Home Publishers Contextweb Takes On Vibrant Media, Kontera With In-Text Ads

Contextweb Takes On Vibrant Media, Kontera With In-Text Ads

SHARE:

Expanding its toolkit for publishers, Contextweb announced today that it will make available in-text ads for publishers on the Adsdaq exchange beginning March 31. Leveraging its contextual technology, Contextweb will enter the same space which Vibrant Media and Kontera have dominated in the recent past in a battle-contextual-royale.

Contextweb’s Jay Sears explains how in-text ads will work on their company blog:

“ContextWeb publishers participating in the In-text program will see specific keywords double underlined within their content. Upon mouse-over of the keyword, the end-user will have the option to see and click on ads. The ads are specifically relevant to the keyword that has been double underlined, which enables advertisers to be precise in their targeting. As a publisher, you will be able to name a CPC AskPrice for all the in-text ads served to your account. No additional tagging or integration is required.”

Contextweb Adds In-text Ads to Adsdaq

Sample from Contextweb

The key differentiator appears to be that publishers will be able to set the CPC price they receive for all in-text ads. (It would be interesting to see a contextual provider allow publishers to set CPCs according to content category, or even keyword, someday.)

Given Contextweb’s Adsdaq at least 50% better reach than Vibrant or Kontera according to recent Comscore numbers, the in-text ads could have significant impact depending on how they roll it out with publishers (large and self-serve pubs) and advertisers.

Sears notes publishers can opt-out of the ads if they wish.

Must Read

How AI Can Enhance Content Without Generating It

As much as consumers complain about AI-generated content, advertising experts say AI still has an important place in video creation and production, including for ads. But using AI in content without turning off consumers is a tricky dance.

How Tovala Banks On Subscriptions And Incrementality – But Not Ads – To Profit From Its Oven

Smart TVs, refrigerators and other home appliances may pester you with marketing, but at least the hardware is cheap. Another startup taking a different approach to the same theory is Tovala, which was founded in 2015 and combines a standalone countertop oven with a weekly meal kit subscription.

Shopify Wades Deeper Into Advertising, But Not Ad Tech

Shopify is slowly but surely making its way into the ads business. But the ecommerce leader maintains its laissez-faire approach to ad monetization.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

Advertisers Say They Need More Data From Netflix

Netflix touts sharper targeting, but buyers say its black-box approach – especially the lack of usable IP data – is blunting measurement and quietly pushing performance-driven spend elsewhere.

Walmart Buys Vibe.co To Woo SMBs To Streaming

Walmart will buy Vibe.co, a self-serve video ad platform, in hopes of attracting more small and medium-sized advertisers to connected TV.

OpenAI's debut in Cannes

At Its First-Ever Cannes, OpenAI Says ‘We Are Clearly In The Advertising Business Now’

Bonjour, ChatGPT ads. OpenAI’s inaugural Cannes Lions appearance doubled as a coming‑out party for its baby ad business.