Cyber crime risk exposed How cyber criminals attack websites Is your PC doing a hacker's dirty work? Click fraud is costing advertisers millions of dollars a year. So how can you protect your computer from becoming a party to the crime? Again the BBC site has an excellent article with practical steps called, "How to keep your computer secure". Take time to read it and be sure you are doing your part to reduce click fraud. Tom Cuthbert
The Click Quality Council invites you...
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The Lens We Look Through
When I told him that we are on the side of the advertiser he paused, thought about it and then the light bulb went off. What’s good for the advertiser is good for our entire industry. 100% of the over $24B spent on search advertising comes from advertisers. They pay the bills for search engines, ad providers, parked domain companies publishers as well as those of us that are working to provide tools to improve traffic quality.
Despite our diverse client base, the lens Click Forensics looks through for every decision we make is that of the advertiser.
Smart sellers look through this lens too. Companies like Yahoo that asked advertisers how they could improve communication. The result was the cooperative development of the FACTr system enabling advertisers to communicate concerns to Yahoo. Companies like Lycos, who realized early on that “quality matters” and began working to enhance their quality using traffic insight tools. And industry organizations including the Click Quality Council, while made of all parts of the ecosystem, is always advertiser focused.
Advertisers drive our industry and that reality will become even clearer in the future as mobile grows more important and display begins to look like search. We are proud of our involvement and the work of the Click Quality Council.
So as the IAB releases the Click Measurement Working Group Guidelines, it is important that they are reviewed through the lens that matters, that of the advertiser. We should be asking, are these guidelines fair? Do they have enough substance to improve traffic quality and help ensure advertisers get what they pay for? Do the guidelines improve transparency and enhance trust between buyers and sellers?
I attended the IAB’s annual conference in Orlando last week and have a clear picture of their lens . We applaud the IAB’s leadership and the work of the Media Rating Council and task force members who produced a foundational document. Our hope now is that we can work together to build on this foundation to build trust, enhance transparency and accelerate the growth of online advertising.
Tom Cuthbert
Is Google Watching You?
Data is the driver to growth and profitability for the online advertising community. No one knows this better than Google. Every day, they are gathering more and more data on consumers and many consumers are completely unaware of this fact. While lots of folks are sitting at home shredding mail, cutting up old credit cards and proclaiming that they will “never shop online”, Google sits by quietly watching every move they make online.
USA Today recently featured an article titled, “Google's G1 phone makes it easy to track surfing habits” written by Leslie Cauley. The article goes into great detail as to the data that Google has (or will have) on consumers. One key driver to the acquisition of this data is the G1 Mobile phone.
The G1 makes things much easier for Google to watch your every move. Jeffrey Chester, executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy says, “It’s like a walking surveillance device”. Cell phone and mobile devices are generally not shared; they are just used by one person. This means that the data collected from that device is highly personalized to that individual and incredibly accurate.
Think about the power of an advertising company (yes,
Tom Cuthbert
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A Lesson in Sportsmanship
- Be true to yourself.
- Make each day your masterpiece.
- Help others.
- Drink deeply from good books.
- Make friendship a fine art.
- Build a shelter against a rainy day.
- Pray for guidance and give thanks for your blessings every day.
Getting an Uptick in a Downturn
It's no secret our county’s economy is slowing and times are getting tough. While there is great optimism, there is an undercurrent of concern. In anytime of economic downturn, one unwanted byproduct is that crime increases ("Statistics point to increase in crime"). Unfortunately, this includes cyber crime and specifically, click fraud.
For almost three years now Click Forensics has been tracking click fraud. While the overall rate somewhat stabilized during 2008, the number of advertisers affected and the dollars lost continue to rise. As we face more sophisticated attacks in 2009, I wanted to highlight some recent advances in the battle and share some specific steps advertisers can do to ensure they get what they pay for.
Cooperation has been a theme for 2008. Progress is being made on three fronts by leaders in the industry. First, the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) continues its work on defining guidelines for counting clicks. Click Forensics continues to take an active role in this important effort and supports it as a good first step. Secondly, leading search providers, including Google and Yahoo!, have enhanced their products with better tools to manage campaigns and announced traffic quality centers to provide additional resources to advertisers.
The third initiative has been the joint effort of Click Forensics and Yahoo! to build the FACTr process (Fully Automated Click Tracking Reconciliation). For years, advertisers have been frustrated when they have found invalid activity in their pay per click campaigns. Now there is a simple, automated process that connects advertisers to the ad providers. The FACTr system was built by Yahoo! and Click Forensics and launched publicly in July of 2008. By the fall, other ad providers including LookSmart, Miva and Google were added.
