Forum Moderators: martinibuster
Maybe so, but it is difficult to whip up on the first-to-market without some real product difference.
I think folks that have low CPC or have been booted out of AdSense will have the same probelems in Y.
I also don't see Y providing an income incentive to switch, they won't be paying a higher click percentage IMHO.
There may be news from PubCon on this. :)
I dont think Yahoo and MSN will have problems getting advertisers to sign up. Both have are veteran players and have immense talent and resources.
Yes, but they have an opportunity to reach mainstream advertisers that Google hasn't been able to reach, if they can offer a level of quality closer to that of traditional media and direct marketing.
More competition among networks means lower prices for the advertisors.
This assumes a static pool of advertisers but that pool is actually growing. It will grow even faster if prices drop which will tend to drive prices back up in the end.
I believe that more competition is better for publishers in the long run regardless of any short-term EPC drops.
I think the effect on revenues for publishers is really very hard to guess. (1) Ad programs will compete for advertisers and publishers. (2) Publishers will try to find the highest paying program and (3) advertisers will choose the program that gives them the highest ROI. (This looks a bit like the economical equivalent of the 'three body' or 'three particle' problem in physics :P)
I'll just hope for the best :)
This is exciting. I sure hope I will get an alternative to Adsense in the future. Not that Adsense is bad, on the contrary, but their strict ToS gives me the creeps.
IMHO, AdSense's TOS (and standards in general) aren't strict enough. It's likely that a serious competitor would go for quality rather than quantity. There's got to be a "sweet spot" between the current Overture approach (general-interest megasites with little penetration in high-profit niches) and the Google approach (lots of niche publishers but very little quality control or reassurance for the advertiser).
"There's got to be a "sweet spot" between the current Overture approach (general-interest megasites with little penetration in high-profit niches) and the Google approach (lots of niche publishers but very little quality control or reassurance for the advertiser)."
I can't help but think that google already has something like this in the works. They just announced AdWords Professionals maybe soon there will be AdSense Professionals. It can be set up similar to AdWords Professional, but for publisher where they would pay $50 to have there sites reviewed and take an exam to see if they qualify.
The exam could be as simple as questions like, What is your experience in your field?, Where do you get the information on your site from?, Where does your traffic come from? etc..
These types of sites would give advertisers more confidence to run text ads on them.