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  2. Digital display advertising - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_display_advertising

    The video is an example of display advertising used for commemorating 27 years of Nike's Air Max shoes. The video advertising aimed at creating brand awareness among users and convincing them to watch the Hangout and purchase products from the display advertising itself. Consumers were able to shop by clicking the display advertising.

  3. Online advertising - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Online_advertising

    An example of display advertising featuring geotargeting. Display advertising conveys its advertising message visually using text, logos, animations, videos, photographs, or other graphics. Display advertising is ubiquitous across online systems including websites, search engines, social media platforms, mobile applications and email.

  4. Real-time bidding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Real-time_bidding

    Real-time bidding (RTB) is a means by which advertising inventory is bought and sold on a per-impression basis, via instantaneous programmatic auction, similar to financial markets. With real-time bidding, online advertising buyers bid on an impression and, if the bid is won, the buyer's ad is instantly displayed on the publisher's site. [2]

  5. Advertising, Analytics, and Privacy. - AOL

    privacy.aol.com/legacy/advertising-and-privacy/...

    These ads are sometimes called "interest-based" ads. Some interest-based ads are based only on an isolated online activity, such as if you were to go to an online bookstore and look at a particular novel. The bookseller might want to show you an ad for that novel because you're probably more interested in buying it than the average online user.

  6. Demand-side platform - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demand-side_platform

    Online advertising serving process. The functionality of the DSP often depends on the format of the media. For example, DSPs that advertise online can see how people behave after viewing an ad, whereas this is not possible in outdoor advertising [5] or television and radio, where the advertising constitutes a one-to-many approach.

  7. Dynamic creative optimization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dynamic_Creative_Optimization

    Dynamic creative optimization (DCO), is a form of programmatic advertising that allows advertisers to optimize the performance of their creative using real-time technology. In DCO, a variety of ad components (backgrounds, main images, text, value propositions, call to action, etc.) are dynamically assembled on the flight, when the ad is served ...

  8. Interactive advertising - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interactive_advertising

    Most of these variables include structural elements, such as ad types, formats and features. This does not mean that consumers never control the structure of the interactive ads. Display ads, companion ads, sponsored posts, hyperlinks and non-carrier websites are examples of advertiser controlled interactive advertising.

  9. Header bidding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Header_bidding

    Header bidding [1] is a programmatic advertising strategy where publishers offer their ad inventory to multiple ad exchanges simultaneously before making calls to their ad servers. This process contrasts with the traditional waterfall method, [ 2 ] where inventory is offered to one ad exchange at a time.

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