Sat 27 Jan 2007
adGridWork is a re-imaging of the old (Web 1.0-1.5) ad exchange sites. I can’t remember any specific sites, but the basic premise was for every 3 (or whatever) ads you show on your site, your add gets shown on 2 sites. The extra ad was sold, allowing the site to make money. The big difference with the adGridWork project is that everything is free. It is a basically a way for the web community to help support each others sites with nothing being taken away.
The site was created by Kyle Johnson and Nick Mazza, both college students majoring in Computer Science. Kyle and Nick are true practitioners of rapid development - they conceived the site in November and had it launched on December 1st. It’s been less than two months since the launch, but they have over 800 registered sites thus far.
One of the most impressive features on the service is it’s ability to filter ads so that only relevant ones are shown. This benefits the site displaying the ads as well as having your ad shown on appropriate sites in the network.
When registering a site with our network, you can select from dozens of specific categories your site falls under, as well as specify any number of keywords to associate with your site. Our ad engine will then display your ad on other sites with similar categories/keywords. In turn, similar ads are displayed on your site, with the exception of any competitor’s ads (you can list your competitors when registering a site).
I signed up for the service a couple weeks ago so I could give it a trial run before writing this. adGridWork provides stats for both the ads your site has served up as well as your ad on other sites. The stats for PseudoCoder are a bit disappointing, but that isn’t adGridWorks fault. This blog isn’t highly visited (yet) - I’ve only shown 178 ads on this site and 0 (as in zero, none) have been clicked. Stats are updated in real time - I just clicked an ad to check.
Right now I’m clearly a leacher. Although I’ve only shown 178 ads, my ad has been shown 5991 times. And clicked on 5 times for a .08% conversion rate. To be honest I have no idea if that rate is good or bad, but I suspect it’s bad, horribly bad. Although this could mean my ad isn’t being show on the right types of sites, I’m guessing it probably because the ad itself isn’t very compelling.
Even though the service isn’t working on great for me at this point I’m going to leave it on this site for a bit. It’s the least I could do since I’ve my ad has appeared about 30 times more than I’ve shown other peoples. If anyone has any suggestions for improving the text in my ad I would definitely give it a shot.
Popularity: 23% [?]











January 27th, 2007 at 10:28 pm
adGridWork did a nice job with their recent redesign. I had a few bugs, but they seemed to have snuffed them all out with this latest version.
A few comments/suggestions:
1) More stats. You can never have enough stats. For example when I look at the day-by-day stats I see: that I had over 2000 impressions on Jan 23rd, 1/3 off all my impressions. I would love to dive into that and see what happened.
2) Along the same lines, I would like to see which sites are showing my ad.
3) I could have sworn there was a more detailed “leader board” then the one in the left column, but I can’t seem to find it anymore.
4) The add a site page is a bit long. You may want to think about separating it into two pages. One for site details and one for ad details.
5) At some point don’t you have to start limiting how many times an ad appears if that site isn’t serving up many ads - like what’s happening with this blog. It doesn’t seem fair to the guys who are generating lots of site requests.
January 28th, 2007 at 9:34 pm
[...] Matt over at pseudocoder.com has posted a great review of adgridwork. Whenever one of our members takes the time to write about our service, we always like to show our appreciation by personally thanking them. You can read Matt’s article On his Blog. He specifically asks for suggestions on improving the conversion rate of his own ad, so any SEO-heads out there should help him out with some pointers. [...]
January 28th, 2007 at 9:36 pm
Hey Matt -
Thanks for the review. I just posted a quick response to this post over on our blog [http://blog.adgridwork.com/?p=18]. Hopefully some of our readers can help you out with some tips on improving your conversion rate.
Take care and good luck with your campaign.
-Nick
http://adgridwork.com
March 9th, 2007 at 2:33 pm
Hiya.. Nice idea for a website, I look forward to hanging around here. I just ran across your review of this adgridwork.com network, and I noticed your numbers you mention up above. you definately have a very bad conversion rate. Maybe you have selected the wrong niches, or the text is not perfect..
Profiling independently built web apps
Techcrunch for the little guy
I am by no means a copywriter, but perhaps something like:
Small apps for big needs
Software for everyone
—- (not everyone knows what Techcrunch is. You might say that the people who do not know are not in your target audience, but there is no need to alienate users before they click on your ad).
Or how about:
Web 2.0 apps that make you smile
Reviews and insights
or..
Web 2.0 reviews and insights
Information you cannot live without
You get the drift.. You might want to get someone else to do a bit of work on the text, but I can understand the problem with your conversion rates.
Cheers and best wishes from a new reader. (Hi mom!