Equativ favicon

Equativ

Industry: Ad Networks
Analyzed: 2026-04-22
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
0
/ 100
Known but Invisible

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
66
/ 100
Category-Strong

What the model believes about Equativ without web search.

LLM Authority?
0
/ 100
Absent

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
0
/ 100
Prompted-Recall-Only

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about Equativ from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
66/100
Category-Strong
Quality?
0.67
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.66
Top associations for Equativ
supply-side platform 3 smaller scale than leaders 2 privacy-conscious advertising 2 European strength 2 programmatic advertising tools 2 ad inventory optimization 2 selling ad inventory 2 difficult integrations 2 publisher monetization 1 publisher-focused ad tools 1 ad serving solutions 1 unclear pricing control 1 ad server solutions 1 digital advertising technology 1 publishers and media owners 1
Control prompt (category baseline)
buys and sells ad inventory 2 digital advertising intermediary 2 ad inventory marketplace 2 connects advertisers and publishers 2 connects advertisers with publishers 2 places ads across websites 2 ad placement across sites 1 placing ads across many apps 1 serves ads on apps 1 targets ads across sites 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows Equativ is firmly in the model's "ad network" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is Equativ known for?
Equativ is known for being an independent ad tech platform, especially for digital advertising solutions like ad serving, supply-side platform (SSP) capabilities, and header bidding.
Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is Equativ known for?
Equativ is known for its advertising technology, especially its supply-side platform (SSP) and ad monetization solutions for publishers and media owners.
Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
0/100
Absent
Recall mode (no web)?
0

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
0

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What are the best ad networks for news websites? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which ad networks work well for lifestyle blogs? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best ad networks for mobile apps? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which ad networks are best for gaming publishers? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best ad networks for sports content sites? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which ad networks are good for high-traffic websites? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What ad networks are best for beginners? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which ad networks are best for premium content publishers? #7 not mentioned
discovery What are the best ad networks for niche websites? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which ad networks are good for international traffic? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best ad networks for banner ads? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which ad networks are best for video content monetization? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What ad networks are best for local publishers? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which ad networks are best for content creators with websites? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best ad networks for affiliate-heavy sites? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which ad networks are best for CPA-based monetization? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best ad networks for auto blogs? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which ad networks are good for recipe websites? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best ad networks for e-commerce publishers? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which ad networks are best for privacy-focused publishers? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to premium ad network platforms? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison How do ad networks compare for small publishers versus large publishers? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best ad network alternatives for higher revenue? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which ad networks are better for video inventory than display inventory? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to direct ad sales for website monetization? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison How do header bidding solutions compare with traditional ad networks? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to managed ad network services? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which ad networks are better for native ads than standard display ads? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best ad network alternatives for niche content sites? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison How do premium ad networks compare with open marketplace ad networks? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I increase ad revenue with an ad network? not mentioned not mentioned
problem Why is my website ad revenue so low? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I monetize a website with display ads? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I get approved by an ad network? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I add ads to my website without hurting user experience? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I fix low fill rates on my ad inventory? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I monetize traffic from outside the United States? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I improve CPMs on my site? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I sell video ad inventory on my site? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I monetize a small blog with ads? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much do ad networks pay publishers? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the average CPM for ad networks? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are there free ad networks for websites? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What ad networks have no minimum traffic requirement? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which ad networks pay the most? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much does it cost to use an ad network? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What are the best ad networks with fast payouts? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which ad networks offer revenue share models? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What are the cheapest ad networks for publishers? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What are the best ad networks with a free account setup? not mentioned not mentioned
Sample responses
Prompt: Which ad networks are best for premium content publishers? · discovery · recall mode
For **premium content publishers**, the best ad networks are usually the ones with **direct premium demand, strong CPMs, and good ad quality controls**. Top options: - **Google Ad Manager** + **AdX** — best overall if you have meaningful traffic and want premium programmatic demand. - **Magnite** — strong for large publishers, especially video and display. - **Xandr** (Microsoft) — good premium demand and enterprise tools. - **OpenX** — strong SSP with solid premium advertiser relationships. - **PubMatic** — very good for premium publishers, especially header bidding and yield optimization. - **Equativ** (formerly Smart AdServer) — strong in Europe and for premium publishers. - **Ezoic** — better for mid-sized publishers who want easy optimization, but less “premium” than the above. - **Raptive** — excellent for established content creators/blog publishers with strong traffic in lifestyle, food, travel, etc. - **Media.net** — good contextual ads, often useful as a secondary network. - **CafeMedia** — strong for premium niche publishers. Best picks by publisher type: - **Largest premium publishers:** Google Ad Manager, Magnite, PubMatic, OpenX - **Mid-sized premium sites:** Raptive, CafeMedia, PubMatic - **Video-heavy publishers:** Magnite, Google Ad Manager, Xandr - **Non-US / Europe-heavy traffic:** Equativ, OpenX, PubMatic If you want, I can also give you a **best network stack by traffic size** or **by niche**.

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
0/100
Prompted-Recall-Only
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best ad networks for publishers? 0 0/5
Which ad networks are most popular right now? 10 0/5
What are the top ad network companies? 10 0/5
What are the best ad network options for websites? 0 0/5
Which ad networks are most recommended for display ads? 0 0/5
What are the best ad networks for monetizing a blog? 0 0/5
What ad networks do publishers use most? 170 0/5
Which ad networks are good for small websites? 0 0/5
What are the best ad networks for video ads? 10 0/5
What are the top programmatic ad networks? 0 0/5
Which ad networks work well for native ads? 1,300 0/5
What are the most reliable ad networks for publishers? 0 0/5
What are the best ad networks for online media sites? 0 0/5
Which ad network is best for website monetization? 0 0/5
What are the most common ad network platforms? 0 0/5
Sample recall responses

What to do next Recommendations for Equativ

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Enter the category conversation

Your Authority is low across category queries. Users asking about your category do not see you. Priority: get listed in "best of" and "top N" articles for your category on domains with strong training-data crawl presence.

+10 to +25 on Authority

Enter the model's competitive set

The model knows your brand when asked directly (LBA > 0) but never volunteers you in category queries. You are outside the model's go-to list. Co-mention density with established category leaders is the single biggest lever: get listed in "Top 10 X" articles alongside the brands the model currently names.

+10 to +30 on TOM over 12-18 months

Protect and reinforce your LBA

Your LBA is strong. Focus on maintaining authoritative coverage and ensuring new product launches get independent reviews within 12 months of release.

Maintain current LBA

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM: (LBA × Authority × TOM)^(1/3). Geometric mean is used so that any single weak metric pulls the overall score down, rather than being masked by strength elsewhere.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
50 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 22, 2026 at 7:13 PM

All 210 AI responses for Equativ

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 210 total responses across 72 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (7 prompts)

