YuktaMedia

YuktaMedia AMA Session Highlights – Vol. 1

YuktaMedia hosted an AMA session for Publishers to get ready for Q ‘4 and there were many interesting questions from inquisitive Publishers. The majority of Publishers are in the final stages for getting ready for Q ‘4. Many Publishers are concerned about the revenue goals this Q’4 and expect a moderate jump in their revenue this year. Here are the most frequently asked questions, that Publishers have, to help those who didn’t make it to the AMA session. Let’s begin…

Q1: How do we leverage the first-party audience data?

Many Publishers have yet not started fully utilizing their first-party data. It has enormous potential to add significant value to the Publisher’s monetization efforts. As a Publisher using Google Ad Manager 360 (GAM),  you can easily create the first-party audience segments based on the user-interactions in your site or app. You can segment your audience based on user behavior, for example, visiting a specific page, section, time spent on a page, clicks, etc. Or you can also place the audience pixels on your website or app to create your audience segments.

Once the data is collected, you can offer it to the buyers to use in their direct/programmatic guaranteed campaigns. First-party data can be best utilized for the site-wide targeting, re-targeting campaigns, strengthening customer relationships, improving targeting accuracy, mapping the customer’s journey, multi-channel measurement, relevancy, and attribution. While collecting the first-party data, the Publisher must adhere to the local government rules.

Companies that leverage the first-party data outperform the ones that don’t use it and offer the best cross-channel experience to their customers.

We recommend Publishers to have a long-term strategy to collect, analyze, and utilize the first-party data to deliver the best experiences to the audiences and the advertisers. You may start by creating your roadmap for utilizing first-party data, setting up the right data points and channels, consistent measurement, and bench-marking your data.

Ping us if you need help getting started with your first-party data strategy.

Q2: How to get the PG / PMP deals? Which one is better?

Analyze your inventory Buyer’s trend to identify the Buyers who are purchasing your inventory and reach out to them individually to set up deals. The simplest way you can get a Private Marketplace (PMP) deal is through your Agency contacts. Publishers must reach out to the Buyers to set up a PMP deal.

Key considerations while implementing the PMP Deals:

  1. Make sure that CPM for PMP deals is much higher compared to open auction.
  2. The inventory which you are selling through the PMP deals should not be available via open auction at a cheaper price. Because if Buyers can buy that same inventory at a lower price in an Open auction then there’s no incentive for them to buy via PMP deals. Make it exclusive.
  3. Try to set up Programmatic guaranteed deals as opposed to “Always On” PMP deals. This is because, in case Programmatic Guaranteed Deals, Advertiser / Agency is committing to buy that inventory upfront. Whereas in “Always On” PMP deals, there’s no guarantee that Buyer will buy a specific amount.

What if the deal is not working?

  1. Ask the agency if the deal is active at their end.
  2. Priority – Check if the deal has been assigned the correct priority. If there are too many deals at the same priority, impressions delivery of some deals will be affected
  3. Inventory / device targeting – Check if the inventory or the device targeting settings are correct as specified in the deal
  4. Blocks – Check if there are any advertiser / inventory blocks
  5. Check the contract with the Demand Partner – Many Demand Partners operate in different channels such as – Open Bidding, Header Bidding, Tag-based environments, etc. Check if your contract has listed out the areas they operate and all services / functionalities available.

Have questions? Ping us!

Q3: How to benchmark Demand Partners effectively to manage the monetization flow?

Demand Partners have specialized in a specific area/domain, for example, some Demand Partners can perform very well for Travel / Tourism related Publishers but may perform poorly for the Technology domain. Some Demand Partners fit the exact vertical of the Publisher, thus performing very well. To know who matches the Publisher’s vertical well, Publisher needs to assess all Demand Partners based on specific KPIs such as – Fill %, revenue, discrepancy, and eCPM. Create Demand Partner benchmark.

Here’s how you can analyze the Demand Partner based on the basic, easy to assess but effective KPIs.

1. Fill rate: Fill rate is one of the most critical KPIs while assessing Demand Partner performance. More the Fill, the better the monetization opportunities. It also helps Publishers increase competitiveness in the ad stack. Some Demand Partners offer guaranteed fill rates, so Publishers need to keep an eye on the fill rate for those Demand Partners regularly. 

