Skip to main content

Glossary

Term

Definition

Action

A behaviour a visitor may perform, such as visiting a web page, reading an article, viewing or clicking on a banner ad, watching a video, playing a game, submitting a form or purchasing a product. Each time a user performs one of these predefined actions, a request is sent to the servers of Adhese.

ADM Administrative cost is an advertising pricing model in which the advertiser pays a price that is independent of volume or duration.
Ad request

The request to deliver an ad at a specific position as a direct result of a user's action as recorded by the ad server.

Ad serving The technology responsible for delivering advertising campaigns from a server to an end-user client (such as a browser), where the ads are then displayed and cached.
Ad spend

The total amount of money spend on ad campaigns

Ad tag

A piece of HTML or JavaScript code inserted into the source code of a web page. For each main format, such as Leaderboard or Skyscraper, you will need to implement an Ad tag in the location where you want the format to run.

Advar template

JavaScript files for adding extra functionality and CSS style rules for designing your online ads. Advar templates are pre-made ads, such as text ads, native ads or pre-roll video ads.

API

Application Programming Interface determines how two applications have to communicate with each other. The API provides access to inventory and performance data in the Adhese database for campaign planning and reporting. You can also use the API to create, manage and update campaigns and bookings.

Auto-delivery The automatic distribution of impressions for a campaign is determined by the percentage set by Adhese for the selected booking based on its characteristics and competing bookings.
Booking A combination of a position and a period determines where, when, how and to whom a campaign is delivered.
Cache busting The process by which sites or servers serve content in a way that prevents browsers from serving content from their cache. This forces the browser to fetch a fresh copy for each request and ensures that reporting reflects the actual views or impressions of an individual ad creative.
Campaign A grouping of booking conditions and creatives.
Channel A grouping of identical positions across different locations within your network (e.g., run-of-network), your website (e.g., run-of-site), or any other custom combination.
Clicks The measurement of a user clicking on a link within an ad creative that redirects the user to the advertiser's landing page or target URL.
Clicks per contact The ratio of clicks to the number of contacts.
Click tag A parameter used in ad creatives. It is a variable that defines the landing page URL from the markup code.
Click-through rate (CTR) The ratio of clicks to impressions.
Client A computer or software program that makes contact with a server to obtain data over the Internet, such as a web browser.
Companion ad Text, display ads, rich media, or skins that wrap around the video experience.
Competing campaigns Campaigns booked at the same position as the selected campaign.
Contact

A unique visitor who accesses a website.

Cookie

Cookies are small packets of data. When someone visits your website for the first time, the cookie and its unique tracking ID are downloaded and stored by Adhese on the user's internet browser. On each subsequent visit, the cookie is returned to Adhese.

CPC Cost per click is an advertising pricing model in which the advertiser pays for each click.
CPD Cost per day is an advertising pricing model in which the advertisers pay a daily fixed fee.
CPL Cost per lead is an advertising pricing model in which advertising costs are based on a visitor taking a specifically defined action in response to an ad creative (such as a sales transaction or newsletter subscription).
CPM Cost Per Mille. Cost per thousand impressions is an advertising pricing model where the advertiser pays for every thousand impressions served.
CPP Cost per period is an advertising pricing model where the advertiser pays a cost for a fixed delivery period, regardless of the number of impressions or clicks.
Creative The file that contains the visual representation of the advertiser’s campaign.
Creative status Indicates whether or not creatives are uploaded to a campaign or attached to a booking.
Creative template A piece of code wrapped around each creative of the format to which it is applied.
Daily contacts The number of unique visitors on a daily basis. If ten different people visit on day one, five new people visit on day two, and five people who also visited on day one the total number of daily contacts is twenty people, even if the absolute number of unique visitors is only fifteen.
Delivery method Indicates how impressions are distributed.
Delivery multiples An option to combine or exclude delivery of a campaign's bookings.
Delivery rate

Estimates whether or not a booking's delivery is on schedule. Several variables are taken into account, such as the number of impressions to be delivered and the number of impressions delivered. (see Delivery overview).

Device type The type of device a visitor uses to access a publication, for example, a desktop, tablet, or smartphone.
eCPC The effective cost per click (eCPC) is calculated by dividing the total earnings by the total number of clicks.
eCPM

The effective cost per thousand impressions. The eCPM is calculated by dividing the total revenue by the total number of thousand impressions delivered. The eCPM indicates how much a booking would have cost if it had been sold on a CPM basis. See eCPM benchmark.

Expandable ad A creative that expands beyond its original size into a larger creative through user interaction.
Fill rate

Indicates the percentage of a position’s total available inventory volume sold. For more information on the calculation of the fill rate, see Monthly inventory.

