Bidding for Representative Allocations for Display Advertising
Source:
WINE (2009)
Abstract:
Display advertising has traditionally been sold via guaranteed
contracts -- a guaranteed contract is a deal between a publisher and an
advertiser to allocate a certain number of impressions over a certain
period, for a pre-specified price per impression. However, as spot
markets for display ads, such as the RightMedia Exchange, have grown
in prominence, the selection of advertisements to show on a given page
is increasingly being chosen based on price, using an auction.
As the number of participants in the exchange grows, the price of an impressions becomes a signal of its value. This correlation between price and value means that a seller
implementing the contract through bidding should offer the contract
buyer a range of prices, and not just the cheapest impressions
necessary to fulfill its demand.
Implementing a contract using a range
of prices, is akin to creating a mutual fund of advertising impressions,
and requires {\em randomized bidding}. We characterize what allocations
can be implemented with randomized bidding, namely those where the desired share obtained at each price is a non-increasing function of price.
In addition, we provide a full
characterization of when a set of campaigns are compatible and how to
implement them with randomized bidding strategies.
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