2. Discrepancy: Discrepancy is not good if it’s more than 10%. If the Publisher is sending many impressions to the Demand Partner but, the Demand Partner is reporting fewer impressions received then, this needs investigation. The majority causes of the discrepancy are the technical issues such as –

3. eCPM: This is one of the most important KPI and a dealbreaker while assessing Demand Partner performance. If the Demand Partner is offering a very low eCPM for the Premium inventory, then Publisher must renegotiate the contract with the Demand Partner. Publishers can easily identify the low performing Demand partners by assessing the eCPM’s side-by-side with other demand partners in the ad stack.

4. Revenue: Last but not the least, REVENUE! Revenue is the king. Having a good eCPM and fill rate is nice to have but eventually, it’s the revenue generated that matters. Some Publishers try to push the fill rate and eCPM higher, but lose out on the revenue. So trying to achieve 100% fill but lower revenue doesn’t help. Publishers should look out for revenue increase and work with Demand Partners to push it higher.

Have questions? Ping us!

Q4: Demand partner having too many ‘reseller’ entries in the ads.txt file. Do we need to worry about it?

Working with mass resellers is a good strategy in a case a lot of remnant impressions are unfilled. In a nutshell, mass resellers sell your inventory to other partners for you for a certain fee. Now, coming to the point of whether it is good to work with mass resellers for selling your inventory – Working with mass resellers is not bad if they are transparent with you.

How do I know if the mass reseller is being transparent with me?

1. Reporting – Data never lies. If you are getting transparent reporting from the reseller then you can find out how your inventory is performing and make data-driven decisions.

2. Partner information – Thanks to IAB for making ads.txt mandatory for selling your inventory. Just by looking at your ads.txt, you can find out how partners are working with each other. Some Demand Partners hide the “shady” partners within a long list of the ads.txt entries. If the Demand Partner has shared a very long list of the partners in the ads.txt file, then you need to be careful with the partner and ask questions about the long list of partners. You can also remove/comment on the suspicious-looking entries in the ads.txt file.

3. Ask questions – Before onboarding or finalizing the contract with the Demand Partner, try to test the Demand Partner for a month and see the behavior of ads, reporting numbers, malware violations, etc. Ask the following questions:

Have questions? Ping us!

Q5: Since the start of the COVID-19 situation, we are seeing that the eCPM’s are going down. What should we do?

You are not alone and we saw many Publishers encountered the same challenges since the start of a pandemic. eCPM’s are going down because many advertisers have limited their spend and some have completely stopped their digital spend. Even in this situation, there are plenty of opportunities that Publishers can grab. Some of the approaches we recommend to the Publishers are –

Have questions? Ping us!

Q6: How do we contact our top buyers and how do we determine what price point we should offer them, for what package?

You can also analyze your inventory Buyer’s trend to identify the Buyers who are buying your inventory and reach out to them individually to set up deals for you. The simplest way you can get a Private Marketplace (PMP) deal is through the Agency contacts. Publishers must reach out to the buyers to set up a deal. Knowing your inventory KPI’s is a great start to showcase your site’s performance. Demand partners usually charge extra fees for the PMP deals, make sure you are aware of the costs while deciding the pricing for your inventory. We recommend creating an Inventory package with the following parameters so that it will be easier for Buyers to know what they are buying.

Audience demographics: While negotiating with Buyers always mention your audience demographics. You don’t need to use the sophisticated audience data management tool to gather the basic details. Most of the Buyers accept Google Analytics reports.

PageViews: Buyers also look for the site’s PageViews data to understand the traffic. The buyer’s biggest concern is the paid traffic which brings low-quality campaigns. Ideally, you should not have any paid traffic coming to your website. Organic search and Direct traffic are the biggest USP’s while selling your deals.

Have questions? Ping us!

Q7: How do I package my inventory to share it with buyers for the PG / PMP deals?

Media kit showcases your offering to the Buyers in an easy to understand fashion. A Publisher must have their media-kit ready and updated all the time. Because, opportunities come from anywhere.

We hope you find the QnA session useful. We will be hosting another AMA session for Publishers who could not make it. Stay tuned for the updates! Have a prosperous Q’4.

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