I've contacted them about starting some campaigns for both myself and clients, and looking forward to seeing how the system delivers on its promises.
Like kposehn said, if it is really that good I'll be moving a lot more of my budget to it. Would really take a lot of the time and effort out of large-scale media buying.
I'm wondering how this will differentiate from companies like SiteScout, which provide the same basic service. If the optimization engine is just that good, I'm definitely going to push more of my budget to it.
It's true that the vast majority of demand-side platforms are bidding on the same impressions, so the differentiation really comes from technology, service, and usability. For example, the main component of building a campaign on SiteScout is scrolling through a really long list of websites and entering individual CPM bids. Between LeanMarket's slick category-targeting UI and auto-optimization, I think we handle this process much more gracefully.
No real invite system, I'm just trying to make sure any advertiser's campaigns seem like a good fit for RTB before I push them to test a campaign that probably won't succeed. Can you please reach out through the contact form or email first name @ company domain dot com? Thanks!
How's your mobile capability? Are you tied into any Mobile specific exchanges? I'm guessing you're running your own ad server... is it performing well for Mobile devices?
Judging the by the screenshots, it looks like a pretty clean interface. It really surprises me how convoluted RTB UI's are when it's really not a complicated workflow.
Great job, very impressive! There's a lot of potential in this space...
Is there any way that a small ad buyer (a few hundred thousand dollars a month) can participate in the auctions directly, bidding in real time rather than going through a middleman that does the work for him (which is what LeanMarket seems to do)?
On the larger exchanges, not really. This would be like a retail investor wanting access to NASDAQ or NYSE rather than Schwab or E-Trade. Some of the 3rd-tier exchanges may be exceptions.
Slightly confusing to be to be honest, Lean.com as the domain (which most likely cost a small fortune) but all the branding is LeanMarket. I'm sure they have plans for more combined branding, but its a bit amiss for me.
One core component of RTB is the separation of supply and demand. This is different than the ad network model where a central hub connects the buyers and sellers who all work with the network. This "central hub" approach is true of AdWords; you can buy traffic from AdSense publishers through AdWords and no one else.
Through LeanMarket, you can buy impressions from publishers who sell through Google, Microsoft, Admeld, Rubicon, or PubMatic--none of whom LeanMarket has a direct relationship with.
I wondered the same thing. Maybe just block Flash totally and only allow HTML5 for rich media stuff?
Other than that, I think it looks like a great idea (love the name) and could have a decent chance of going somewhere (assuming enough small biz firms are sophisticated enough to use it).
Edit: or maybe the plan is that the ad exchanges (e.g. Rubicon) do the vetting, since they're in-between leanmarket and the publishers?
Haven't touched ad servers for a while but do most ad serving platforms correctly track HTML 5 rich media? I know most of them are setup to correctly hook into Flash (Actionscript) and be able to automatically catch plays, replays, hovers, and other actions.
No. None of they aren. some consume a global variable with a link but that's minor and has irrelevant reasons for the security concerns here.
For richmedia, the publisher (website owner) just accepts to serve a Javascript snipped, which most of the time request more Javascript from places the publisher has no control whatsoever. And it has to be inlined on the page because that script uses document.write like crazy.
because of that, the script has total control of the page.
That's why there's no rich media in most free email providers. Yahoo is the only one but they render the ad in an crossdomain iframe and force the ad to behave via a richmedia api
Yeah, either way it's spun... seems like a pretty good arrangement for their platform, and should work out well for all involved. Seems to solve the problem of ad exchanges having heavily-manual interfaces, or having to setup a 3rd party tracking system for helping optimize spends.
The system sounds pretty slick, and if does what it says it will, I think their UI will go a long way towards helping them gain traction with the smaller firms.
If it truly makes things as easy as it wants/claims to, it should find a pretty solid base of users fairly quick.
I've contacted them about starting some campaigns for both myself and clients, and looking forward to seeing how the system delivers on its promises.
Like kposehn said, if it is really that good I'll be moving a lot more of my budget to it. Would really take a lot of the time and effort out of large-scale media buying.