While progress continues, here are specific steps advertisers can take to protect their online investment. First, advertisers should monitor campaign performance at the most granular level. Click fraud attacks come in spikes of activity. By watching campaign performance on a daily basis, advertisers can see anomalies and alert the ad provider quickly. Looking for spikes in clicks, drops in conversion ratios, and higher than normal impression levels are all signs something may be out of line.
Secondly, now is a good time to double check campaign settings. A large number of unwanted clicks come as a result of campaigns not being set up correctly. Look at geo-target settings to ensure they match your campaign goals. Review day part settings to ensure you have optimal ad delivery for delivering quality traffic.
Finally, avoid paying for clicks from low quality traffic sources. By utilizing the site exclusion functionality made available by ad providers, you can block bad clicks from ever getting to your campaign. Click Forensics has a process called, Intelligent Exclusion™ that dynamically identifies bad traffic sources and eliminates them from the campaign. We see a 43.5% decline in the overall invalid rate for advertisers who use this process. Keeping the money in your pocket is always better than having to go back and ask for a refund!
Like you, we are hopeful that the economy will make a quick recovery. As it does, we will all benefit. In the meantime, it’s more important than ever that advertisers are on the lookout for threats to their ad budgets. You can count on all of us at Click Forensics to continue to work on behalf of the entire industry to bring solutions to the marketplace to ensure advertisers get what they pay for.
Tom
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Connections, Followers and Friends... Oh My!
I’ve been studying and thinking about social media. I began studying social media for purely business reasons in early 2008. I was wondering how Facebook got its start, what Twitter can do to make money and why no one is using MySpace anymore. I read several books, nosed around the net and jumped onto several sites. Today, I use social media a lot and it has become woven into my everyday and workday life.
I’ve been on LinkedIn for several years and it has become the place for my “real world” work connections. I have 427 connections and can honestly tell you I have personally met almost every single one. I typically don’t accept requests from people don’t know. It has been a valuable tool to connect others for business reasons. I manage my network by trying to be helpful with networking requests and frequently contact people through LinkedIn. I like it, for what it is. Some of the recent app additions (Wordpress, TripIt, Amazon Reading List…) are quite useful. LinkedIn succeeds because you can manage your network by both contributing to and benefitting from your connections.
I joined Facebook in early ’08 because it seemed to be the thing to do. My daughters have been on it for years, along with MySpace. As a parent, I have always disliked MySpace. It was way to easy to hack protected profiles and kids were prone to put stupid information (ie. home phone numbers) on the site. While they have cleaned up their act from a security standpoint there is no doubt they are losing ground to Facebook.
I was surprisingly impressed with the Facebook community and tools. The first issue I had was who to be “friends” with. My daughter initially wanted nothing to do with me in “her world”. Most of my real friends my age could care less about Facebook. I found a few and began connecting. I now have 74 friends (including my daughter!). These are all people I actually know and consider a real world friend. I try and keep Facebook “friends” separate from LinkedIn “connections”. I am much more transparent with Facebook friends and feel comfortable letting them into my world. When a business associate requests becoming my “friend” on Facebook, I connect with them on LinkedIn, thereby keeping my worlds from colliding!
One other Facebook note, I have learned once you add someone as a “friend” on Facebook, this becomes an emotional attachment. I once “defaced” someone from my list and inadvertently offended someone. I invented a new term, “reface” and added her back. I then sent this in to Urban Dictionary. You might find it handy one day! (WSJ article on this topic)
Twitter has become my favorite social media outlet over the past nine months. I like Twitter because it is kind of a “stream of consciousness”. I recently told someone I view it as a creative outlet, a place for me to make pithy, smart aleck comments! I post about my travels, news items, random observations and relevant news for my industry. I enjoy following people who post about news or interesting information and observations. I have 289 “followers” and am following 288 (seems like a nice balance to me!). I try and post a few times a day and recognize that everything I post will forever be archived by the search engines. My Twitter feeds into my Facebook status updates, a feature I like. While I certainly know many of my “followers”, there are many more I do not. It has been a way to have brief conversations with others not usually accessible to me. It’s funny, I feel a responsibility to my “followers” to entertain and inform! One told me once, “Don’t let us down”… it is an overwhelming responsibility!
Overall, LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter are now part of my digital life. Jump on in, the water is fine! :)