On a scale of 1-10, rate your familiarity with the brand "Equativ" in the ad network category. 1 = I've never heard of this brand 4 = I'm aware of the name but know little specific 7 = I know the brand well including its main products 10 = Deep, confident knowledge including specific features, differentiators, pricing tier, competitor positioning Return JSON: { "familiarity": <1-10 integer>, "justification": "<one sentence>" }
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 6, "justification": "I recognize Equativ as an ad tech platform (formerly Smart AdServer) and know its general role in programmatic advertising, but I’m not deeply familiar with its current product details or pricing." }
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 6, "justification": "I know Equativ as an ad tech/platform company (formerly Smart AdServer) with solid general awareness of its publisher-focused offerings, but not deep specifics on pricing or full product differentiation." }
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":7,"justification":"I know Equativ reasonably well as an ad tech/digital advertising platform (formerly Smart AdServer), including its core ad serving and monetization offerings, but not deep pricing or highly specific current positioning details."}
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 7, "justification": "I know Equativ reasonably well as an ad-tech/platform brand, including its core products and its evolution from Smart AdServer, but not in deep detail on pricing or current competitive nuances." }
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":7,"justification":"I know Equativ as an ad tech/ad server and SSP brand (formerly Smart AdServer) and am familiar with its core role and market positioning, but not deep specifics like current pricing or detailed product packaging."}
What is Equativ known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Equativ is known for being an independent ad tech platform, especially for digital advertising solutions like ad serving, supply-side platform (SSP) capabilities, and header bidding.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Equativ is known for its advertising technology, especially its supply-side platform (SSP) and ad monetization solutions for publishers and media owners.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Equativ is known for its digital advertising technology, especially its supply-side platform (SSP) and ad server solutions that help publishers and media owners manage, sell, and optimize ad inventory.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Equativ is known for its independent advertising technology platform, especially its ad serving and supply-side platform (SSP) solutions for publishers and advertisers.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Equativ is known for being an ad tech company focused on digital advertising monetization and programmatic advertising. It operates a sell-side platform (SSP) and provides tools for publishers, advertisers, and media owners to manage, optimize, and sell ad inventory across formats and channels.
What are Equativ's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Equativ’s main strengths are its strong independent ad-tech/SSP positioning, solid omnichannel capabilities (display, video, CTV, retail/media), good privacy-first and cookieless readiness, and a reputation for transparent, publisher-friendly monetization tools. It also benefits from being more flexible and less conflicted than some larger, vertically integrated competitors. Main weaknesses: it has less scale, brand recognition, and global buying demand than the biggest ad-tech platforms; integrations and service coverage can vary by market; and like most SSPs, its performance is tied to publisher inventory quality and overall ad-market conditions. It may also feel less “all-in-one” than larger platforms that bundle more media and data capabilities.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Equativ’s main strengths are: - Strong independent ad platform/SSP heritage, especially in programmatic monetization and curation. - Good reputation for privacy-safe, cookieless-ready solutions and European market strength. - Flexible tools for publishers, with solid support for header bidding, inventory management, and direct/indirect monetization. - Broad ad quality and brand-safety controls, plus supply-path optimization capabilities. - The merger of Smart and Sharethrough broadened its product set and footprint. Main weaknesses: - Smaller scale than the biggest ad-tech players, which can limit liquidity, data advantage, and buyer demand. - Less brand recognition globally compared with top-tier competitors like Google, Magnite, or The Trade Desk. - Integration complexity after mergers can create product and operational friction. - Like most SSPs, performance can be affected by market volatility, privacy changes, and publisher consolidation. - Some buyers and publishers may see it as stronger in certain regions/use cases than as a universal, end-to-end platform.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Equativ’s main strengths are: - Strong independent ad-tech positioning, especially in privacy-conscious advertising. - Good supply-side tooling: ad server, SSP, and curation capabilities. - Solid reputation in Europe and with premium publishers. - Flexible, modular platform that can fit different publisher and media-buying setups. Main weaknesses are: - Smaller scale than giants like Google, Amazon, Magnite, or The Trade Desk. - Less global reach and brand recognition outside Europe. - Can be more complex to evaluate because its offering spans multiple ad-tech categories. - Like most ad-tech vendors, it faces pressure from privacy changes, cookie loss, and intense competition.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Equativ’s main strengths are its ad-tech/SSP expertise, strong positioning in omnichannel programmatic advertising, and a privacy-focused approach that fits a cookieless market. It’s also known for flexibility and international reach, especially in Europe. Main weaknesses: it operates in a very competitive market, depends on advertising budgets that can be cyclical, and faces the usual ad-tech challenges around signal loss, regulation, and integration complexity. It also lacks the scale of the biggest global platforms.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Equativ’s main strengths are its independent ad tech position, strong expertise in omnichannel programmatic advertising (especially SSP/supply-side tools, curation, and curation/marketplace capabilities), and a reputation for privacy-minded, cookieless-ready solutions. It also benefits from a solid European footprint and a more neutral alternative to the biggest walled-garden platforms. Main weaknesses: it has much smaller scale and less brand recognition than Google, The Trade Desk, or Amazon; it can face pressure from margin squeeze and intense competition in ad tech; and its value depends on publisher and advertiser adoption, so growth can be uneven in a market that is highly consolidated and fast-changing.
Who should use Equativ? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Equativ is best for advertisers, agencies, publishers, and ad-tech teams that want a programmatic advertising platform for buying, selling, and optimizing digital inventory, especially if they need transparent, privacy-conscious media tools and support for open-web display/video/native campaigns. It may be less suitable for very small businesses with simple ad needs, teams that want an all-in-one consumer marketing tool rather than an ad-tech platform, or organizations that need heavy hands-on creative production/CRM features. If you want a basic self-serve social ads tool, Equativ is probably overkill.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Equativ is best for publishers, media owners, advertisers, and agencies that need programmatic ad tech, ad serving, yield management, and privacy-conscious monetization tools. It’s a good fit if you run digital inventory and want more control, transparency, and custom setup. You should probably avoid it if you’re a very small business with simple, low-volume advertising needs, or if you just want an easy plug-and-play solution with minimal setup and no dedicated ad ops team.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Equativ is best for advertisers, agencies, publishers, and media teams that want ad monetization, programmatic advertising, or supply-side platform tools—especially if they need omnichannel inventory, header bidding, and stronger control over brand safety and ad quality. It’s a good fit for organizations already operating at a medium to large digital-ad scale. It may be a poor fit for very small businesses, beginners who only need simple DIY ads, or teams that don’t run meaningful programmatic display/video/audio inventory. If you need a basic, low-cost advertising tool with minimal setup, Equativ may be more complex than necessary.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Equativ is best for publishers, media owners, agencies, and brands that need programmatic ad monetization, ad serving, and stronger control/transparency over inventory and audience targeting. It’s less suitable for very small businesses, non-technical teams, or anyone who just wants simple DIY marketing tools without programmatic ad ops resources. Also avoid it if you don’t have enough ad volume or budget to justify an enterprise-style ad tech platform.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Equativ is best for advertisers, agencies, publishers, and ad ops teams that need programmatic advertising tools, private marketplace access, ad serving, and monetization controls—especially if they want a more privacy-aware, transparent alternative to some larger ad tech stacks. It can also fit teams with enough budget and technical resources to manage a real ad-tech platform. It’s probably not a good fit for very small businesses, beginners who want a simple plug-and-play ad solution, or anyone looking for a cheap, self-serve tool with minimal setup. If you need ultra-fast onboarding, very limited reporting needs, or don’t run enough media volume to justify a full ad-tech partnership, you may want something simpler.
How does Equativ compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Equativ is generally seen as a mid-market independent ad-tech platform focused on SSP, ad serving, and curation. Compared with its main competitors: - The Trade Desk: much larger and stronger in demand-side buying; Equativ is more supply-side / publisher-oriented. - Google Ad Manager: Google has far more scale and bundled reach; Equativ differentiates with independence and less conflict of interest. - Magnite / PubMatic / Index Exchange: these are Equativ’s closest SSP competitors. Equativ is usually smaller, but often competes on flexibility, service, and curated marketplace tools. - Xandr (Microsoft): similar enterprise positioning, though Equativ is typically viewed as more focused on independent supply-side and European strength. In short, Equativ is not the biggest player, but it is competitive when publishers and media owners want an independent, privacy-conscious alternative to the largest ad platforms.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Equativ is generally seen as a mid-sized, independent SSP/ad server provider: strong on direct relationships, privacy-first identity, and omnichannel monetization, but smaller in scale than the biggest players. Compared with main competitors: - Magnite: usually has broader scale and stronger CTV/video leadership. Equativ is often seen as more agile and more focused on transparency and European strength. - PubMatic: similar independent SSP positioning, but PubMatic tends to have more global scale and stronger supply-side analytics/infrastructure. Equativ is competitive on product flexibility and curation. - OpenX: OpenX is also strong in quality and curation; Equativ competes well on European footprint and publisher relationships, while OpenX is often perceived as larger in auction dynamics and marketplace depth. - Google Ad Manager: Google dominates because of its ecosystem and publisher adoption. Equativ’s advantage is independence and less conflict-of-interest concerns. Bottom line: Equativ is a credible alternative to the largest SSPs, especially for publishers wanting independence, privacy alignment, and curated demand, but it usually trails the top competitors in scale and CTV reach.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Equativ is generally positioned as an independent, sell-side ad-tech platform, strongest in flexible monetization, curation, and omnichannel supply-path optimization. Compared with its main competitors: - Google Ad Manager: much larger ecosystem and default choice for many publishers, but less independent. Equativ is often seen as more neutral and customizable. - Magnite: broader scale and stronger TV/video footprint, especially in CTV. Equativ is usually smaller, but can be attractive for publishers wanting more hands-on service and flexibility. - PubMatic: very strong SSP at global scale with good efficiency and omnichannel reach. Equativ tends to compete on customization, curation, and European presence. - Index Exchange: known for premium publisher relationships and high-quality supply. Equativ is typically smaller, but can offer more tailored solutions. - Xandr/Microsoft (where relevant): strong enterprise and buyer-side integration. Equativ is more focused on independent publisher monetization. In short: Equativ is not usually the biggest player, but it competes well as a flexible, independent alternative to the larger SSPs, especially for publishers that value control, curation, and service.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Equativ is generally viewed as a mid-market, independent ad-tech platform that competes on flexibility and service rather than sheer scale. Compared with Google Ad Manager, Equativ is much smaller and lacks Google’s ecosystem dominance, but it can be more neutral for publishers who want less dependency on Google. Compared with Magnite, PubMatic, and Index Exchange, Equativ usually has less global scale and fewer network effects, but it can be simpler to work with and more customizable for certain publisher setups. Compared with Xandr/other large enterprise platforms, Equativ is typically less broad in product coverage, but often stronger in privacy-conscious, cookieless, and publisher-focused use cases. In short: Equativ is a credible independent alternative, best for publishers and media owners who value control, transparency, and tailored support over maximum reach and market power.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Equativ is generally seen as a strong independent ad-tech/SSP player, especially in Europe, with a reputation for privacy-friendly, publisher-focused monetization and good customer support. Compared with the biggest competitors: - Google Ad Manager: Equativ is smaller and less dominant, but more independent and often more flexible for publishers that want alternatives to Google’s ecosystem. - Magnite: Magnite is usually stronger at large-scale programmatic video/CTV and has broader U.S. market reach; Equativ tends to be more publisher-centric and strong in direct relationships, especially in Europe. - PubMatic: PubMatic is often viewed as larger and more established globally, with strong infrastructure and scale; Equativ is competitive on service, transparency, and privacy positioning. - Xandr/other legacy SSPs: Equativ often compares well on product modernization and independence, though it has less scale than the largest global platforms. Overall, Equativ’s main advantages are independence, publisher service, and European strength; its main tradeoff versus top competitors is smaller scale and less global footprint.
What do people typically complain about with Equativ?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain about Equativ’s platform being a bit complex to set up and use, with a learning curve for reporting and campaign management. Other common gripes are slow or inconsistent customer support, occasional UI/UX issues, and results that can vary depending on traffic and integrations.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain about Equativ’s platform being a bit complex to learn, with a less intuitive interface and reporting/dashboard quirks. Other common complaints are slow or inconsistent customer support, integration/setup hassles, and occasional concerns about transparency or discrepancies in campaign reporting and ad delivery.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain about Equativ in the same ways they do with many ad-tech platforms: implementation can be complex, reporting/debugging can feel opaque, and support or account management may be inconsistent. Some also mention performance issues like delayed reporting, difficult integrations, or limited transparency around fees and campaign delivery.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain about Equativ (the ad-tech platform) in a few recurring areas: support can feel slow or hard to reach, the platform/integration can be complex to set up, reporting and analytics may not feel as transparent or intuitive as expected, and some users mention occasional performance or trafficking issues. As with many ad tech tools, complaints often center more on usability and service than on the core product itself.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
People most often complain about Equativ in the same ways they do about many ad-tech platforms: support can feel slow, reporting/analytics can be hard to understand, setup and integrations can be a bit complex, and some users want more transparency or control over performance and pricing. In short, the usual complaints are about service responsiveness, usability, and visibility into results.
What is a typical ad network known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical ad network is known for connecting advertisers with publishers to buy and sell ad inventory, helping ads get placed across multiple websites or apps and often handling targeting, delivery, and reporting.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical ad network is known for connecting advertisers with websites or apps that have ad inventory, so ads can be bought, placed, and targeted across many publishers.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical ad network is known for connecting advertisers with publishers to buy and sell ad space, often by aggregating inventory and helping ads be targeted and served across multiple websites or apps.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical ad network is known for connecting advertisers with publishers to buy and sell ad inventory, helping ads be placed across websites, apps, or other digital media.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical ad network is known for connecting advertisers with publishers to buy and sell ad inventory, usually by aggregating unsold ad space and helping ads get placed across many websites or apps.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What are the best ad networks for news websites? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For news websites, the best ad networks are usually the ones with strong programmatic demand, good viewability, and support for editorial sites: 1. **Google Ad Manager + AdX** - Best overall for most news publishers. - Great control, strong demand, excellent reporting. 2. **Monumetric** - Good for mid-sized news sites. - Hands-on setup, solid CPMs, easy to work with. 3. **Raptive (formerly CafeMedia)** - Strong for larger content publishers. - Good RPMs, especially for high traffic in the U.S. 4. **Mediavine** - Excellent for quality news/content sites. - Best for sites with substantial traffic and strong engagement. 5. **Ezoic** - Good entry option for smaller or growing news sites. - Easy to start, lots of optimization tools. 6. **PubsHub / Ezoic's alternatives like Nitropay** - Useful if you want more direct ad optimization and faster pages. 7. **Sovrn** - Decent supplemental network, especially for additional fill. 8. **Taboola** and **Outbrain** - Best for content recommendation/native ads. - Common on news sites and can be a major revenue source. ### Best picks by site size - **Small news site:** Ezoic, Google AdSense/Ad Manager - **Mid-sized:** Monumetric, Sovrn, Taboola/Outbrain - **Large news publisher:** Google Ad Manager + AdX, Raptive, Mediavine If you want, I can also give you the **best ad stack for a news site** based on your traffic level and country mix.
retrieval Not mentioned
For a **news website**, my short list is: 1. **Google Ad Manager** — best as the core ad stack for most news publishers; it supports native, out-stream, video, custom creatives, reporting, and deal management. ([admanager.google.com](https://admanager.google.com/home/partner-solutions/news-publishing/)) 2. **Raptive** — strong if you have meaningful traffic and want a managed, premium setup; Raptive says it’s the world’s largest ad management platform for independent websites and has paid out $4B to publisher partners. ([raptive.com](https://raptive.com/newsroom/raptive-reaches-4-billion-paid-out-to-publishers-reinforcing-its-position-as-a-top-10-global-media-company/)) 3. **Mediavine** — good for publishers who want cleaner user experience plus ad management and enterprise-scale monetization. ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/)) 4. **Ezoic** — useful if you want data-driven optimization and first-party-data monetization tools. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/)) 5. **Monumetric** — solid full-service option, especially for smaller-to-mid sites; its programs start at 10k pageviews/month. ([monumetric.com](https://www.monumetric.com/)) 6. **Sovrn** — good if you want publisher tech + data + monetization in one stack. ([sovrn.com](https://www.sovrn.com/)) **Quick pick by site size:** - **Small/new news site:** Ezoic or Monumetric. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/)) - **Mid-size / growing:** Mediavine or Raptive. ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/)) - **Large news publisher:** Google Ad Manager + Raptive/Mediavine + direct sales. ([admanager.google.com](https://admanager.google.com/home/partner-solutions/news-publishing/)) If you want, I can turn this into a **top 3 recommendation based on your monthly pageviews**.
