Summary of Amazon Remnant Ad Experiment
The Motivation
In Podcast 64, Jeff talked about turning off AdSense because of the pitifully low payouts. Like all publishers, Stack Overflow fills its premium inventory with direct sales and is therefore left with remnant inventory to be filled by either an ad network or house ads. I confidently told Jeff that I could build something that beat AdSense. *
After discussing a few alternatives, we decided that advertising programming books from Amazon would be a good experiment. Hence, the Stack Overflow “rads” (Remnant Advertising System) was born.
* This is not a boastful claim, since AdSense pays an effective CPM of less than $0.01. Any idiot can beat AdSense.
The Setup
Rads has three main components:
- A spider which uses the Amazon Product Advertising API to crawl the Amazon product catalog.
- A website which renders an advertisement based on Stack Overflow tags.
- Some analytics to determine which ads, books, and tags are most effective.
The spider was fed the top 5000 tags on Stack Overflow. For each tag, it preformed a keyword search on the “Computers & Internet” node, returning the top 10 books with five-star reviews, sorted by number of reviews.
Stack Overflow has two separate ad units: an IAB-standard leaderboard (728×90) that is displayed below the question, but only to anonymous users, and a 250×220 sidebar unit that is displayed to all users. Several different creative templates were split-tested against one another.
One problem with Amazon is that you can only make purchases in six countries. So any visitors who were not from the US, UK, Canada, France, Germany or Japan would not be able to make purchases, and would, by definition, provide $0 in revenue. So tracking by country would be important.
On September 12, 2008 we turned rads on, and it served ads until October 21.
The Results
Week One
Initial results were promising: the ads were getting a 0.6% CTR. (In online advertising, a 1% click-through-rate is considered very good, so to hit 0.6% out of the gates was encouraging.)
Well, the leaderboard ads were getting 0.6%. The sidebar ads were seeing less than 0.1% CTR. We quickly dropped the sidebar units to focus on the leaderboards.
We initially were using the Coding Horror affiliate account, so it wasn’t possible to get an accurate measure of conversion (the number of clicks that turn into Amazon purchases). The Coding Horror account gets 8% – 10% conversion, so I thought we were well on our way to $1 CPMs, a whopping 100x better than AdSense. (0.6% CTR * 9% conversion * $1.85 per order = $1 per 1000 impressions)
Not so fast…
Boy, was I was wrong.
Firstly, the 0.6% CTR was fleeting; after users got over the initial delight of seeing a new kind of ad, the CTR settled at 0.2%.
Secondly, the conversion estimates were wildly different between Jeff’s blog and Stack Overflow. Once we wired up a dedicated affiliate account, we learned that less than 0.5% of the Stack Overflow users who clicked through to Amazon actually bought the book. The $1 CPM was looking more like a $0.01 CPM; no better than AdSense.
Thankfully, the Cost-Per-Action advertising universe has developed a few tricks over the years to combat this exact problem of low conversion. The key is to lure the user in with baby steps. This is why so many online sites will merely ask for your name or gender, as a way to essentially Jedi Mind Trick you into eventually signing up for their service.
One last tweak
In October, we added an interstitial: clicking on an ad would take you to a dedicated StackOverflow page, telling you about the book, and other books, and only then could you click through to Amazon (example). This increased conversion to about 2.5%, with only a negligible impact on CTR. This lifted the CPM to about $0.06. We could have done more of this kind of lead qualification, but it’s a slippery slope, and pretty soon you might be telling people that if they punch the monkey they win a free programming book!
On top of the low CPMs, Amazon can only sell to users in six countries, representing 43% of the Stack Overflow traffic (and only 32% of the clicks!). Even if we had managed to lift CPMs as high as, say, $0.20, we still wouldn't have been able to hit Jeff's minimum revenue threshold of $1000 per month.
So, the experiment was ultimately a failure, but hopefully there are some lessons that others can glean from the exercise and the data.
The Data
The following table shows impressions, clicks, and earnings for the six target countries in October 2008.
| Country | Impressions | Clicks | CTR | Orders | Conversion | Revenue | eCPM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| US | 2,258,418 | 4,321 | 0.19% | 94 | 2.17% | $144.91 | $0.06 |
| GB | 727,916 | 1,234 | 0.17% | 30 | 2.45% | $46.71 | $0.06 |
| CA | 309,234 | 620 | 0.20% | 13 | 2.07% | $19.84 | $0.06 |
| FR | 244,014 | 493 | 0.20% | 10 | 2.05% | $15.66 | $0.06 |
| JP | 79,695 | 208 | 0.26% | 3 | 1.59% | $5.11 | $0.06 |
| DE | 409,614 | 724 | 0.18% | 17 | 2.35% | $26.28 | $0.06 |
We showed ads to everyone, however. Here are the stats for the "non-revenue" users, which could click through to Amazon but not make any purchases.
| Country | Impressions | Clicks | CTR |
|---|---|---|---|
| CN | 100,853 | 543 | 0.54% |
| IN | 913,935 | 4,298 | 0.47% |
| RU | 155,166 | 519 | 0.33% |
| BR | 187,806 | 492 | 0.26% |
| ES | 157,836 | 363 | 0.23% |
| IT | 211,724 | 446 | 0.21% |
| IL | 105,108 | 212 | 0.20% |
| PL | 150,281 | 300 | 0.20% |
| CH | 100,234 | 188 | 0.19% |
| NL | 247,221 | 410 | 0.17% |
| AU | 301,469 | 481 | 0.16% |
| BE | 103,934 | 164 | 0.16% |
| SE | 198,169 | 260 | 0.13% |
| Others | 2,511,362 | 7097 | 0.28% |
Notice that 68% of the clicks were from non-revenue countries. If only there had been a way to make money off those clicks… time perhaps for amazon.in to open?



November 5th, 2009 at 5:35 pm
Well, at least you had fun playing with the API right?
November 8th, 2009 at 10:57 pm
Yes. Time for Amazon.in to open :)