Frequency capping

Limiting how often a given ad is shown to an individual visitor to your site (see User frequency cap).

Format A definition of the creative requirements, such as file size and dimensions.
Header status Indicates if there is a problem with the header of the campaign.
Impression

A measurement of responses from Adhese to an ad request from the user’s client (see Impression measurement).

Inventory Advertising space available for sale across your network or across all positions. The impression metric expresses the volume of advertising space available.
Inventory share The percentage of the expected inventory volume of the booked item that a booking claims.
Location A (sub)section within a publication, such as the home page, the local news or lifestyle section, or the daily newsletter.
Logfile A file that records transactions that have taken place on the server. Some data that may be collected is the date/time stamp, URL served, IP address, previous URL, etc.
Metadata Additional information about a campaign.
Offer

A simulation of a campaign used to propose potential campaigns to advertisers, together with an indication of the cost price of the campaign. (see Offers and options).

Option

A campaign proposal with "shelf life". It allows you to plan pending campaigns (see Offers and options).

Over-delivery percentage

Used to avoid reporting discrepancies with third party ad servers. If the percentage is 2%, the campaign will deliver 2% more than the initial booked volume. (see System-wide over-delivery).

Parameter

The information that Adhese collects along with the action. Parameters provide a greater insight into who is doing what, where and how these actions occur.

Platform How a publisher distributes its content to its audience, such as a website, newsletter or application..
Position A combination of a location and a format.
Position template A template linked to a specific position, such as a leaderboard on a homepage, contains a wrapper for all ads served on that position.
Position type

Adds additional functionality to a position, such as the ability to load multiple types of ad formats into one position. (see Position types).

PPID Publisher-Provided IDentifier. A PPID is assigned to a user by a publisher. Publishers typically tie a PPID to a logged-in user or customer profile that relates to a single identified user. Used for features like User Frequency Capping.
Priority Determines how important it is for the campaign to achieve its objectives within the specified time frame compared to competing campaigns.
Progress status The ratio of impressions already served to the number of impressions required.
Publication A publisher maintains one or more online publications, such as a blog, video channel, newsletter, smartphone app, web shop or the online version of a printed newspaper.
Publisher A distributor of content via one or more media platforms.
Render rate The likelihood of a sold ad request turning into an impression. The formula for the Render Rate is: (Total Measured Impressions / Total Sold Ad Requests) * 100 = Render Rate %.
RON Run of Network, the delivery of an advertising campaign across multiple sites within a publisher's network.
ROS Run of Site, the delivery of an advertising campaign across a publisher's entire website.
Rotation delivery If the delivery method is set to rotation, each creative attached to the same position has an equal chance of being delivered.
Running status Indicates the 'health' or state of the campaign or booking, and whether there are any issues that may affect the start or delivery of a campaign.
Server response The necessary information Adhese returns in response to a request.
Sold ad request The number of ad requests where the ad server responds with an ad.
SOV delivery method Share of Voice, the booking reserves a part (share) from the position’s expected volume of impressions (voice). The delivery percentage indicates the percentage the booking must deliver. If the delivery percentage is set at 20%, the booking will be delivered once every five impressions.
Stack format A stack format sends the client (e.g. a browser) a list of ads that can be displayed for the position at that time. It is up to the client to decide which ad will be displayed.
Targeting

The process of optimising campaign performance by, for example, tailoring delivery to the profile of your audience. See Targeting for the different targeting techniques.

Target URL The website that is visited when an ad is clicked on. Also known as the landing page.
Team campaign Campaigns run by users with the same user level and parent publisher as the logged-in user.
Template

Formats that are more complex than the IAB Standard Formats, as templates are characterized by advanced functionality.

Third-party discrepancy

Differences between reports from a publisher and an advertiser. Refer to Third-party discrepancies for more information on how to resolve these discrepancies.

Third-party tag

A piece of JavaScript code provided by a third party, usually the advertiser’s ad server (see Add a third-party tag).

Timestamp A unique piece of code that is added to an ad request to prevent a browser from re-using a previously cached file of the same ad.
Track request

A request that is executed after the initial ad request and acts as an impression request.

Traffic status

 

Checks if the linking of a booking to a creative in a campaign is correct.
Unique visitor A unique individual or browser which accesses a website (see also contact).
VAST

Video Ad Serving Template (VAST) is a standard for communication requirements between ad servers and video players. VAST enables the scalable delivery of video advertising campaigns to video players from multiple vendors because ad servers need to use a single ad response format regardless of the video player's technology.

Viewable impressions Impressions that have an actual chance to be seen by the visitor.
Visitor An individual (or browser) that accesses a website.
Weight

Indicates how the delivery of a creative is distributed relative to other creatives attached to the same booking (see Weight per creative).