Which ad networks work well for lifestyle blogs? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For lifestyle blogs, these usually work best: - **Mediavine** — Great for established lifestyle, food, beauty, travel, and home blogs. Strong RPMs and easy management, but you need decent traffic. - **Raptive** — Excellent for bigger lifestyle publishers. Often strong earnings, especially for US-heavy audiences. - **Monumetric** — Good mid-tier option if you don’t meet Mediavine/Raptive thresholds yet. - **Ezoic** — Better for smaller or growing lifestyle blogs. More hands-on, but can work well with optimization. - **Journey by Mediavine** — A newer option for smaller creators; good if you’re not ready for full Mediavine. If your blog is very visual/lifestyle-focused, also consider: - **AdThrive** (now under **Raptive**) - **SheMedia** — Good for women’s lifestyle, parenting, and home content. If you tell me your monthly pageviews and niche (fashion, home, travel, etc.), I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options.
retrieval Not mentioned
For lifestyle blogs, these are usually the best bets: - **SHE Media** — especially strong for women’s/lifestyle content and creator-led sites. ([shemedia.com](https://www.shemedia.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Raptive** — good if you have original, brand-safe content and decent traffic; they explicitly say they work with lifestyle sites and review traffic/content quality. ([raptive.com](https://raptive.com/blog/applying-to-join-adthrive/?utm_source=openai)) - **Mediavine / Journey by Mediavine** — solid for premium content sites; Mediavine says it wants original, brand-safe content and a good reader experience, and Journey starts at **1K sessions**. ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/mediavine-requirements?utm_source=openai)) - **Ezoic** — useful for growing sites; Ezoic’s Incubator is for publishers under **250,000 monthly active users**, and their current monetization page says 250K+ users for standard service. ([support.ezoic.com](https://support.ezoic.com/kb/article/ezoic-incubator-program?utm_source=openai)) - **Monumetric Propel** — a middle-ground option; they say it’s for **10k–80k pageviews/month** and requires WordPress/Blogger plus US/UK/Canada/Australia-heavy traffic. ([monumetric.com](https://www.monumetric.com/propel-program/?utm_source=openai)) - **Google AdSense** — best as the easy baseline if you’re just starting out; Google’s policies emphasize compliant traffic and policy-safe content. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/adsense/answer/48182?utm_source=openai)) Quick pick: - **Under 10k pageviews/mo:** AdSense or Ezoic Incubator. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/adsense/answer/48182?utm_source=openai)) - **10k–80k:** Monumetric Propel or Ezoic. ([monumetric.com](https://www.monumetric.com/propel-program/?utm_source=openai)) - **50k+ and quality content:** Mediavine/Journey or Raptive. ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/mediavine-requirements?utm_source=openai)) - **Women’s/lifestyle-focused brand:** SHE Media. ([shemedia.com](https://www.shemedia.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to the **best 3 for your traffic level**.
What are the best ad networks for mobile apps? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
The best ad networks for mobile apps depend on your app type and traffic quality, but these are the top picks: ### Best overall - **Google AdMob** — biggest demand pool, easy setup, strong mediation support. - **AppLovin MAX** — excellent for monetization optimization, especially with in-app bidding. - **Unity LevelPlay (ironSource)** — strong for games and good mediation tools. ### Best for high eCPM / performance - **Meta Audience Network** — strong for certain geos and audiences, though availability can vary. - **Pangle** — often good eCPMs in gaming and APAC-heavy traffic. - **Liftoff Monetize** — solid performance for mobile apps, especially with quality inventory. ### Best for rewarded/video ads - **AdMob** - **AppLovin** - **Unity** - **Mintegral** ### Best mediation platforms - **AppLovin MAX** - **Google AdMob Mediation** - **Unity LevelPlay** ### Good if you want to start simple - **AdMob** is usually the easiest first choice. - Add **AppLovin MAX** or **LevelPlay** once you want to improve fill rate and revenue. ### Practical recommendation - **Games:** AppLovin MAX + Unity LevelPlay + AdMob - **Utility/content apps:** AdMob + AppLovin MAX - **APAC-heavy traffic:** Add Pangle and Mintegral If you want, I can also give you a **best ad network stack by app category** or **by country/geo**.
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If you want the **best setup for most mobile apps**, use a **mediation platform** and connect several networks rather than relying on one. The most common “core” choices are **Google AdMob**, **AppLovin MAX**, and **Unity LevelPlay**; all three are built to serve ads from multiple sources and optimize fill/revenue. ([developers.google.com](https://developers.google.com/admob/android/mediation?utm_source=openai)) **Good default stack** - **AdMob** — best general-purpose starter and strong for broad demand. ([developers.google.com](https://developers.google.com/admob/android/mediation?utm_source=openai)) - **AppLovin MAX** — especially strong for apps/games that want aggressive mediation and bidding. ([developers.applovin.com](https://developers.applovin.com/en/max/max-dashboard/networks/connect-networks/?utm_source=openai)) - **Unity LevelPlay** — solid for games and apps needing one-SDK mediation across multiple networks. ([docs.unity.com](https://docs.unity.com/en-us/grow/levelplay/platform/get-started/introduction?utm_source=openai)) **Networks to add as demand sources** - **Pangle** — useful if you want additional scale, especially outside the U.S.; it’s supported in major mediation stacks. ([ads.tiktok.com](https://ads.tiktok.com/business/es/inspiration/rocketgamestudio-pangle-IAA-VBO-case-study?utm_source=openai)) - **Mintegral** — another common extra source in mediation, supported by AdMob and AppLovin. ([developers.google.com](https://developers.google.com/admob/android/mediation/mintegral?utm_source=openai)) - **Liftoff Monetize** — worth testing, especially if rewarded/interstitial formats matter. ([developers.google.com](https://developers.google.com/admob/android/mediation/liftoff-monetize?utm_source=openai)) **My practical recommendation** - **Casual/non-game app:** AdMob + 1–2 extra networks. - **Game app:** AppLovin MAX or Unity LevelPlay + AdMob + Pangle + Mintegral + Liftoff Monetize. ([developers.google.com](https://developers.google.com/admob/android/mediation?utm_source=openai)) If you tell me your **app genre**, **top countries**, and **iOS vs Android split**, I can suggest the best exact ad stack.
Which ad networks are best for gaming publishers? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **gaming publishers**, the best ad networks usually depend on whether you run **mobile games**, **PC/console launchers**, or **web games**. The strongest options are: ### Top picks 1. **AppLovin (MAX + AppLovin Exchange)** - Excellent for mobile game monetization - Strong eCPMs, especially for rewarded video and interstitials - Great mediation platform 2. **Unity LevelPlay (formerly ironSource)** - One of the best for **mobile games** - Strong in-app game demand - Good mediation and rewarded ad performance 3. **Google AdMob** - Best “baseline” network for mobile games - Easy to integrate, reliable fill - Works well as part of a mediation stack 4. **Google Ad Manager** - Best for **web gaming publishers** - Good for direct deals, programmatic, and inventory control - Strong if you have scale 5. **PubMatic** - Good for larger publishers with premium traffic - Strong programmatic demand 6. **Magnite** - Better for scaled web publishers and video-heavy inventory - Good SSP for premium demand ### Good secondary options - **Mintegral** — strong for international mobile gaming traffic - **Liftoff Monetize** — solid mobile app monetization - **Digital Turbine / AdColony** — useful for mobile video inventory - **InMobi** — decent global mobile demand ### Best stack by publisher type - **Mobile games:** AppLovin + Unity LevelPlay + AdMob - **Web games:** Google Ad Manager + PubMatic + Magnite - **Hybrid/mobile-web:** AdMob or AppLovin for in-app, GAM for web ### Quick recommendation If you want the safest “best overall” choice for gaming: - **Mobile:** **AppLovin MAX** - **Web:** **Google Ad Manager** If you want, I can also give you a **best ad network list by region (US/EU/Asia)** or by **game genre** (casual, hyper-casual, midcore, etc.).
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For **mobile game publishers**, the strongest starting stack is usually: 1. **AppLovin MAX** — best if you want a mature **mediation** layer plus access to multiple demand sources in one place. AppLovin’s MAX docs list major partners like Google AdMob/Ad Manager, InMobi, Meta, and Pangle. ([developers.applovin.com](https://developers.applovin.com/en/max/unity/preparing-mediated-networks/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Unity LevelPlay** — a top choice for game studios that want a leading mediation platform with unified auction and support for rewarded, interstitial, banner, and native formats. Unity also positions LevelPlay as a way to maximize revenue while preserving player experience. ([unity.com](https://unity.com/products/levelplay?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Google AdMob** — especially strong as a core network and mediation source for mobile games; Google says AdMob mediation and bidding help maximize fill rate and revenue, and it specifically calls out gaming monetization use cases. ([admob.google.com](https://admob.google.com/home/games/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **InMobi** — a solid add-on network for in-app game monetization, with rewarded video, interstitial, and banner formats, plus mediation and audience bidding support. ([advertising.inmobi.com](https://advertising.inmobi.com/game-monetization?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Chartboost / Tapjoy-style offerwall demand** — useful if your game leans into rewarded engagement or hybrid monetization; Unity’s monetization pages highlight offerwall as an important format for some studios. ([unity.com](https://unity.com/solutions/app-monetization?utm_source=openai)) **Practical recommendation:** - If you’re **starting from scratch**: use **Unity LevelPlay or AppLovin MAX** as the mediation layer, then add **AdMob**, **Unity Ads**, **InMobi**, and other bidders/networks. ([unity.com](https://unity.com/products/levelplay?utm_source=openai)) - If you want the **simplest baseline**: start with **AdMob**. ([admob.google.com](https://admob.google.com/home/games/?utm_source=openai)) - If you’re optimizing for **highest ad revenue at scale**: test **MAX vs. LevelPlay** and keep whichever wins for your genres/geos. ([developers.applovin.com](https://developers.applovin.com/en/max/unity/preparing-mediated-networks/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to **mobile vs. web vs. PC/console** and give you a ranked list for your exact game type.
What are the best ad networks for sports content sites? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For sports content sites, the best ad networks usually are: 1. **Google Ad Manager + AdSense** - Best baseline choice - Great demand, strong fill rates, easy to start - Good if you want full control and are scaling 2. **Raptive** - Often one of the highest earners for established content sites - Strong for US/UK-heavy traffic - Best if you have solid monthly pageviews 3. **Mediavine** - Excellent for lifestyle/editorial sites, and works well for sports blogs/news - Good RPMs, easy setup, strong support - Best for sites with consistent traffic 4. **Ezoic** - Good for smaller or growing sports sites - Easy to get approved compared with premium networks - Useful if you want optimization tools and faster entry 5. **Monumetric** - Solid middle-ground network - Good support and decent monetization - Better if you want something more hands-on than AdSense 6. **Sovrn // Commerce + display** - Useful if your sports site also does product/merch/content monetization - Good for publishers with niche audiences 7. **PubMatic / OpenX / Magnite** - More advanced header-bidding demand sources - Better for larger sites using ad ops or GAM ### Best picks by site size - **Small sports site:** AdSense, Ezoic - **Growing site:** Monumetric, Mediavine - **Large established site:** Raptive, Google Ad Manager + header bidding ### If your audience is sports fans, also consider: - **FanDuel Affiliate** - **DraftKings Affiliate** - **BetMGM Affiliate** - **Fanatics Affiliate** - **Amazon Associates** for gear/merch content If you tell me your **monthly pageviews, top countries, and content type** (news, fantasy, betting, local sports, gear), I can suggest the best exact network mix.
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For sports content sites, the best options are usually: - **Raptive** — best for larger, high-quality editorial sports sites; it now has tiers starting at **25k monthly pageviews** for some creators, with more established programs for bigger sites. ([raptive.com](https://raptive.com/blog/opening-the-door-to-more-creators-who-meet-raptive-quality-standards/?utm_source=openai)) - **Mediavine** — strong for content-heavy sports sites with **original, evergreen content**; their classic Ad Management path has required **50,000 sessions/month**, and they now also have broader program tiers. ([help.mediavine.com](https://help.mediavine.com/mediavine-official?utm_source=openai)) - **Ezoic** — good if you’re growing and want AI-driven layout/ad testing; their Incubator is for sites under **250,000 monthly active users**. ([support.ezoic.com](https://support.ezoic.com/kb/article/ezoic-incubator-program?utm_source=openai)) - **Setupad** — a solid pick if you want header bidding / programmatic monetization and want a **Google Certified Publishing Partner**. ([setupad.com](https://setupad.com/about-us/?utm_source=openai)) - **Snigel** — good for premium programmatic monetization and ad-tech support, especially for sites that can use header bidding. ([snigel.com](https://snigel.com/blog/publisher-advertising-network?utm_source=openai)) - **NitroPay** — worth a look for performance-focused publishers; it emphasizes page speed and says it scans/filters ads for quality. ([nitropay.com](https://nitropay.com/publishers/?utm_source=openai)) **Best practical pick by site size:** - **<50k sessions/month:** Ezoic. ([support.ezoic.com](https://support.ezoic.com/kb/article/ezoic-incubator-program?utm_source=openai)) - **50k+ sessions/month:** Mediavine. ([help.mediavine.com](https://help.mediavine.com/mediavine-official?utm_source=openai)) - **100k+ pageviews/month and premium editorial sports content:** Raptive. ([help.raptive.com](https://help.raptive.com/hc/en-us/articles/360059153331-RPM-Guarantee-FAQs?utm_source=openai)) - **If you want more hands-on header bidding / AdX style monetization:** Setupad or Snigel. ([setupad.com](https://setupad.com/about-us/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **“best ad networks for sports sites by traffic level and GEO (US-only vs global)”** shortlist.
Which ad networks are good for high-traffic websites? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **high-traffic websites**, the best ad networks are usually: - **Google Ad Manager** – best for control, direct deals, and premium programmatic setup. - **Raptive** – strong for large content sites; often good RPMs. - **Mediavine** – great for established publishers with quality traffic. - **Ezoic** – flexible and easier to enter than premium networks; good for testing. - **Monumetric** – solid mid-to-high traffic option with hands-on support. - **Snigel** – good for publishers wanting premium ad optimization. - **Freestar** – strong for larger sites with custom monetization. If you want the simplest shortlist: 1. **Raptive** if you have a big content site 2. **Mediavine** if you meet their traffic/quality thresholds 3. **Google Ad Manager + a header bidding partner** if you want maximum control 4. **Ezoic** if you want easier entry and optimization If you tell me your **monthly pageviews**, **niche**, and **country mix**, I can suggest the best one.
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For **high-traffic websites**, the strongest options are usually: - **Raptive** — a premium managed network for large publishers; it says its old benchmark was **100,000 monthly pageviews**, and it’s built for high-quality, brand-safe inventory. ([raptive.com](https://raptive.com/blog/opening-the-door-to-more-creators-who-meet-raptive-quality-standards/?utm_source=openai)) - **Mediavine** — a premium ad-management network; current requirements are **$5,000+ annual ad revenue**, with **50,000 monthly sessions** still used until the new January 2026 program rollout, and it emphasizes original content and clean traffic. ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/mediavine-requirements?utm_source=openai)) - **Google Ad Manager** — best if you want more control, direct deals, header bidding, and programmatic demand at scale; Google positions it as a full ad-management platform for publishers and shows it working with very large sites. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/admanager/?utm_source=openai)) - **Ezoic** — good if you’re high-traffic but not quite at the top premium tier; it targets publishers with quality traffic and offers ad monetization and revenue optimization tools. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/ezoic-access-now/ad-policy-requirements/?utm_source=openai)) - **Google AdSense** — solid baseline, but usually not the best choice once you’re truly high-traffic; Google’s policies are stricter than its simplicity suggests, and Ad Manager is generally the more scalable Google option. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/adsense/answer/48182?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule of thumb:** - **50k+ sessions/month:** Mediavine - **100k+ pageviews/month:** Raptive - **Very large / needs control:** Google Ad Manager - **Growing into premium:** Ezoic If you want, I can also give you a **best network by traffic level, niche, and country split**.
What ad networks are best for beginners? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For beginners, the easiest ad networks to start with are: 1. **Google AdSense** - Best overall starter network - Easy setup, widely supported, good for new sites - Works well even with low traffic 2. **Ezoic** - Good next step after AdSense - Better optimization potential - Usually better once you have some traffic and content 3. **Media.net** - Strong for content sites, especially finance/tech/business - Simple to test, though usually not as beginner-friendly as AdSense 4. **Amazon Publisher Services / Amazon Native Shopping Ads** - Good if your site reviews products or recommends shopping items - Better for affiliate-style content than general display ads 5. **PropellerAds** - Easier approval than premium networks - Good for testing, but often lower-quality ads than AdSense/Ezoic **Best choice for most beginners:** **Google AdSense** **Best upgrade later:** **Ezoic** or **Mediavine** (once you have more traffic) If you want, I can also give you the **best ad network by website type** (blog, news, niche site, forum, etc.).
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If you’re starting a website/blog, the usual beginner-friendly picks are: - **Google AdSense** — easiest first stop for most beginners because it’s the default entry-level network. - **Media.net** — good for content sites, especially if your traffic is topic-focused and reader intent matters. - **Journey by Mediavine** — a strong “next step” for newer sites; Mediavine says Journey starts at **1K sessions**. ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/mediavine-requirements/?utm_source=openai)) - **Adsterra** — a self-serve option that’s simple to set up for websites, blogs, and social traffic. ([adsterra.com](https://adsterra.com/cpanetwork?utm_source=openai)) - **Ezoic** — better once you have some traction; Ezoic’s main platform is now tied to **250,000 monthly users**, with an **Incubator** path for smaller sites. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/incubator?utm_source=openai)) **Best simple path:** 1. Start with **AdSense** 2. Add **Media.net** or **Adsterra** if approved/fit 3. Move up to **Journey by Mediavine** 4. Later try **Mediavine** or **Ezoic** when traffic grows. ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/mediavine-requirements/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you the **best ad network by site type** (blog, news, niche, adult, games, YouTube, etc.).
Which ad networks are best for premium content publishers? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
For **premium content publishers**, the best ad networks are usually the ones with **direct premium demand, strong CPMs, and good ad quality controls**. Top options: - **Google Ad Manager** + **AdX** — best overall if you have meaningful traffic and want premium programmatic demand. - **Magnite** — strong for large publishers, especially video and display. - **Xandr** (Microsoft) — good premium demand and enterprise tools. - **OpenX** — strong SSP with solid premium advertiser relationships. - **PubMatic** — very good for premium publishers, especially header bidding and yield optimization. - **Equativ** (formerly Smart AdServer) — strong in Europe and for premium publishers. - **Ezoic** — better for mid-sized publishers who want easy optimization, but less “premium” than the above. - **Raptive** — excellent for established content creators/blog publishers with strong traffic in lifestyle, food, travel, etc. - **Media.net** — good contextual ads, often useful as a secondary network. - **CafeMedia** — strong for premium niche publishers. Best picks by publisher type: - **Largest premium publishers:** Google Ad Manager, Magnite, PubMatic, OpenX - **Mid-sized premium sites:** Raptive, CafeMedia, PubMatic - **Video-heavy publishers:** Magnite, Google Ad Manager, Xandr - **Non-US / Europe-heavy traffic:** Equativ, OpenX, PubMatic If you want, I can also give you a **best network stack by traffic size** or **by niche**.
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For **premium content publishers**, the best options usually aren’t “one network,” but a stack: - **Raptive** — strongest fit for established premium publishers wanting full-service monetization and higher RPM optimization. ([raptive.com](https://raptive.com/enterprise/?utm_source=openai)) - **Mediavine** — great for high-quality content sites that want managed ad ops, strong support, and a premium demand stack; it now also has **Journey** for growing sites. ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/ad-management/?utm_source=openai)) - **Google Ad Manager** — best for control and scaling multiple demand sources; Google also points publishers to Certified Publishing Partners for help. ([google.com](https://www.google.com/ads/publisher/?utm_source=openai)) - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** — strong for premium programmatic demand, especially if you have larger scale, video, or CTV inventory. ([aps.amazon.com](https://aps.amazon.com/aps/unified-ad-marketplace/?utm_source=openai)) - **Index Exchange / PubMatic / OpenX** — best as premium SSPs for publishers selling high-quality inventory through programmatic auctions and curated deals. ([indexexchange.com](https://www.indexexchange.com/press/press-releases/mediavine-launches-curated-audiences-index-marketplaces/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall managed network:** Raptive - **Best for many content publishers:** Mediavine - **Best for maximum control:** Google Ad Manager - **Best premium SSP layer:** Index Exchange + PubMatic + OpenX - **Best for large-scale premium/video:** APS If you want, I can narrow this down by **your traffic level, niche, and country mix**.
What are the best ad networks for niche websites? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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For niche websites, the best ad networks usually depend on traffic level, audience geography, and content type. Top picks: - **Google AdSense** — best for beginners, easiest approval, broad demand. - **Ezoic** — great for small-to-mid sites that want higher RPMs and testing tools. - **Mediavine** — one of the best for content sites with strong US traffic, usually requires ~50k sessions/month. - **Raptive (formerly AdThrive)** — excellent for larger lifestyle/content sites, premium demand, usually ~100k pageviews/month. - **Monumetric** — good middle ground for growing niche sites, more hands-on than AdSense. - **NitroPay** — strong for gaming, tech, and enthusiast sites; also good for direct-sold ads. - **Setupad** — solid header bidding/network option for international traffic. - **BuySellAds** — best if your niche audience is valuable and you want direct sponsorships. - **Freestar** — good for publishers with decent traffic wanting managed monetization. Best by situation: - **New/small site:** AdSense - **Growing niche site:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **High-traffic content site:** Mediavine or Raptive - **Specialized audience / direct deals:** BuySellAds or Freestar If you tell me your niche, monthly pageviews, and main traffic countries, I can recommend the best 2–3 networks for your site.
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For **niche websites**, the best ad network depends mostly on your **topic + traffic level**: - **Best starter:** **Google AdSense** — easiest to get going, but usually lower RPMs. Google requires compliance with its publisher policies and won’t serve ads on thin or low-value pages. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/adsense/answer/48182?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for smaller content sites:** **Monumetric Propel** — geared toward emerging publishers; it lists **10k–80k pageviews/month** and **50% US/UK/CA/AU traffic**. ([monumetric.com](https://www.monumetric.com/propel-program/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best mid-tier premium network:** **Raptive** — now open to sites with **25,000+ monthly pageviews** (plus other quality/traffic-country requirements). ([help.raptive.com](https://help.raptive.com/hc/en-us/articles/360032840891-How-do-I-apply-to-AdThrive-?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for tech/dev niches:** **EthicalAds** and **Carbon Ads** — both are built around highly targeted developer/design audiences rather than generic display ads. ([ethicalads.io](https://www.ethicalads.io/our-audience/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best contextual alternative:** **Media.net** — strong if your site has keyword-rich content and you want contextual/native ads. ([media.net](https://www.media.net/ads/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best if you have very high traffic:** **Ezoic** can work well, but its current requirements are much higher for its main platform. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/incubator?utm_source=openai)) **Quick picks by niche:** - **Developer / coding / docs:** EthicalAds, Carbon Ads. ([ethicalads.io](https://www.ethicalads.io/our-audience/?utm_source=openai)) - **Food / lifestyle / travel / parenting:** Raptive, Monumetric. ([help.raptive.com](https://help.raptive.com/hc/en-us/articles/360032840891-How-do-I-apply-to-AdThrive-?utm_source=openai)) - **General informational blog:** AdSense first, then Media.net or Monumetric. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/adsense/answer/48182?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **ranked list for your exact niche and traffic level**.
Which ad networks are good for international traffic? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Good options for **international traffic**: - **Google AdSense** — best overall; works well globally and is the easiest starting point. - **Ezoic** — strong for mixed international traffic, especially if you have decent content volume. - **Mediavine** — excellent RPMs, but best for mostly English-speaking traffic and higher volume. - **Raptive** — premium option for large publishers with strong US/UK/CA/AU traffic. - **Adsterra** — good for broad international traffic, including Tier 2/3 countries. - **PropellerAds** — solid for global traffic, especially if you have lots of non-US visitors. - **MGID** — good for content sites and international audiences. - **Monetag** — useful for global and Tier 2/3 traffic, including pop/redirect formats. - **Setupad** — strong header bidding network for international publishers. - **Taboola** / **Outbrain** — best if you have a content/news site and good traffic volume. Quick rule: - **High-quality content traffic**: AdSense, Ezoic, Mediavine, Raptive - **Mixed/global or Tier 2/3 traffic**: Adsterra, PropellerAds, Monetag, MGID If you want, I can rank these by **RPM**, **approval ease**, or **best for low-traffic sites**.
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Good options for **international traffic**: - **Google AdSense** — best default if you want broad demand and easy setup. It’s widely used globally, though it isn’t available in some sanctioned territories. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/adsense/answer/6167308?hl=en&utm_source=openai)) - **Ezoic** — strong for mixed global traffic if you want ad optimization plus site-level revenue testing. Ezoic says it works with publishers “all over the world.” ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **MGID** — a good fit for international/native traffic; it says it reaches **200+ countries** and supports **70+ languages**. ([mgid.com](https://www.mgid.com/advertisers?utm_source=openai)) - **Adsterra** — strong for broad worldwide traffic, especially if you monetize with pop, push, or social bar formats; it says it covers **248 geos**. ([adsterra.com](https://adsterra.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **PropellerAds** — another strong international option, especially for push/pop/in-page formats; it says it covers **195+ geos**. ([propellerads.com](https://propellerads.com/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall:** AdSense + Ezoic - **Best for Tier 2/3 / global mixed traffic:** Adsterra or PropellerAds - **Best for native placements:** MGID If you want, I can rank these for your exact traffic mix (country split, niche, and monthly sessions).
What are the best ad networks for banner ads? discovery 260/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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For **banner ads on websites**, the best ad networks depend on your traffic and niche. Top picks: ### Best overall - **Google AdSense** — easiest to start with, huge demand, strong fill rates. - **Google Ad Manager** — best if you want more control and run multiple demand sources. ### Best for higher earnings - **Mediavine** — excellent RPMs, but usually requires ~50k sessions/month. - **Raptive (formerly AdThrive)** — premium network, great payouts, stricter approval. - **Ezoic** — good for mid-sized sites; uses AI to test layouts and placements. ### Best alternatives - **NitroPay** — good for gaming, news, and entertainment sites. - **Monumetric** — solid support and setup help for growing publishers. - **Media.net** — strong contextual ads, especially for content-heavy sites. ### If you want direct/managed programmatic - **Index Exchange** - **OpenX** - **PubMatic** - **Magnite** ### Quick recommendation - **New site:** AdSense - **Growing site:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **Established traffic:** Mediavine or Raptive - **Need full control:** Google Ad Manager + OpenX/Index Exchange/PubMatic If you want, I can also rank these by **earnings**, **ease of approval**, or **best for low-traffic sites**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **banner ads on websites**, the best choices usually are: - **Google AdSense** — best for beginners and smaller sites; easiest to start, and Google explicitly recommends standard banner placements like 728×90 and sidebar skyscrapers. ([adsense.google.com](https://adsense.google.com/intl/en_in/start/resources/best-format-your-site-for-adsense/?utm_source=openai)) - **Ezoic** — good for sites that want AI-driven ad testing and optimization, especially when you’re beyond basic AdSense setup. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/ezoic-ads/?utm_source=openai)) - **Mediavine** — strong premium option for established publishers; it requires at least **$5,000 in annual ad revenue** (or its lower-tier Journey option starts at **1K sessions**). ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/mediavine-requirements/?utm_source=openai)) - **Raptive** — another premium publisher network; Raptive says publishers generally don’t need additional ad networks because it manages monetization across the inventory. ([help.raptive.com](https://help.raptive.com/hc/en-us/articles/204620139-Does-Raptive-recommend-new-ad-networks-for-me?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **New / low traffic:** AdSense - **Growing site:** Ezoic - **Established content site:** Mediavine or Raptive If you want, I can also give you the **best banner ad networks by traffic level, niche, and payout model**.
Which ad networks are best for video content monetization? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best video ad networks depend on your traffic size and content type, but these are strong options: - **Google AdSense / Google Ad Manager** — best general starter option; huge demand, easy setup. - **Teads** — strong for premium video and outstream ads. - **SpringServe** — good for publishers with direct video inventory and more control. - **Primis** — popular for video recommendation and monetization widgets. - **Monumetric** — good for mid-sized publishers who want managed monetization. - **Ezoic** — solid for smaller sites wanting optimization across ad formats. - **Mediavine** — excellent RPMs, but usually requires higher traffic. - **Raptive (formerly AdThrive)** — top-tier for premium content sites with large traffic. - **ExoClick** — broad demand, often used for more flexible or niche content. - **PubMatic** / **Magnite** — strong SSPs for larger publishers and programmatic video. If you want the simplest recommendation: - **Small site:** AdSense + Ezoic - **Growing publisher:** Monumetric or Primis - **Large premium site:** Mediavine or Raptive - **Advanced programmatic video:** SpringServe, Magnite, or PubMatic If you tell me your platform (website, YouTube, app, OTT) and monthly traffic, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.
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Best options depend on your setup: - **Best overall control/scaling:** **Google Ad Manager**. It’s the strongest choice if you have your own video inventory and want programmatic, direct deals, and flexible video formats. ([admanager.google.com](https://admanager.google.com/home/capabilities/video/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best managed partner for independent publishers:** **Raptive**. It’s a full-service ad management platform for publishers and includes a custom video player monetized through its stack. ([raptive.com](https://raptive.com/newsroom/raptive-reaches-4-billion-paid-out-to-publishers-reinforcing-its-position-as-a-top-10-global-media-company/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for growing content sites:** **Mediavine**. It offers a managed ad platform, and its official program includes a Universal Player and other publisher monetization tools. ([help.mediavine.com](https://help.mediavine.com/mediavine-official?utm_source=openai)) - **Best dedicated video platform:** **EX.CO** or **Aniview**. Both are built around publisher video monetization; EX.CO emphasizes a monetization-first online video platform, while Aniview focuses on video ad serving and marketplace monetization. ([ex.co](https://ex.co/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best entry-level/basic option:** **Google AdSense** for simple video monetization, but it’s generally less powerful than Ad Manager for serious video inventory. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/adsense/answer/1705822?hl=en&utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - Small site / easy setup: **AdSense** - Serious publisher with your own player: **Google Ad Manager** - Hands-off managed monetization: **Raptive** or **Mediavine** - Video-first media business: **EX.CO** or **Aniview** ([admanager.google.com](https://admanager.google.com/home/capabilities/video/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can rank these for your specific site type (YouTube, embedded video on a website, app, or CTV).
What ad networks are best for local publishers? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **local publishers**, the best ad networks are usually the ones that can fill **small/geo-targeted inventory** without killing CPMs. ### Best options 1. **Google Ad Manager + Google AdSense** - Best starting point for most local sites. - Easy setup, strong fill, good for display and programmatic. 2. **Media.net** - Good contextual ads, often works well for news/local content. - Solid backup if AdSense fill is weak. 3. **Ezoic** - Good for publishers with decent traffic who want optimization. - Often improves yield through layout/testing. 4. **Monumetric** - Better for mid-sized local publishers. - More hands-on support than AdSense/Ezoic. 5. **Mediavine** - Best if you have strong traffic and mostly content-driven local publishing. - Usually better RPMs, but higher traffic requirements. 6. **Raptive (AdThrive)** - Great for established publishers with substantial traffic. - Strong monetization, premium demand. ### For local/direct advertiser sales If you have local businesses advertising directly, pair the above with: - **Google Ad Manager** for trafficking and reporting - **BuySellAds** for selling remnant or direct placements ### Best simple stack - **Small local site:** Google AdSense + Media.net - **Growing local publisher:** Google Ad Manager + Ezoic or Monumetric - **Large local publisher:** Google Ad Manager + Mediavine or Raptive If you tell me your **monthly pageviews** and **country/region**, I can recommend the best 2–3 networks for your situation.
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For most **local publishers**, the best setup is usually a **stack**, not one network: 1. **Google Ad Manager + AdSense** — best starting point if you want broad demand and simple operations. Google says AdSense is best for publishers who want more automation and have a small ad team, while Ad Manager is the stronger ad server when you’re ready to manage more demand sources. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/admanager/answer/9234653?hl=en&utm_source=openai)) 2. **Freestar** — a strong choice for local news and community sites that want a managed monetization partner. Freestar explicitly positions itself around header bidding, private marketplace deals, unified analytics, and direct-deal support for publishers, including news sites. ([direct.freestar.com](https://direct.freestar.com/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Raptive** — better for established local publishers with meaningful traffic and premium inventory. Raptive says it’s a large ad management platform for independent websites and offers advanced monetization with diversified demand. ([raptive.com](https://raptive.com/newsroom/raptive-reaches-4-billion-paid-out-to-publishers-reinforcing-its-position-as-a-top-10-global-media-company/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Media.net** — useful as an additional contextual demand source, especially if you want another major network beyond Google. ([media.net](https://www.media.net/press/pressfbpartnership?utm_source=openai)) **My practical recommendation:** - **Small/local startup:** AdSense + Ad Manager. - **Growing local news site:** Ad Manager + Freestar. - **Bigger premium local brand:** Ad Manager + Raptive. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/admanager/answer/9234653?hl=en&utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **best RPM**, **easiest setup**, or **best for local news specifically**.
Which ad networks are best for content creators with websites? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For most content creators with websites, the best ad networks are: 1. **Google AdSense** - Best for: beginners / low traffic - Easy approval, simple setup, broad advertiser demand - Good starting point before moving to higher-paying networks 2. **Ezoic** - Best for: growing sites with decent traffic - Uses AI to optimize ad placement and revenue - Often a step up from AdSense 3. **Mediavine** - Best for: established content sites - Strong RPMs, good support, creator-friendly - Usually requires around **50k monthly sessions** 4. **Raptive** - Best for: high-traffic publishers and creators - Premium network, strong monetization, hands-on support - Often best for larger sites 5. **Monumetric** - Best for: mid-sized websites - Easier to qualify for than Mediavine/Raptive - Good if you want managed ads without huge traffic ### Quick pick: - **New site:** Google AdSense - **Growing site:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **Large site:** Mediavine or Raptive If you want, I can also recommend the **best network based on your monthly traffic, niche, and country**.
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It depends on your traffic and niche, but these are the usual best picks for website creators: - **Google AdSense** — best starter option; easy to add and works for most sites. ([adsense.google.com](https://adsense.google.com/intl/en_in/start/resources/platforms/)) - **Journey by Mediavine** — best for growing sites; Mediavine says it starts at **1K sessions**. ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/mediavine-requirements/)) - **Mediavine** — best premium option once you’re bigger; current guidance is **$5,000+ annual ad revenue**. ([help.mediavine.com](https://help.mediavine.com/mediavine-official)) - **Raptive** — strong premium network for higher traffic sites; their minimum is **25,000 pageviews/month**. ([help.raptive.com](https://help.raptive.com/hc/en-us/articles/360032840891-How-do-I-apply-to-AdThrive-)) - **Monumetric Propel** — solid mid-tier choice; requires **10K–80K pageviews/month** and is aimed at emerging publishers. ([monumetric.com](https://www.monumetric.com/propel-program/)) - **Ezoic** — good if you want ad optimization and more flexibility; it’s a common middle-ground option for publishers. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/ezoic-access-now/ad-policy-requirements/?utm_source=openai)) - **Carbon Ads** — best for **tech/design/developer** sites; it’s a curated network for those audiences. ([carbonads.net](https://www.carbonads.net/join)) Quick rule of thumb: - **Under ~1K sessions:** AdSense - **1K–50K sessions:** Journey / Ezoic / Monumetric - **50K+ sessions:** Mediavine - **25K+ pageviews with premium audience:** Raptive If you want, I can narrow this down to the **best ad network for your exact site type** (blog, news, tech, food, finance, etc.).
What are the best ad networks for affiliate-heavy sites? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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For affiliate-heavy sites, the best ad networks are usually the ones that offer **good RPMs without wrecking UX**. ### Best options 1. **Raptive** Best overall for established content sites. Strong CPMs, good support, and generally solid for affiliate-heavy pages. 2. **Mediavine** Great for lifestyle, review, and niche content sites. Usually a top choice if you want strong earnings with lighter ad load. 3. **Ezoic** Best for smaller or growing sites. Easier to get into than Raptive/Mediavine, but performance can be more variable. 4. **Monumetric** Good middle-ground option. Often better than basic self-serve ads, with decent control over layout. 5. **NitroPay** Worth considering if you want more premium monetization and cleaner UX. Good for publishers with decent traffic quality. 6. **Snigel** Strong for premium programmatic ads, especially if you want a more managed, hands-off setup. ### Best pick by site type - **High traffic, strong content**: Raptive or Mediavine - **Smaller site**: Ezoic - **Need more control**: Monumetric or NitroPay - **Premium managed programmatic**: Snigel ### Important for affiliate-heavy sites Avoid networks that: - overload pages with ads, - slow load time, - interfere with affiliate links/buttons. If your site is heavily affiliate-driven, **Mediavine and Raptive** are usually the safest bets. If you want, I can also give you a **traffic-based recommendation** (e.g. under 50k sessions/month, 50k–100k, 100k+) or a **best network by niche**.
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For **affiliate-heavy sites**, the best ad networks are usually the ones that **maximize RPM without wrecking UX**, since too many ads can hurt clicks on affiliate links. **Best overall:** **Raptive** — strongest fit for established review/comparison sites with mostly original, long-form content. Raptive now says its minimum is **25,000 monthly pageviews**, with extra geo/quality requirements depending on traffic level. ([help.raptive.com](https://help.raptive.com/hc/en-us/articles/360032840891-How-do-I-apply-to-Raptive?utm_source=openai)) **Best balance of revenue + UX:** **Mediavine** — a very common choice for affiliate publishers because it’s designed around page-speed and reader experience. Mediavine’s core ad management still requires **50,000 sessions/month**, while **Journey by Mediavine** starts around **10,000 monthly sessions**. ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/mediavine-application-process-ga4/?utm_source=openai)) **Best for smaller growing sites:** **Monumetric Propel** — it targets sites with **10k–80k pageviews/month**, requires **50% US/UK/CA/AU traffic**, and charges a **$99 one-time implementation fee**. ([monumetric.com](https://www.monumetric.com/propel-program/?utm_source=openai)) **Best if you want to test/adapt aggressively:** **Ezoic** — but it’s less “plug and play” now. Ezoic’s current docs say its standard service tier requires **250,000 monthly users**, with a selective **Incubator** for smaller sites. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/incubator?utm_source=openai)) **Simple ranking for affiliate sites:** 1. **Raptive** 2. **Mediavine** 3. **Monumetric** 4. **Ezoic** If you want, I can also give you: - the **best network by traffic level**, or - a **“best ad strategy for affiliate sites”** (ads vs affiliate links vs email capture).
Which ad networks are best for CPA-based monetization? discovery 140/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **CPA-based monetization**, the best networks are usually **affiliate/CPA networks** rather than traditional display ad networks. Top picks: - **MaxBounty** — strong all-around CPA network, good for beginners and pros - **Perform[cb]** — excellent for lead gen and high-quality offers - **ClickDealer** — solid global traffic coverage, lots of verticals - **AdCombo** — great for international / nutra / COD offers - **CrakRevenue** — very strong in adult and mainstream CPA - **Mobidea** — good for mobile traffic and international geos - **Admitad** — broad marketplace, good if you want many advertiser options - **CJ Affiliate** / **Impact** — better for brands and CPS/CPA-style affiliate programs If you want the **best by traffic type**: - **Search / high-intent traffic:** MaxBounty, Perform[cb] - **Mobile traffic:** Mobidea, ClickDealer - **International / tier-2 geo traffic:** AdCombo, ClickDealer - **Adult:** CrakRevenue If you mean **traditional ad networks with CPA-style optimization**, look at: - **Google Ads** / **Meta Ads** for buying traffic - **PropellerAds** / **RichAds** for push/pop traffic feeding CPA offers If you tell me your **traffic source, GEOs, and niche**, I can narrow it to the best 3 networks for your case.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **CPA-based monetization**, the best options usually depend on your traffic type: - **CPAlead** — best for **content lockers, offerwalls, rewarded traffic, mobile/app traffic, and social traffic**. It offers CPA/CPI/CPC campaigns, daily payouts, and publisher tools like lockers and APIs. ([cpalead.com](https://www.cpalead.com/)) - **Perform[cb]** — a strong **mainstream performance marketing / CPA** network, especially if you want a more established, brand-style network. The company says it focuses on cost-per-action and has been named a top CPA network. ([performcb.com](https://www.performcb.com/news/clickbooth-awarded-top-cpa-network-honors-for-third-consecutive-year-industry-best-campaign-management-tools-and-service-cited-by-20000-advertiser-and-publisher-partners/)) - **MaxBounty** — a long-running **general-purpose CPA network** that has repeatedly been ranked #1 in industry surveys. Good if you want broad offer variety. ([plus.maxbounty.com](https://plus.maxbounty.com/maxbounty-ranked-top-cpa-network-offervault/)) - **CrakRevenue** — best if you work in **adult, dating, cam, gaming, or OnlyFans-model verticals**. Their site highlights those verticals explicitly. ([crakrevenue.com](https://www.crakrevenue.com/fr/)) **My short recommendation:** - **Best overall:** Perform[cb] or MaxBounty - **Best for content lockers/rewarded traffic:** CPAlead - **Best for adult/dating:** CrakRevenue If you want, I can also rank the best CPA networks by **traffic type** (SEO, PPC, push, social, app installs, adult, etc.).
What are the best ad networks for auto blogs? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For auto blogs, the best ad networks are usually: 1. **Mediavine** — best overall - Great RPMs, solid support, good UX - Best if you have **50k+ sessions/month** 2. **Raptive** (formerly AdThrive) — premium high-traffic option - Strong for large content sites - Best if you have **100k+ pageviews/month** and mostly US traffic 3. **Ezoic** — best for growing sites - Easier to get into than Mediavine/Raptive - Good if you’re still scaling and want to test ad layouts 4. **Monumetric** — good mid-tier choice - Friendly for smaller publishers than the big premium networks - Often a nice step up from AdSense 5. **Google AdSense** — easiest starter network - Lowest barrier to entry - Good until you qualify for a better network 6. **Sovrn //Commerce + display** - Useful if your auto blog has product reviews and shopping intent - Good supplement, not usually the main network **Best pick by size:** - **New/small auto blog:** Google AdSense - **Growing blog:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **Established blog:** Mediavine - **Large premium site:** Raptive If you want, I can also give you the **best ad network based on your traffic level and country mix**.
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For an **auto blog**, the best ad network usually depends on your traffic and content quality: - **Google AdSense** — best starting point for small/newer sites. It’s the easiest to get running, but it’s usually the lowest-paying option. Google’s policies are strict about traffic quality and content. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/adsense/answer/48182?utm_source=openai)) - **Ezoic** — strong next step for growing blogs. Ezoic says it works with informational, content-rich sites and has an Incubator path for sites under 250k monthly active users. ([support.ezoic.com](https://support.ezoic.com/kb/article/ezoic-incubator-program?utm_source=openai)) - **Monumetric** — good mid-tier choice. Their Propel program is aimed at sites with about **10k–80k pageviews/month** and requires **50%+ traffic from the US/UK/Canada/Australia**. ([monumetric.com](https://www.monumetric.com/propel-program/?utm_source=openai)) - **Mediavine** — excellent if you have established traffic. Mediavine’s current minimum is **50,000 sessions/month**, and it now also has a lower-entry path starting at **$5,000 annual ad revenue** via Mediavine Official/Journey. ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/mediavine-application-process-ga4/?utm_source=openai)) - **Raptive** — another top premium option. Raptive’s current minimum is **25,000 monthly pageviews**, with extra quality and geo-traffic requirements. ([help.raptive.com](https://help.raptive.com/hc/en-us/articles/360032840891-How-do-I-apply-to-AdThrive-?utm_source=openai)) **My practical pick for auto blogs:** 1. **Under 10k pageviews/month:** AdSense 2. **10k–50k:** Ezoic or Monumetric 3. **50k+:** Mediavine or Raptive If you want, I can also give you a **best ad network recommendation based on your monthly traffic**.
Which ad networks are good for recipe websites? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For recipe websites, the best ad networks are usually: - **Raptive** (formerly AdThrive) — best for established food sites with strong traffic; great RPMs and premium advertisers. - **Mediavine** — excellent for mid-to-large recipe blogs; strong performance and easy to manage. - **Ezoic** — good if you’re smaller or still growing; easier entry, but results can be more variable. - **Monumetric** — solid option for medium traffic sites; more hands-on than Mediavine/Raptive. - **Journey by Mediavine** — good for smaller sites that aren’t ready for full Mediavine yet. If your recipe site is new, start with: - **Google AdSense** or **Ezoic** If you have good traffic and want higher earnings: - **Mediavine** or **Raptive** For recipe sites specifically, also consider ad networks with strong **sticky sidebar**, **in-content**, and **mobile** ad formats, since food content often performs well on mobile. If you want, I can also suggest the best network based on your monthly pageviews.
retrieval Not mentioned
For recipe sites, the usual best picks are: - **Mediavine** — strong choice for established food/recipe blogs; current entry is **50,000 monthly sessions** for Ad Management, while **Journey by Mediavine** is the lower-traffic on-ramp starting at about **10,000 monthly sessions**. ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/new-mediavine-requirements/?utm_source=openai)) - **Raptive** — good for larger recipe publishers; it now says the minimum is **25,000 monthly pageviews** to join, and it still emphasizes original, high-quality, brand-safe content. ([raptive.com](https://raptive.com/blog/opening-the-door-to-more-creators-who-meet-raptive-quality-standards/?utm_source=openai)) - **Ezoic** — a flexible option if you’re earlier-stage or in between networks; Ezoic says it no longer imposes pageview limits for new sign-ups, though it generally recommends at least **1,000 sessions or 3,000 pageviews** before monetizing. ([support.ezoic.com](https://support.ezoic.com/kb/article/getting-started-ezoics-requirements%3Fid%3Dgetting-started-ezoics-requirements%26lang%3Den-US?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule of thumb:** - **Under ~10k sessions/month:** Journey by Mediavine or Ezoic. ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/newsroom/mediavine-announces-new-solution-for-publisher-partners/?utm_source=openai)) - **~10k–50k sessions/month:** Journey or Ezoic; Mediavine main program once you hit 50k sessions. ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/newsroom/mediavine-announces-new-solution-for-publisher-partners/?utm_source=openai)) - **50k+ sessions/month:** Mediavine is often the first premium network to consider. ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/new-mediavine-requirements/?utm_source=openai)) - **25k+ pageviews/month and growing:** Raptive is worth a look. ([raptive.com](https://raptive.com/blog/opening-the-door-to-more-creators-who-meet-raptive-quality-standards/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **best ad network by traffic level** or a **recipe-blog monetization stack**.
What are the best ad networks for e-commerce publishers? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For e-commerce publishers, the best ad networks are usually the ones that balance **high RPMs**, **good UX**, and **commerce-friendly ad formats**. ### Best ad networks 1. **Mediavine** Best overall for many ecommerce content sites with strong traffic. Great CPMs and solid display/video monetization. 2. **Raptive** Excellent for established publishers. Strong premium demand and good support. 3. **Google AdSense** Best starting point. Easy to use, reliable, and works well when traffic is still growing. 4. **Ezoic** Good for smaller-to-mid publishers who want testing and optimization. Can improve revenue, but UX varies. 5. **Monumetric** Strong option for publishers who want more hands-on support than AdSense/Ezoic. 6. **Sovrn //Commerce** Especially useful for product-focused sites. Good for affiliate + ad monetization. 7. **Taboola** Good if you can use native/content recommendation ads without hurting UX too much. 8. **Outbrain** Similar to Taboola; useful for high-traffic commerce or editorial sites. ### Best choice by site type - **New/small site:** Google AdSense - **Growing content site:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **Established ecommerce publisher:** Mediavine or Raptive - **Product-review / shopping content:** Sovrn //Commerce, Taboola, Outbrain ### Quick recommendation If you want the simplest answer: **Mediavine** and **Raptive** are usually the best premium choices for e-commerce publishers. If you’re early-stage, start with **Google AdSense**. If you want, I can also rank these by **RPM**, **traffic requirements**, or **best for Shopify/blog/product-review sites**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you mean **content publishers in ecommerce / shopping** (gift guides, reviews, deal pages, buying-intent traffic), the strongest options are usually: - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** — great for commerce-heavy inventory because it connects publishers to Amazon demand and other SSPs via UAM. ([aps.amazon.com](https://aps.amazon.com/aps/unified-ad-marketplace-es/?utm_source=openai)) - **Sovrn Commerce** — best if you want **affiliate + ads** together; it’s built for shoppable links, widgets, and price-comparison monetization. ([sovrn.com](https://www.sovrn.com/blog/commerce-aps-connection-marketplace/?utm_source=openai)) - **Taboola** — strong for native/discovery ads and content recommendation on premium publisher inventory. ([taboola.com](https://www.taboola.com/marketing-hub/native-advertising-platform/?utm_source=openai)) - **Media.net** — a solid contextual option, especially for shopping/review content where search-intent matters. ([media.net](https://www.media.net/ads/?utm_source=openai)) - **Raptive** — good for larger, high-quality publishers; it’s positioned as an ad management platform for creators and publishers. ([raptive.com](https://raptive.com/newsroom/cafemedia-and-adthrive-are-now-raptive-a-new-kind-of-creator-company/?utm_source=openai)) - **Mediavine** — strong if you have quality content and meet its program thresholds; it now has multiple publisher programs and still offers ad management for qualifying sites. ([help.mediavine.com](https://help.mediavine.com/programs-and-the-publisher-path-to-growth?utm_source=openai)) - **Ezoic** — useful for smaller-to-mid publishers who want automated ad optimization. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/web-publishers?utm_source=openai)) - **GumGum** — worth testing if your site is very context-driven and you want privacy-friendly contextual ads. ([gumgum.com](https://gumgum.com/press-releases/gumgum-platform-mindset-graph?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall for ecommerce publishers:** **APS + Sovrn Commerce** - **Best native/discovery network:** **Taboola** - **Best contextual network:** **Media.net** - **Best premium full-service ad management:** **Raptive** or **Mediavine**. ([aps.amazon.com](https://aps.amazon.com/aps/unified-ad-marketplace-es/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **best-by-site-size table** (under 50k sessions, 50k–500k, 500k+) or a **best-by-monetization goal** list.
Which ad networks are best for privacy-focused publishers? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For privacy-focused publishers, the best-fit ad networks are usually **contextual** or **first-party-data friendly** and avoid heavy third-party tracking. ### Strong options - **Nativo** — strong contextual/native ads; good for premium content sites. - **Seedtag** — privacy-friendly contextual advertising; popular in Europe too. - **MonetizeMore** — works well for publishers wanting more control over demand and setups. - **Playwire** — good for ad ops + monetization with more publisher control. - **Raptive** — strong for content publishers, but best for larger sites. - **Media.net** — classic contextual network; widely used. - **Verve Group** (incl. **Smaato**) — decent privacy-conscious mobile/app and web demand. - **Index Exchange** — SSP with strong publisher controls and transparency. - **OpenX** — solid programmatic demand and header bidding support. - **PubMatic** — good global supply-side platform with privacy-safe tooling. ### Best “privacy-first” picks If privacy is your top priority, start with: 1. **Seedtag** 2. **Nativo** 3. **Media.net** 4. **Index Exchange** 5. **PubMatic** ### What to look for Choose networks that support: - **Contextual targeting** - **Consent Mode / CMP integration** - **Limited third-party data use** - **SSP/header bidding transparency** - **GDPR/CCPA support** If you want, I can also give you: - the **best networks by site type** (news, niche blog, SaaS, forums) - or a **top 5 for small publishers vs. large publishers**.
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For privacy-focused publishers, the best fit is usually **contextual, no-tracking ad networks** rather than behavioral ones. My short list: - **EthicalAds** — best for developer, open-source, and technical sites; it says it uses **no tracking** and targets ads by **site content**, not browsing history. ([ethicalads.io](https://www.ethicalads.io/publishers/?utm_source=openai)) - **Media.net** — good general-purpose contextual network; its privacy policy says it serves **contextual (nonpersonalized)** ads as part of its platform. ([media.net](https://www.media.net/privacy-policy?utm_source=openai)) - **GumGum** — strong for premium publishers wanting contextual, brand-safe ads **without personal data**. ([da.gumgum.com](https://da.gumgum.com/about?utm_source=openai)) - **Seedtag** — good for visual/premium content sites; it positions itself as a **contextual AI** platform and cookie-free/ privacy-first solution. ([press.seedtag.com](https://press.seedtag.com/seedtag-awarded-best-contextual-targeting-offering-at-digiday-media-awards?utm_source=openai)) **Best overall if privacy is your top priority:** **EthicalAds**. That’s the clearest “no tracking” option in the list. ([ethicalads.io](https://www.ethicalads.io/publishers/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this down by your niche (developer, news, lifestyle, kids, crypto, etc.).
What are the best alternatives to premium ad network platforms? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you mean **alternatives to premium publisher ad networks** like **Google Ad Manager premium demand, Mediavine, AdThrive, Raptive, Ezoic**, the best options are usually: ### Top alternatives - **Monumetric** — good for mid-sized sites; hands-on onboarding and solid display monetization. - **Mediavine Journey** — easier entry point than full Mediavine; good for growing traffic. - **Ezoic** — flexible and widely used; strong testing tools, but can be more complex. - **Mediavine** — still one of the best if you qualify; strong RPMs and support. - **Raptive** — great for established publishers with strong US traffic. - **NitroPay** — good for publishers who want more control and better UX than basic ad stacks. - **Setupad** — strong header bidding and monetization for international traffic. - **Publift** — good for medium-to-large sites, especially outside the US. - **Snigel** — premium ad optimization with managed service. - **AdPushup** — strong for A/B testing and revenue optimization. ### Best picks by situation - **Small / growing site:** **Ezoic** or **Monumetric** - **Mid-size content site:** **Mediavine Journey** or **Monumetric** - **High traffic premium site:** **Raptive** or **Mediavine** - **More control / custom setup:** **NitroPay** or **AdPushup** - **International traffic:** **Setupad** or **Publift** ### If you want direct ad network alternatives, also consider: - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** - **Index Exchange** - **Magnite** - **OpenX** - **PubMatic** If you want, I can narrow this down to the **best alternative for your traffic level and niche**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you mean **alternatives to premium managed ad networks for publishers**, the best options are usually: - **Google AdSense** — best for beginners or smaller sites; low friction and no heavy setup. ([adsense.google.com](https://adsense.google.com/intl/en_in/start/resources/platforms/?utm_source=openai)) - **Ezoic** — best for sites that want AI-driven ad testing and a more hands-on monetization platform. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/web-publishers?utm_source=openai)) - **Monumetric** — best for independent publishers who want managed ad ops plus more control. ([monumetric.com](https://www.monumetric.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Freestar** — best for publishers wanting full-service ad management and yield optimization. ([freestar.com](https://freestar.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Google Ad Manager + header bidding partners** — best if you want more control and already have decent traffic. ([google.com](https://www.google.com/ads/publisher/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Lowest barrier:** AdSense - **Best all-around managed alternative:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **Best for larger publishers:** Freestar or Google Ad Manager stack If you want, I can rank these by **traffic size, RPM potential, or ease of setup**.
How do ad networks compare for small publishers versus large publishers? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Ad networks tend to work very differently for **small** vs **large** publishers. ### Small publishers Best for: **easy setup, low traffic, quick approval** - **Lower traffic requirements**: Many premium networks won’t take you until you have steady pageviews. - **Simpler monetization**: Often just add a script and go. - **Less control**: Fewer custom deals, less pricing power. - **Lower RPMs at first**: You usually start with more generic demand. **Good options for small publishers:** - **Google AdSense** — easiest starting point - **Ezoic** — often good once you have some traffic - **Media.net** — contextual ads, sometimes works well on content sites - **Mediavine Journey** — for growing sites before full Mediavine eligibility ### Large publishers Best for: **higher revenue, premium demand, more control** - **Higher CPM/RPM potential**: Better access to premium advertisers. - **Header bidding / programmatic**: More advanced setups can increase revenue. - **Dedicated account support**: More optimization help. - **More demand sources**: Access to SSPs, direct deals, and private marketplaces. - **Stricter requirements**: Usually need significant traffic, quality content, and stable audience. **Good options for large publishers:** - **Mediavine** — strong for content publishers with meaningful traffic - **Raptive** — often strong for established publishers - **AdThrive** (now under Raptive brand in many cases) — premium content monetization - **Google Ad Manager** + header bidding partners like **Prebid**, **PubMatic**, **Magnite**, **OpenX** ### Practical rule of thumb - **Under ~50k sessions/month**: start with **AdSense** or **Ezoic** - **50k–100k+ sessions/month**: consider **Mediavine Journey**, **Mediavine**, or **Raptive** depending on eligibility - **Very large publishers**: use **Google Ad Manager** plus header bidding and direct sales ### Main difference in one line - **Small publishers** need **access and simplicity** - **Large publishers** need **yield optimization and premium demand** If you want, I can also give you a **best-network-by-traffic-range table**.
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For **small publishers**, ad networks usually matter more because they need: - **Easy setup** - **Fast approval** - **Good fill rate** - **Low traffic minimums** - **Automation** Typical fit: **Google AdSense**, **Ezoic**, **Media.net**, **Monetag**, sometimes **PropellerAds**. For **large publishers**, the priorities shift to: - **Higher CPMs / yield optimization** - **Direct deals and programmatic demand** - **Better control over inventory** - **Dedicated account management** - **Header bidding / multi-demand access** Typical fit: **Google Ad Manager**, **PubMatic**, **Magnite**, **Index Exchange**, **OpenX**, plus direct sales. ### Main difference - **Small publishers** need networks that can monetize modest traffic with minimal friction. - **Large publishers** can unlock better rates by selling premium inventory and using multiple demand sources. ### In practice - Small site: one strong network may be enough. - Large site: usually a stack of tools, not just one network. ### Rule of thumb - **Under ~100k monthly pageviews:** start simple. - **Hundreds of thousands to millions:** optimize with bidding and multiple partners. - **Enterprise-scale:** use a full ad stack and negotiate directly. If you want, I can also give you a **best ad network list by traffic level**.
What are the best ad network alternatives for higher revenue? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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If you want **higher revenue than basic AdSense**, the best alternatives usually are: ### Best overall - **Mediavine** — often top RPMs for content sites; best for established publishers with quality traffic. - **Raptive** — strong for high-traffic content sites and often very competitive on revenue. - **Ezoic** — good if you want an easier entry point and AI-based ad testing; revenue can be solid but varies. - **Monumetric** — good for mid-size publishers; more hands-on than Ezoic. ### Best for premium/enterprise - **PubMatic** - **Magnite** - **Index Exchange** - **OpenX** These are usually better through a **header bidding setup** or via a managed partner, not as simple plug-and-play networks. ### Best for easy setup + decent gains - **Sovrn** - **Media.net** - **Infolinks** - **AdThrive** (now part of **Raptive**, for many publishers) ### If you have eCommerce or direct-sell inventory - **Google Ad Manager** + header bidding partners like **Prebid**, **Magnite**, **PubMatic**, **Index Exchange** ## Quick recommendation by site type - **Small site (<100k monthly pageviews):** Ezoic, Media.net, Sovrn - **Mid-size site:** Monumetric, Ezoic, Mediavine (if eligible) - **Large content site:** Mediavine, Raptive - **Premium inventory:** Google Ad Manager + header bidding with PubMatic/Magnite/Index Exchange ## Best picks if your goal is max revenue 1. **Mediavine** 2. **Raptive** 3. **Google Ad Manager + header bidding** 4. **Ezoic** (if you’re not ready for premium networks) If you tell me your **monthly pageviews, niche, and country traffic split**, I can recommend the best network for your site specifically.
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If your goal is **higher ad revenue**, the usual top choices are: - **Raptive** — strong for established content sites; requires **25,000+ monthly pageviews**, original/high-quality content, and meaningful US/UK/CA/NZ/AU traffic. ([help.raptive.com](https://help.raptive.com/hc/en-us/articles/360032840891-How-do-I-apply-to-Raptive?utm_source=openai)) - **Mediavine** — great for premium lifestyle/content publishers; core program needs **50,000 sessions/month** (or roughly **$5,000+ annual ad revenue**), while **Journey by Mediavine** starts around **1,000 sessions** for smaller sites. Mediavine says it focuses on premium demand and higher CPMs. ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/mediavine-requirements?utm_source=openai)) - **Ezoic** — good if you want optimization/testing; current main program requires **250,000 monthly users**, with an **Incubator** option for smaller sites. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/incubator?utm_source=openai)) - **Monumetric** — a solid mid-tier option; **Propel** is for about **10k–80k pageviews/month** and requires at least **50% US/UK/CA/AU traffic**. ([monumetric.com](https://www.monumetric.com/propel-program/?utm_source=openai)) - **Setupad** — worth considering for sites with **100K+ visitors/month** and a more technical ad stack. ([setupad.com](https://setupad.com/referral-program-setupad/?utm_source=openai)) - **Media.net** — useful especially for contextual/search-heavy and niche content sites; it offers search, display, native, and video ads through one tag. ([media.net](https://www.media.net/ads/publisher-program/?utm_source=openai)) **Best pick by site size** - **Small site:** Mediavine Journey or Monumetric Propel. ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/newsroom/mediavine-announces-new-solution-for-publisher-partners/?utm_source=openai)) - **Mid-size site:** Mediavine or Raptive. ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/mediavine-requirements?utm_source=openai)) - **Large site:** Raptive or Ezoic. ([help.raptive.com](https://help.raptive.com/hc/en-us/articles/360032840891-How-do-I-apply-to-Raptive?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to the **best option for your traffic level, niche, and country mix**.
Which ad networks are better for video inventory than display inventory? comparison
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Networks that are generally **stronger for video than display**: - **Google Ad Manager / AdX** — very strong for in-stream and CTV video demand, especially with premium publisher setups. - **FreeWheel** — excellent for premium video monetization, especially broadcaster/publisher inventory. - **Magnite** — one of the biggest video/CTV SSPs; usually stronger on video than standard display. - **SpotX (now part of Magnite)** — historically video-first; still a common benchmark for video demand. - **PubMatic** — solid video and CTV performance, often better on video than open-web display. - **Xandr Monetize** — strong video and premium programmatic video demand. - **Teads** — very video-centric, especially outstream and native video. - **Tremor Video** — video-focused, good for in-stream/outstream. - **Unruly** — known for video, especially social-style and outstream formats. If you mean **smaller networks that outperform on video specifically**, Teads and Unruly are often better bets than general display-heavy networks. If you want, I can also rank these by: 1. **CTV/in-stream**, 2. **outstream**, or 3. **best for mid-tier publishers**.
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If you mean **publisher monetization**, the networks that tend to be stronger on **video inventory** than plain display are: - **Teads** — very video/outstream-first. ([teads.com](https://www.teads.com/blog/teads-outstream-as-google-adopts-iab-standards/2777/?utm_source=openai)) - **Magnite** (especially **SpringServe/SpotX**) — heavily oriented toward CTV and online video supply. ([investor.rubiconproject.com](https://investor.rubiconproject.com/news-releases/news-release-details/wetv-partners-magnite-enhance-video-inventory-monetisation?utm_source=openai)) - **PubMatic** — has dedicated CTV/online video products and video auction packages. ([pubmatic.com](https://pubmatic.com/video/?utm_source=openai)) - **Index Exchange** — offers outstream video monetization for publishers. ([indexexchange.com](https://www.indexexchange.com/press/press-releases/outstream-ad-unit-helps-media-owners/?utm_source=openai)) If your inventory is **mostly display**, a broader SSP/network is often fine; if it’s **premium video, in-stream, outstream, or CTV**, the names above are usually better fits. ([investor.rubiconproject.com](https://investor.rubiconproject.com/news-releases/news-release-details/wetv-partners-magnite-enhance-video-inventory-monetisation?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can rank them for your specific setup: **site video, outstream, CTV, or app**.
What are the best alternatives to direct ad sales for website monetization? comparison
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Best alternatives to direct ad sales: 1. **Ad networks / programmatic ads** - **Google AdSense** (easy to start) - **Ezoic** (better optimization for many sites) - **Mediavine** / **Raptive** (strong for larger content sites) 2. **Affiliate marketing** - **Amazon Associates** - **Impact** - **CJ Affiliate** - **ShareASale** Best if your content recommends products/services. 3. **Subscriptions / memberships** - **Memberful** - **Patreon** - **Substack** Good for premium content, community, or newsletters. 4. **Sponsored content / newsletter sponsorships via marketplaces** - **BuySellAds** - **Paved** - **Swapstack** Useful if you have a niche audience but don’t want to sell ads manually. 5. **Digital products** - **Gumroad** - **Lemon Squeezy** - **Shopify** Great for ebooks, templates, courses, presets, downloads. 6. **Donations / tips** - **Buy Me a Coffee** - **Ko-fi** Best for loyal audiences and creator-style sites. 7. **Lead generation / referrals** - **PartnerStack** - **Impact** - **CJ Affiliate** Good for SaaS, finance, or B2B sites. 8. **Job boards / classifieds** - **Niceboard** - **WP Job Manager** Works well for niche communities. **Best overall mix for most sites:** - **Google AdSense or Ezoic** for baseline revenue - **Affiliate marketing** for high intent pages - **Memberful or Patreon** if you have a loyal audience If you tell me your site niche and traffic level, I can recommend the best 2–3 options.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are the strongest alternatives to direct ad sales for website monetization: 1. **Affiliate marketing** Earn commissions by recommending products/services. Best if your content already drives buying intent. 2. **Subscriptions / memberships** Charge for premium content, tools, communities, or ad-free access. Best for loyal audiences. 3. **Sponsored content / brand partnerships** Brands pay for posts, newsletters, videos, or placements without a full ad-sales program. 4. **Digital products** Sell ebooks, templates, courses, presets, reports, or downloadable tools. High margin, scalable. 5. **Lead generation** Collect qualified leads for businesses and get paid per lead. Works well in finance, insurance, education, home services, etc. 6. **Donations / tips** Good for niche media, creators, and community sites with loyal readers. 7. **E-commerce / merch** Sell physical products, branded goods, or curated storefront items. 8. **Paid services** Consulting, audits, coaching, custom work, or done-for-you services tied to your niche. 9. **API / SaaS / tools** Build a useful tool and charge usage or subscription fees. Best if your site solves a specific problem. 10. **Licensing content/data** Sell access to proprietary data, reports, photos, or archives to other businesses. **Usually the best mix:** - Content sites: **affiliate + subscriptions + sponsored content** - Niche B2B sites: **lead gen + sponsorships + services** - Expert/creator sites: **digital products + memberships + consulting** If you want, I can rank these by **most profitable**, **easiest to start**, or **best for your specific website niche**.
How do header bidding solutions compare with traditional ad networks? comparison
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Header bidding usually delivers **more competition and higher yield** than traditional ad networks, but it’s also **more complex**. **Questions for the best fit:** - **Traditional ad networks**: simpler setup, easier management, usually faster to launch, but you often give up some control and revenue. - **Header bidding solutions**: multiple demand partners bid at the same time, which can boost CPMs and fill rates, especially for publishers with meaningful traffic. **Most important takeaway:** If you want **maximum revenue and control**, header bidding is generally better. If you want **simplicity and low overhead**, traditional ad networks are easier. **Best-known header bidding products:** - **Google Ad Manager** (for ad serving, often paired with header bidding) - **Prebid.js** (popular open-source header bidding wrapper) - **PubMatic** - **Magnite** - **Index Exchange** **Traditional ad network examples:** - **Google AdSense** - **Media.net** - **Ezoic** (more of a managed ad platform than a simple network) If you want, I can explain **how header bidding works step-by-step** or **which option is better for small vs. large publishers**.
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**Header bidding** and **traditional ad networks** both help publishers sell ad inventory, but they work differently: ### Traditional ad networks - Publisher sends inventory to one network at a time, often in a waterfall order. - Networks get a chance sequentially, based on priority. - Simpler to set up and manage. - Usually less competition for each impression, so yield can be lower. ### Header bidding - Multiple demand sources bid on the same impression at the same time before the ad server decides. - Creates more competition. - Often increases revenue and fill rate. - More complex to implement and can add latency if not optimized. ### Main tradeoffs | Factor | Traditional ad networks | Header bidding | |---|---|---| | Revenue potential | Lower | Usually higher | | Competition | Sequential | Parallel | | Complexity | Lower | Higher | | Page speed impact | Usually lower | Can be higher | | Transparency | Less | More | | Control | Less | More | ### In practice - **Small publishers** may prefer traditional networks for simplicity. - **Mid-to-large publishers** often use header bidding to maximize yield. - Many publishers use a **hybrid setup**: header bidding for premium inventory, traditional networks for backfill. ### Bottom line If your goal is **ease and simplicity**, traditional ad networks win. If your goal is **max revenue and stronger auction competition**, header bidding usually wins. If you want, I can also compare **client-side vs server-side header bidding**.
What are the best alternatives to managed ad network services? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Best alternatives depend on whether you’re a **publisher** or an **advertiser**, but the main options are: ### For publishers 1. **Header bidding / programmatic monetization** - **Google Ad Manager** - **Prebid.js** - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** - **Index Exchange** - **OpenX** 2. **Direct-sold ads** - Sell inventory yourself through sponsorships, newsletter placements, or site takeovers. - Best if you have a niche audience. 3. **Affiliate monetization** - **Amazon Associates** - **Impact** - **CJ Affiliate** - **ShareASale** 4. **Sponsored content / native ads** - **Taboola** - **Outbrain** - Direct brand partnerships ### For advertisers 1. **Self-serve ad platforms** - **Google Ads** - **Microsoft Advertising** - **Meta Ads** - **TikTok Ads** 2. **DSPs for programmatic buying** - **The Trade Desk** - **Adform** - **MediaMath** (where available) - **StackAdapt** 3. **Direct publisher buys** - Buy placements directly from sites, newsletters, or podcasts. ### Best overall alternatives - **Small/medium publishers:** Google Ad Manager + Prebid.js - **Larger publishers:** Google Ad Manager + APS + Index Exchange/OpenX - **Brands/advertisers wanting control:** Google Ads or The Trade Desk - **Audience monetization beyond ads:** affiliates + sponsorships If you tell me whether you’re a **publisher or advertiser**, I can narrow this to the best 3 options for your case.
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The best alternatives depend on what you mean by “managed,” but the strongest options are: 1. **Self-serve ad platforms** - **Google Ads** - **Meta Ads Manager** - **Microsoft Advertising** - **Amazon DSP / Amazon Ads** These let you run and optimize campaigns yourself, with optional expert help or managed-service layers if you want them later. ([ads.google.com](https://ads.google.com/intl/en_us//home/tools/manager-accounts/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Programmatic DSPs** - **The Trade Desk** is a major self-service DSP for buying across the open internet, including CTV, display, video, audio, and retail media. ([thetradedesk.com](https://www.thetradedesk.com/our-demand-side-platform?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Direct publisher deals / programmatic direct** - Using **Google Ad Manager** you can do **Preferred Deals**, **Private Auctions**, and other Programmatic Direct workflows instead of relying on a managed ad network. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/admanager/answer/16536966?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Build your own in-house stack** - Common pieces are an ad server, a DSP seat, reporting, and a CRM/CDP integration. This gives the most control, but also the most operational work. ([ads.google.com](https://ads.google.com/intl/en_us/intl/en_us/home/tools/api/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Small budget / simple setup:** Google Ads or Meta Ads Manager. ([ads.google.com](https://ads.google.com/intl/en_us//home/tools/manager-accounts/?utm_source=openai)) - **Cross-channel programmatic:** The Trade Desk or Amazon DSP. ([thetradedesk.com](https://www.thetradedesk.com/our-demand-side-platform?utm_source=openai)) - **Publisher direct sales:** Google Ad Manager. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/admanager/answer/16536966?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **cost, ease of use, and control**.
Which ad networks are better for native ads than standard display ads? comparison
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For **native ads**, these networks usually outperform standard display networks: - **Taboola** — strong for content discovery/native placements, especially publishers and ecommerce/content funnels. - **Outbrain** — similar to Taboola; great for native sponsored content and premium publisher inventory. - **Revcontent** — often good for lower-cost native traffic and lead-gen. - **MGID** — broad native reach, especially useful for performance campaigns. - **Yahoo Native** — solid premium native inventory, good brand safety. - **Nativo** — best if you want more true native/display hybrid placements and publisher integrations. - **Sharethrough** — strong programmatic native across premium inventory. - **TripleLift** — good for programmatic native and high-quality placements. If you want a quick pick: - **Best premium/native content:** Outbrain, Taboola - **Best performance/cheap traffic:** Revcontent, MGID - **Best programmatic native:** TripleLift, Sharethrough - **Best enterprise/publisher integrations:** Nativo If you want, I can also rank them for **lead gen, ecommerce, or brand awareness**.
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If you mean **networks built for native ads** (rather than banner/display), the main ones are: - **Taboola** — strong for content-recommendation style native ads on publisher sites. ([taboola.com](https://www.taboola.com/native-advertising?utm_source=openai)) - **Outbrain / Teads** — native discovery and in-feed style placements; Outbrain says its technology continues under Teads. ([outbrain.com](https://www.outbrain.com/what-is/us/?utm_source=openai)) - **RevContent** — explicitly a native ads platform for premium publisher sites. ([revcontent.com](https://www.revcontent.com/advertisers?utm_source=openai)) - **MGID** — native ad platform with responsive native units and publisher network reach. ([mgid.com](https://www.mgid.com/landing/3self-serve-advertisers/?utm_source=openai)) - **Nativo** — native-first platform focused on ads that blend into the site experience. ([support.nativo.com](https://support.nativo.com/en/articles/11144166-what-is-native-advertising?utm_source=openai)) - **Sharethrough / TripleLift** — both are native-specialist programmatic platforms; TripleLift positions itself around native advertising and native formats. ([triplelift.com](https://triplelift.com/native-advertising/?utm_source=openai)) - **Google Ad Manager** — if you want native units on your own site/app, it supports native ads, but it’s broader than a native-only network. ([admanager.google.com](https://admanager.google.com/home/resources/feature-brief-native-ads/?utm_source=openai)) **Rule of thumb:** - For **content sites/blog monetization**: Taboola, Outbrain/Teads, RevContent, MGID. - For **programmatic/native display**: Sharethrough, TripleLift, Google Ad Manager. - For **higher-end brand/native**: Nativo. ([revcontent.com](https://www.revcontent.com/advertisers?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these for **publisher revenue**, **advertiser ROI**, or **US traffic**.
What are the best ad network alternatives for niche content sites? comparison
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For niche content sites, the best ad network alternatives are usually: - **Mediavine** — great for content sites with strong US traffic and decent volume. Usually better RPMs than basic networks. - **Raptive** (formerly AdThrive) — best for larger publishers with premium content and mostly US traffic. - **Ezoic** — good for smaller-to-mid sites that want an easier entry point and AI testing. - **Monumetric** — solid mid-tier option if you want managed support and don’t qualify for top-tier networks yet. - **Snigel** — strong for niche publishers who want ad optimization without heavy hands-on work. - **Sovrn** — good for smaller sites, especially if you want simple setup and additional monetization tools. - **BuySellAds** — best if your niche audience is valuable and you want direct sponsorships or premium placements. - **Carbon Ads** — especially good for design, dev, tech, and other high-end niche audiences. - **SHE Media** — strong for lifestyle, parenting, food, and women-focused content. ### Quick pick - **Small site:** Ezoic or Sovrn - **Mid-size site:** Monumetric or Mediavine - **Large premium site:** Raptive - **Highly niche audience:** BuySellAds or Carbon Ads If you tell me your **traffic level, niche, and top countries**, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options.
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For niche content sites, my short list is: - **Mediavine / Journey** — best overall if you want premium managed ads. Mediavine now says sites can start at **1K sessions** with Journey, while its main ad management path still uses the **50,000 monthly sessions** benchmark. ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/mediavine-requirements/?utm_source=openai)) - **Raptive** — best for established, high-quality content sites. Raptive now requires **25,000 monthly pageviews**, original content, good ad standing, and mostly traffic from the US/CA/UK/AU/NZ. ([raptive.com](https://raptive.com/blog/opening-the-door-to-more-creators-who-meet-raptive-quality-standards/?utm_source=openai)) - **Monumetric Propel** — best for smaller niche sites that aren’t ready for premium networks yet. Propel is for **10k–80k pageviews/month** and is built for emerging publishers. ([monumetric.com](https://www.monumetric.com/propel-program/?utm_source=openai)) - **Ezoic** — best if you want a more flexible, data-driven platform and are okay with more testing/complexity. Ezoic positions itself for sites of all sizes, and its Incubator path is for sites under **250,000 monthly users**. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Nitro** — best for gaming, fan, wiki, pop-culture, and gaming-adjacent niche sites. Nitro says its publisher network is centered on **gaming and gaming-adjacent websites**, including pop culture sites, wikis, fan sites, and editorials. ([nitropay.com](https://nitropay.com/publishers/?utm_source=openai)) - **Media.net** — strong for context-heavy niches because it focuses on **contextual ads**, display, and native units tied to user intent. ([media.net](https://www.media.net/ads/?utm_source=openai)) **My practical recommendation:** - **Under 10k visits/pageviews:** Ezoic or AdSense-style setup first. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **10k–50k:** Monumetric Propel or Ezoic. ([monumetric.com](https://www.monumetric.com/propel-program/?utm_source=openai)) - **50k+:** Mediavine main network, or Raptive if your audience is mostly Tier-1 and your content is very polished. ([help.mediavine.com](https://help.mediavine.com/programs-and-the-publisher-path-to-growth?utm_source=openai)) - **Gaming niche:** Nitro. ([nitropay.com](https://nitropay.com/publishers/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **best network by traffic tier + niche type** table.
How do premium ad networks compare with open marketplace ad networks? comparison
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**Premium ad networks** and **open marketplace ad networks** both sell ad inventory, but they differ a lot in quality, pricing, and control. ### Premium ad networks Examples: **Google Ad Manager premium access, Magnite, PubMatic, OpenX premium deals** - **Inventory quality:** Usually higher-quality publishers and placements - **Audience:** Better targeting and often brand-safe - **Pricing:** Higher CPMs - **Transparency:** More visibility into where ads run - **Controls:** Better controls for brand safety, viewability, and frequency - **Best for:** Advertisers focused on performance + brand reputation ### Open marketplace ad networks Examples: **Google AdSense, PropellerAds, Adsterra, MGID** - **Inventory quality:** Mixed; can include many long-tail publishers - **Audience:** Broader reach, but less curated - **Pricing:** Lower CPMs, cheaper scale - **Transparency:** Usually less transparent - **Controls:** More limited - **Best for:** Traffic volume, testing, and lower-cost reach ### Simple rule - Choose **premium** if you want **better quality and brand safety** - Choose **open marketplace** if you want **cheap scale and broad reach** If you want, I can also compare them for **publishers** vs **advertisers**, since the tradeoffs are a bit different.
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**Premium ad networks** and **open marketplace ad networks** differ mainly in **inventory quality, access, pricing, and control**. ### Premium ad networks - Work with **high-quality, vetted publishers** - Usually offer **better brand safety** - Often have **higher viewability and stronger engagement** - Inventory is more limited, so **CPMs are usually higher** - Better for **brand awareness** and campaigns where quality matters most ### Open marketplace ad networks - Aggregate a **much larger pool of inventory** - Include many publishers, often with **less strict vetting** - Usually provide **lower CPMs** - Better for **scale, reach, and performance testing** - Can be more variable in **quality, placement, and fraud risk** ### In short - **Premium = quality, control, higher cost** - **Open marketplace = scale, flexibility, lower cost** If you want, I can also compare them by **brand safety, targeting, ROI, and use cases** in a simple table.
How do I increase ad revenue with an ad network? problem
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To increase ad revenue with an ad network, focus on **more valuable impressions**, not just more ads: - **Improve viewability**: place ads in visible areas; use **sticky anchors** and **in-content units**. - **Speed up your site**: faster pages usually mean better fill and higher CPMs. Use **Google Ad Manager** and a CDN like **Cloudflare**. - **Use header bidding / mediation**: let multiple demand sources compete. Common options: **Prebid.js**, **Google Ad Manager**, **Magnite**, **PubMatic**. - **Test ad formats**: try **in-stream video**, **native ads**, and **responsive display**. Video often pays more if you have the inventory. - **Set floor prices carefully**: too high = lost fill; too low = lower revenue. Test floors by geo/device/content. - **Increase traffic quality**: organic, engaged users typically monetize better than low-quality traffic. - **Segment by audience**: separate US/UK/CA traffic from low-CPM geos; use different floor prices and placements. - **Use multiple networks**: don’t rely on one buyer. Consider **Google AdX via Google Ad Manager**, plus partners like **Raptive**, **Mediavine**, or **Ezoic** if you qualify. - **A/B test placements**: compare above-the-fold, mid-content, sidebar, and sticky placements. - **Protect policy compliance**: invalid traffic or policy issues can crush revenue. If you tell me your **site type, traffic volume, and platform** (WordPress, app, etc.), I can suggest the best ad setup and networks.
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To increase ad revenue with an ad network, focus on **more valuable traffic, better ad placement, and higher viewability**. ### Biggest levers 1. **Increase traffic quality** - Get users from higher-value geos - Improve session length and pageviews per visit - Target topics advertisers pay more for 2. **Improve viewability** - Place ads where people actually see them - Use above-the-fold and in-content placements - Avoid clutter and too many ads per page 3. **Optimize ad formats** - Test display, native, video, interstitials, and sticky units - Use responsive sizes - Prefer formats with stronger CTR or CPM for your site 4. **Use header bidding or competition** - Let multiple buyers compete for each impression - Don’t rely on one demand source if you can avoid it 5. **Raise page speed** - Faster pages usually improve engagement and ad performance - Compress images, reduce scripts, lazy-load ads carefully 6. **A/B test constantly** - Test ad positions, sizes, colors, and density - Compare RPM, viewability, CTR, and bounce rate 7. **Match ads to user intent** - Finance, insurance, software, and B2B content often monetize better than general entertainment - Build content around higher-paying keywords if relevant 8. **Improve fill rate and demand** - Add more ad partners or exchange access - Check for blocked categories, geo gaps, or low-demand pages ### Watch these metrics - **RPM / page RPM** - **Fill rate** - **Viewability** - **CTR** - **eCPM** - **Bounce rate** - **Pages per session** ### Common mistakes - Too many ads hurting UX - Slow pages - Low-quality traffic - Poor mobile layout - Ignoring ad blocking and consent issues If you want, I can help you make a **step-by-step ad revenue optimization plan** for your site or app.
Why is my website ad revenue so low? problem
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Usually it’s low because one or more of these are weak: - **Low traffic quality**: low-viewability, low-session, or low-US/UK audience - **Bad traffic source mix**: social traffic often monetizes worse than search - **Low ad viewability**: ads below the fold, slow pages, cluttered layout - **Low fill rate / weak demand**: your ad stack isn’t competitive enough - **Low RPM niche**: entertainment/news often pays less than finance, software, insurance - **Poor mobile experience**: mobile users often bring lower CPMs - **Too few ad units**: not enough inventory, or no high-viewability placements - **Site speed issues**: slower pages can reduce bids and viewability - **Policy/ad quality problems**: invalid traffic, blocked categories, or limited ads What to check first: 1. **Pages/session and time on site** 2. **Top traffic countries** 3. **Device split** 4. **Viewability rate** 5. **Ad fill rate** 6. **RPM by page and by traffic source** Best tools/products to improve it: - **Google Ad Manager** for better ad control - **Google AdSense** if you’re small and just starting - **Mediavine** if you have solid traffic and mostly lifestyle/content sites - **Raptive** for larger content sites - **Ezoic** if you want easier optimization and testing - **NitroPay** if you want header bidding and stronger demand Quick fixes that often help: - Put ads **above the fold** and in-content - Improve **Core Web Vitals** - Focus on **search traffic** - Increase **US/Canada/UK audience** - Use **lazy loading** for lower ads - Test **one premium network** instead of only AdSense If you want, I can help you diagnose it if you share: - monthly sessions - top 3 countries - niche - ad network you use - current RPM/EPMV
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Usually one (or more) of these: - **Low traffic quality**: visitors from low-paying countries or weak intent - **Low viewability**: ads aren’t actually seen - **Bad ad placement**: too far below the fold, too few ads, or poor layout - **Low CTR / CPM**: niche, season, or audience pays less - **Slow site / bad UX**: users bounce before ads load - **Policy issues**: limited ads, invalid traffic, or account restrictions - **Weak monetization setup**: wrong ad network, no header bidding, no refresh, etc. Fast checks: 1. Look at **RPM / eCPM, CTR, viewability, fill rate** 2. Compare **mobile vs desktop** 3. Check **geo breakdown** 4. See if pages have **high bounce rate / low time on page** 5. Inspect whether ads are **above the fold** and loading correctly 6. Verify there are no **policy/invalid traffic warnings** If you want, I can help diagnose it if you paste: - your monthly sessions/pageviews - ad network you use - top traffic countries - niche/topic - average RPM or earnings per 1,000 pageviews
How do I monetize a website with display ads? problem
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To monetize a website with display ads: 1. **Get traffic first** - Ads usually pay better once you have steady, organic traffic. - Focus on useful content, SEO, and page speed. 2. **Pick an ad network** - **Google AdSense**: easiest to start with. - **Ezoic**: good for growing sites with decent traffic. - **Monumetric**: solid for smaller publishers with some traffic. - **Mediavine**: best once you have strong traffic (typically around 50k sessions/month). - **Raptive**: strong for larger content sites. - **Media.net**: good alternative, especially for niche/content sites. 3. **Sign up and verify your site** - Add the ad code or connect via CMS/plugin. - Make sure your site has: - privacy policy - contact page - original content - clear navigation 4. **Place ads strategically** - Common spots: - header - in-content - sidebar - footer - Don’t overdo it—too many ads can hurt user experience and SEO. 5. **Optimize performance** - Test layouts, ad density, and mobile placement. - Use lazy loading and keep your site fast. - Improve RPM by targeting high-value topics and traffic from countries like the US, UK, Canada, and Australia. 6. **Track earnings** - Watch: - Pageviews - RPM (revenue per 1,000 views) - CTR - bounce rate - Use Google Analytics and your ad network dashboard. 7. **Stay compliant** - Follow **Google AdSense policies** if using Google ads. - Add cookie consent if required by your region. If you want, I can recommend the **best ad network based on your current traffic** and site niche.
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Use a **display ad network**, add its **ad code** to your site, then optimize for traffic and placement. **Common options** - **Google AdSense**: easiest to start - **Google Ad Manager**: better control if you grow - **Ezoic**, **Mediavine**, **Raptive**: usually for sites with more traffic **Basic steps** 1. **Publish quality content** and get steady traffic. 2. **Apply to an ad network**. 3. **Place ad tags** in your site’s header/body/sidebar/content. 4. **Set ad sizes/placements**. 5. **Check performance**: RPM, CTR, viewability. 6. **Improve pagespeed and UX** so ads don’t hurt retention. **Best practices** - Put ads **above the fold**, **in-content**, and **sidebar** where appropriate. - Don’t overload pages; too many ads can reduce earnings. - Use **responsive ads** for mobile. - Add a **privacy policy** and **cookie consent** if required. - Track with **Google Analytics** and the ad network dashboard. **Revenue formula** - Earnings depend on **traffic × page views × ad viewability × niche × geography**. If you want, I can suggest the **best ad network for your traffic level** and CMS.
How do I get approved by an ad network? problem
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To get approved by an ad network, make your site look **real, useful, and policy-compliant**. ### What most networks want - **Original content**: real articles/pages, not scraped or AI-spam. - **Enough content**: usually 10–30+ solid posts/pages. - **Clean navigation**: Home, About, Contact, Privacy Policy, Terms. - **Good UX**: fast site, mobile-friendly, no broken links, no popups everywhere. - **Traffic quality**: real visitors, not bots or incentivized traffic. - **Policy compliance**: no copyright theft, adult content, piracy, hate, gambling, or misleading claims. ### Before applying 1. **Publish consistently** Aim for 5–20 well-written pages/posts first. 2. **Add legal pages** Use a Privacy Policy generator like **Termly** or **iubenda**. 3. **Set up analytics** Install **Google Analytics 4** and **Google Search Console**. 4. **Improve speed** Use **Cloudflare** and a fast theme/host like **SiteGround** or **WPX**. 5. **Make contact easy** Add an email, contact form, and About page. 6. **Remove weak content** Delete thin, duplicated, or AI-only filler pages. ### Easier networks to start with - **Google AdSense** — common first choice, but strict. - **Ezoic** — usually wants some traffic first. - **Mediavine** / **Raptive** — higher requirements, better for established sites. - **Media.net** — can be an alternative depending on niche. ### Common reasons for rejection - Too little content - Low-value or copied content - Missing privacy/contact pages - Poor site design - Invalid or low-quality traffic - Restricted niche/content ### Best simple strategy Build a niche site with: - 15–25 strong posts - a clean theme - privacy/contact/about pages - real organic traffic - no policy risk If you want, I can give you a **step-by-step approval checklist for AdSense** or for a specific network like **Ezoic** or **Mediavine**.
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To get approved by an ad network, make your site look like a **real, complete business**: - **Original content**: enough useful, non-copied pages - **Clear navigation**: Home, About, Contact, Privacy Policy, Terms - **Good UX**: fast, mobile-friendly, no broken links - **No policy violations**: no adult, pirated, hateful, misleading, or spammy content - **Real traffic**: some genuine visitors helps a lot - **Trust signals**: about page, contact form, social links, domain email - **Consistent site quality**: avoid empty pages, thin content, or scraped content Common reasons for rejection: - too little content - low-quality or AI-spammy pages - policy issues - poor design or broken site - not enough traffic / unclear niche Best approach: 1. Publish 10–30 solid pages/posts. 2. Add policy pages. 3. Fix speed/mobile issues. 4. Check everything for policy compliance. 5. Apply again after improving the site. If you want, I can give you a **checklist for Google AdSense**, **Ezoic**, or **Mediavine** specifically.
How do I add ads to my website without hurting user experience? problem
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Best way: **keep ads few, relevant, and clearly separated from content**. ### Good UX ad rules - **Use 1–3 ad placements max** on a page. - Put ads in **natural breaks**: sidebar, after the first section, or between long content blocks. - Prefer **responsive display ads** that fit mobile well. - **Avoid pop-ups, auto-play video, sticky takeovers, and ads that push content around**. - Make sure ads are **labeled “Advertisement”** and don’t look like site navigation. - **Cap ad density** on mobile even more than desktop. - Use **lazy loading** so ads load after main content. - Set **fixed ad slot sizes** to prevent layout shift. ### Solid ad products/platforms - **Google AdSense** — easiest starting point, decent controls, strong brand safety. - **Google Ad Manager** — better if you want more control over placements and direct deals. - **Ezoic** — more aggressive optimization; can work well, but test carefully for UX. - **Mediavine** or **Raptive** — good for content sites with enough traffic; usually better RPMs, but they have requirements. - **AdThrive** is now **Raptive**. ### Best practices that help UX and revenue - Use **content-relevant ads**. - Keep page speed high with **Cloudflare**, **WP Rocket** (WordPress), or **LiteSpeed Cache**. - Track **Core Web Vitals** and monitor bounce rate after adding ads. - A/B test placements with **Google Ad Manager** or **Ezoic**. ### Simple safe setup 1. Add one ad **below the first paragraph**. 2. Add one **in-content** ad after a major section. 3. Add one **sidebar** ad on desktop only. 4. Test on mobile, tablet, and desktop. 5. Remove any placement that hurts scroll depth or page speed. If you want, I can suggest the **best ad setup for your site type** (blog, forum, SaaS, news, portfolio).
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Keep ads **light, fast, and predictable**: - **Use fewer placements**: 1–3 well-placed ads beat a cluttered page. - **Avoid intrusive formats**: skip pop-ups, auto-play video, and full-screen interstitials. - **Place ads where they don’t block reading**: sidebar, below the fold, or between content sections. - **Match the page design**: make ads look native in size/style, but still clearly labeled. - **Prioritize speed**: lazy-load ads and use async loading so they don’t delay content. - **Protect layout stability**: reserve space so ads don’t shift the page while loading. - **Limit frequency**: don’t repeat the same ad too often on one page. - **Keep mobile extra clean**: ads that feel fine on desktop can be awful on phones. - **Test with real users**: watch bounce rate, time on page, and scroll depth after adding ads. A good rule: **content first, ads second**. If you want, I can suggest a **simple ad layout by page type** (blog, news site, SaaS, forum, etc.).
How do I fix low fill rates on my ad inventory? problem
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Low fill usually means demand, setup, or policy issues. Fix it in this order: 1. **Check if it’s really fill vs. viewability** - Compare **ad requests → responses → impressions** in **Google Ad Manager** or your ad server. - If responses are low, it’s a demand/setup problem. If responses are high but impressions are low, it’s viewability/rendering. 2. **Widen demand** - Turn on **header bidding** with **Prebid.js**. - Add strong demand partners: **Google Ad Manager/AdX**, **Amazon Publisher Services (Transparent Ad Marketplace)**, **Index Exchange**, **OpenX**, **PubMatic**, **Magnite**. - If you only use one network, fill will often be weak. 3. **Fix floor prices** - Too-high floors kill fill. Lower them or use **dynamic floors**. - In **Google Ad Manager**, test floor changes by geo/device/ad unit. - Start with no floor, then raise gradually. 4. **Expand ad formats and sizes** - Add high-demand sizes like **300x250, 336x280, 728x90, 300x600, 320x50**. - Support **responsive** and **multi-size** inventory. - If you only have niche sizes, demand will be thin. 5. **Improve ad targeting quality** - Make sure geo, device, content category, and audience segments are accurate. - Clean bad traffic; buyers avoid low-quality or bot-heavy inventory. - Use **IAS**, **DoubleVerify**, or **Human Security** if fraud is suspected. 6. **Reduce policy/technical blockers** - Check consent setup: **Google Consent Mode v2** and a proper CMP like **OneTrust** or **Sourcepoint**. - Make sure ads aren’t blocked by **ad blockers**, lazy-loading bugs, CSP issues, or broken tags. - Verify page speed and iframe/rendering aren’t preventing requests. 7. **Increase competition** - More bidders = better fill. - Use **price granularity** in GAM. - Segment by **geo**, **device**, and **placement** so premium inventory isn’t diluted. 8. **Sell unsold inventory** - Add **house ads**, direct-sold campaigns, or fallback demand. - Use **AdSense** or **Media.net** as backfill if relevant. If you want, I can give you a **step-by-step fill-rate troubleshooting checklist for Google Ad Manager + Prebid.js**.
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Low fill rate usually means one of 3 things: **demand is weak, your inventory is unattractive, or your setup is blocking bids**. ### Quick fixes 1. **Check demand sources** - Add more bidders / more SSPs - Make sure header bidding is enabled and working - Compare fill by demand partner 2. **Relax pricing floor** - Lower hard floors, especially on long-tail placements - Test dynamic floors instead of fixed floors - Too-high floors often kill fill fast 3. **Improve viewability and page quality** - Put ads in visible, high-traffic placements - Reduce load latency - Improve page speed and CLS - Better viewability usually means better demand 4. **Audit geo/device mix** - Fill is often lower on certain countries, devices, or browsers - Segment by geo, device, ad unit, and browser to find the weak spots 5. **Fix technical problems** - Ad blocker impact - Broken ad tags - Missing consent signals - Incorrect sizes or lazy loading issues - Prebid / GAM configuration problems 6. **Increase inventory quality** - Add more premium sizes - Make units responsive - Avoid overcrowding the page - Improve content relevance 7. **Check policy / brand safety** - Policy violations can suppress demand - Make sure content categories aren’t scaring off buyers ### Best diagnostic order - **By ad unit** - **By geo** - **By device/browser** - **By demand partner** - **By floor price** - **By latency / timeout** ### If you use GAM + header bidding - Lower bidder timeout if it’s too high - Verify all bidders are actually returning bids - Make sure GAM line items match bidder setup - Check for competition between direct deals and open auction - Test no-floor vs floor traffic split If you want, I can give you a **step-by-step fill-rate troubleshooting checklist** for **GAM / Prebid / AdX**, or help you diagnose it from your own metrics.
How do I monetize traffic from outside the United States? problem 10/mo
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The best way is to match the monetization method to the country mix and traffic quality. **Top options:** 1. **Display ads** - Good for broad international traffic. - Networks to try: **Google AdSense**, **Mediavine**, **Raptive**, **Ezoic**. - If your traffic is mostly outside the US, expect lower RPMs than US traffic. 2. **Affiliate offers** - Often better than ads for non-US traffic. - Use region-specific programs: - **Amazon Associates** (local stores: .uk, .de, .fr, etc.) - **CJ Affiliate** - **Impact** - **Awin** (strong in Europe) - **ClickBank** (digital products, global) - Best if you can localize offers by country. 3. **Direct sales / digital products** - Highest margin. - Sell ebooks, templates, courses, memberships, or services. - Tools: **Gumroad**, **Lemon Squeezy**, **Shopify**, **Kajabi**. 4. **Lead gen** - Works well in markets with strong buyer intent. - Route traffic to local businesses, finance, education, insurance, or SaaS. - Use networks like **PartnerStack**, **Impact**, or direct outreach to advertisers. 5. **Sponsored placements** - If you have niche traffic, sell placements directly. - Better than ad networks once you have meaningful volume. **Important for non-US traffic:** - **Localize content** by country/language. - Use **geo-targeted offers** and pricing. - Make sure your **payment processor** supports your audience: **PayPal**, **Stripe**, **Wise**. - Check **tax/VAT** handling if you sell products. **Simple rule:** - Low intent + lots of traffic → **ads** - High intent → **affiliate** - Loyal audience → **digital products / membership** If you want, I can suggest the best monetization stack based on your traffic countries and niche.
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If you mean **website/app traffic from users outside the U.S.**, monetize it like this: 1. **Use an ad network that can price and target by country.** Geo-targeted networks like PropellerAds let you target by country and say they monetize traffic from 195+ countries. ([help.propellerads.com](https://help.propellerads.com/en/articles/1955669-what-targeting-options-are-available?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Don’t rely on U.S.-only assumptions.** Google’s publisher products support many languages, but content primarily in an unsupported language isn’t allowed; Google also serves relevant ads in the page’s language. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/adsense/answer/9727?hl=en&utm_source=openai)) 3. **Optimize for mixed geo traffic.** Use ad stack testing / layout optimization so non-U.S. traffic isn’t “underfilled.” Ezoic says its system tests ad combinations per visitor to maximize inventory value; Mediavine also focuses on ad management and revenue optimization for qualifying publishers. ([wp.ezoic.com](https://wp.ezoic.com/de-lang?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Add non-display revenue.** For lower-RPM countries, usually the best mix is: display ads + affiliate offers + direct sponsorships + digital products. 5. **Avoid fake/cheap traffic.** Google warns against traffic exchange and similar schemes because they can trigger invalid traffic and get monetization disabled. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/adsense/answer/1348729?hl=en&utm_source=openai)) **Practical playbook:** - Tier 1 countries: premium display ads + affiliate offers. - Tier 2/3 countries: lighter ads, local affiliate offers, and lead-gen. - All countries: build email list and sell your own product/service. If you want, I can give you a **country-by-country monetization stack** for your exact traffic mix.
How do I improve CPMs on my site? problem
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To improve CPMs on your site, focus on **traffic quality, ad viewability, and monetization setup**. ### Biggest levers - **Get higher-value traffic**: U.S., Canada, UK, Australia usually pay much better than lower-tier geos. - **Increase session depth**: more pages/session = more ad opportunities. - **Improve viewability**: ads above the fold, sticky units, lazy-load below the fold. - **Match content to high-paying niches**: finance, insurance, software, B2B, health, legal. - **Reduce low-quality traffic**: bot traffic and accidental clicks can tank CPMs. ### Ad setup wins - Use **Google Ad Manager** + **header bidding**. - Add a premium network like **Mediavine**, **Raptive**, or **Ezoic** if you qualify. - Test **sticky sidebar**, **in-content**, and **anchor ads**. - Avoid too many ads per page; clutter often lowers overall RPM. ### Tools/products worth using - **Google Ad Manager** — control and yield optimization - **Prebid.js** — header bidding - **Mediavine** or **Raptive** — strong for content sites with decent traffic - **Ezoic** — easier entry, good for testing - **Cloudflare** — helps performance, which can improve viewability and UX - **Google Search Console** — find pages/queries that attract higher-value traffic ### Quick checklist - Page speed under ~2–3 seconds - Ads visible on load - Mobile layout optimized - Content targeted to buyer-intent keywords - Remove junk traffic sources - A/B test ad placements weekly If you want, I can give you a **site-specific CPM improvement plan** based on your traffic, niche, and ad stack.
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To improve CPMs, focus on **more valuable traffic + better ad inventory + better auction dynamics**. ### Biggest levers - **Increase tier-1 traffic**: US/UK/CA/AU visitors usually pay more. - **Improve viewability**: ads that are seen longer earn higher CPMs. - **Use better placements**: above-the-fold, in-content, and sticky units often outperform low-visibility spots. - **Reduce clutter**: too many ads can hurt page speed and auction value. - **Speed up the site**: faster pages usually improve viewability and fill. - **Use a header bidding setup**: more demand sources can raise bids. - **Segment your inventory**: separate desktop/mobile, article/category pages, and logged-in vs anonymous users. - **Block low-quality demand**: filter spammy or irrelevant ads. - **Test ad sizes**: 300x250, 336x280, 300x600, 970x250, and mobile anchor/sticky often perform well. - **Improve content quality and niche**: finance, software, business, and high-intent topics often get stronger CPMs. ### Quick wins 1. Check **Core Web Vitals** and page load speed. 2. Move one strong ad unit **closer to the top**. 3. Add **lazy loading** below the fold. 4. Test **sticky mobile** and **in-content ads**. 5. Run **A/B tests** on layout, density, and ad types. 6. Compare **direct deals, PMP, and open auction** demand. ### Common mistakes - Too many ads - Poor mobile layout - Slow pages - Generic traffic from low-value regions - No floor pricing strategy - Not using multiple demand partners If you want, I can give you a **CPM optimization checklist** for: - **AdSense/Ad Manager** - **Display + programmatic** - **Newsletter/publisher sites** - **Mobile-heavy sites**
How do I sell video ad inventory on my site? problem
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To sell video ad inventory on your site, you generally need **video player + ad server + demand sources**. ### Simple path 1. **Add a video player** - Use something like **JW Player**, **Brightcove**, or **Video.js**. - Make sure it supports **VAST/VMAP** ad tags. 2. **Set up ad serving** - Most publishers use **Google Ad Manager (GAM)** for trafficking and reporting. - In GAM, create video ad units and place ad tags in your player. 3. **Connect to programmatic demand** - Use an **SSP** like: - **Magnite** - **PubMatic** - **Index Exchange** - **OpenX** - These connect your inventory to DSP buyers and auction demand. 4. **Package your inventory** - Define: - pre-roll, mid-roll, post-roll - desktop/mobile - instream vs outstream - geography, content category, viewability - Strongly consider **pre-roll** first; it’s easiest to sell. 5. **Set direct deals** - Sell directly to advertisers/agencies at a fixed CPM. - Use **Google Ad Manager** for line items and targeting. 6. **Optimize for buyers** - Use clear content categories, brand safety, and decent playback quality. - Keep load times low and make sure ads are skippable/non-skippable as appropriate. ### Best “starter stack” - **Player:** JW Player - **Ad server:** Google Ad Manager - **SSP:** Magnite or PubMatic ### If you want, I can also give you: - a **step-by-step setup in Google Ad Manager** - the **best SSPs for small publishers** - or a **technical implementation checklist for VAST/VMAP**
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To sell video ad inventory on your site, you usually need 5 things: 1. **Video player** - Use a player that supports ad tags/VAST, like **Google IMA**, **JW Player**, or **Video.js**. 2. **Ad server / monetization stack** - Common options: - **Google Ad Manager** (most common for publishers) - **SpringServe** - **Kevel** if you want more control 3. **Demand sources** - Sell via: - **Direct deals** with advertisers - **Programmatic** via SSPs like **Magnite**, **PubMatic**, **Index Exchange**, **OpenX** - Or through **Google AdX** if you have access via GAM 4. **Ad format setup** - Decide what video inventory you have: - **Pre-roll** - **Mid-roll** - **Post-roll** - **Outstream** - **Sticky / floating video** - Then configure ad rules, frequency caps, viewability, and allowed durations. 5. **Measurement and reporting** - Track: - Impressions - Viewability - Completion rate - Fill rate - CPM / eCPM ### Practical path - If you’re a smaller publisher: start with **Google Ad Manager + a supported player + one or two SSP partners**. - If you have direct sales: build a **media kit**, set a **minimum CPM**, and sell sponsorships or guaranteed placements. - If you want maximum yield: use **header bidding / unified auctions** for video. ### What you’ll need before selling - Consistent video traffic - Clear content category - Ad policy compliance - A way to place VAST/VPAID (mostly VAST now) - Privacy/consent setup if you serve users in regulated regions If you want, I can give you: - a **step-by-step setup for Google Ad Manager**, or - a **best monetization stack based on your site size**.
How do I monetize a small blog with ads? problem
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For a simple 3-step of which of the available toays easy, hard, and a crew data of 3-4 times no. 3 o it. Concrased to the options: - Set up Google AdSense if your blog is a normal blog with modest traffic. - If you have more traffic, try Ezoic. - If your blog is in a premium niche, apply to Mediavine or Raptive later. Then study: - Place ads in the header, sidebar, and within posts. - Keep ad density moderate so the site stays fast. - Use Google Analytics and AdSense reports to see which pages earn best. - Write more posts around high-RPM topics like finance, software, or insurance. How you monetize if you get a new blog: - 1–10k monthly visits: AdSense - 10k–50k: Ezoic - 50k+ and good content quality: Mediavine or Raptive Helpful brands and tools: - Google AdSense - Google Analytics - Ezoic - Mediavine - Raptive If you want, I can sketch a light, few-the other with yours where you can buy.
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Here’s the simplest path: 1. **Get decent traffic first** Ads pay very little on tiny traffic, so focus on consistent visitors. 2. **Join an ad network** - **Beginner:** Google AdSense - **Better once you have more traffic:** Mediavine, Raptive, Ezoic 3. **Place ads carefully** - Use 1–3 ad spots to start - Put one in the header, one in-content, one in sidebar/footer - Don’t overload the page or hurt reading experience 4. **Optimize for RPM** - Topics like finance, insurance, software, and business usually pay more - U.S., UK, Canada traffic often pays better than low-CPM regions 5. **Track and test** - Watch CTR, RPM, and bounce rate - Try different placements and formats 6. **Stay compliant** - Add a privacy policy and cookie notice if needed - Follow ad network rules **Reality check:** if your blog is very small, ads may only make a few dollars a month. In that case, ads work best as a **secondary income stream**, while you also use: - affiliate links - sponsored posts - digital products - email list monetization If you want, I can give you: - the **best ad network for your traffic level**, or - a **step-by-step setup for WordPress**.
How much do ad networks pay publishers? transactional
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It varies a lot, but here are common ranges: - **Display ads (CPM/RPM):** about **$1–$20 per 1,000 pageviews** - Low-traffic/general sites: **$1–$5 RPM** - Better niches/US traffic: **$5–$20+ RPM** - **Premium publishers / strong niches:** can get **$20–$50+ RPM** - **Paid search / CPC ads:** usually **a few cents to a few dollars per click**, depending on the keyword What changes the payout most: - **Traffic country** (US/UK/Canada usually pays more) - **Niche** (finance, insurance, tech, legal pay more) - **Ad format** (video, native, display) - **Viewability and engagement** - **Network** and demand Common networks: - **Google AdSense**: easy to start, usually lower payouts - **Ezoic**: often better than AdSense for many sites - **Mediavine** / **Raptive**: typically much higher, but require substantial traffic If you want, I can estimate earnings for your site traffic and niche.
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It depends a lot, but most ad networks pay publishers on a **revenue-share** basis, usually expressed as **RPM/eCPM** (earnings per 1,000 impressions/pageviews). Google AdSense says publishers get **80% of revenue** for AdSense for Content, and in the common Google Ads-to-AdSense example that works out to about **68% of advertiser spend** going to the publisher. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/adsense/answer/180195?hl=en&utm_source=openai)) So the short answer is: **not a fixed amount**—it can be anywhere from **pennies per 1,000 views** for low-value traffic to **much higher RPMs** for premium niches, better geographies, and stronger ad layouts. The main drivers are audience country, topic/niche, device mix, viewability, ad format, and fill rate. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/adsense/answer/112032/%E5%B9%BF%E5%91%8A-rpm?hl=en-GB&utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can estimate your likely earnings from your **pageviews, niche, and traffic countries**.
What is the average CPM for ad networks? transactional
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Average CPM for ad networks varies a lot, but a rough rule of thumb is: - **Display ads (general sites):** **$1–$10 CPM** - **Premium content sites:** **$10–$30+ CPM** - **Finance/insurance/tech niches:** often **$20–$100+ CPM** - **Low-tier/untargeted traffic:** sometimes **under $1 CPM** Examples: - **Google AdSense:** often around **$0.50–$5 CPM** - **Ezoic:** commonly **$2–$15 CPM** - **Mediavine:** often **$10–$30 CPM** - **Raptive (AdThrive):** often **$15–$40+ CPM** Big factors: - audience country - niche - device - ad format - traffic quality/season If you want, I can also give **average CPMs by ad network** or **by niche**.
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There isn’t one true “average CPM” for ad networks—it varies a lot by geo, niche, and ad format. A useful rough benchmark for **display ads** is **about $0.50–$5 CPM globally**, with premium markets like the US/UK/Germany often around **$3–$5**; **video** is usually much higher, around **$8–$20+**. ([monetizemore.com](https://www.monetizemore.com/blog/best-ad-networks-europe/?utm_source=openai)) Also, CPM can be misleading because networks may optimize for fill rate or only count high-value impressions, so two networks with the same “CPM” may earn very different total revenue. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/blog/what-is-cpm-ad-networks?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you CPM benchmarks for a specific ad type (display, native, video, app, or mobile).
Are there free ad networks for websites? transactional 10/mo
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Yes — there are several **free-to-join ad networks** for websites. Common options: - **Google AdSense** — easiest starting point, widely used. - **Media.net** — good for content sites, contextual ads. - **PropellerAds** — simple approval, multiple ad formats. - **Adsterra** — popular with niche and international traffic. - **Ezoic** — free to join, but usually works best once you have decent traffic. A few notes: - “Free” usually means **no upfront cost to join**; the network takes a cut of ad revenue. - Some networks have **minimum traffic or content requirements**. - Ad quality and payouts vary a lot by niche and country. If you want, I can recommend the **best one for your site type** (blog, news, forum, adult, gaming, etc.).
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Yes — several ad networks let website owners join **without an upfront fee**. Google AdSense says you just create an account and add a code snippet to your site. ([adsense.google.com](https://adsense.google.com/intl/da_dk/start/?utm_source=openai)) Examples: - **Google AdSense** — free to start. ([adsense.google.com](https://adsense.google.com/intl/da_dk/start/?utm_source=openai)) - **Ezoic** — says it is **free-to-use**, but current access is more limited: new sites generally need about **250,000 monthly active users** unless they qualify for its **Incubator** path. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/blog/no-more-pageview-limits?utm_source=openai)) So the short answer is: **yes, but “free” usually means no setup fee — the network still takes a cut of ad revenue.** ([adsense.google.com](https://adsense.google.com/intl/da_dk/start/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also list the **best free ad networks for small websites**.
What ad networks have no minimum traffic requirement? transactional
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Here are ad networks that are commonly used with **no strict minimum traffic requirement**: - **Google AdSense** — no official traffic minimum, but your site must meet policy/content requirements. - **Adsterra** — no minimum traffic; works well for smaller/new sites. - **PropellerAds** — no minimum traffic requirement; easy to join. - **MGID** — typically no minimum, but they review site quality. - **RevenueHits** — no set minimum traffic requirement. - **Bidvertiser** — no traffic minimum. - **Infolinks** — no minimum traffic requirement. - **Ezoic** — no minimum traffic requirement now, though approval still depends on site quality. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best no-minimum ad networks for beginners**, or 2. **which one pays best for low-traffic sites**.
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A few ad networks that publicly say they don’t require a minimum traffic level are: - **Google AdSense** — no published minimum traffic threshold; approval still depends on policy compliance. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/blog/what-do-ad-networks-look-for-when-doing-a-site-review?utm_source=openai)) - **Ezoic Access Now** — explicitly says there’s **no pageview limit** for Access Now. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Basic-Ad-Policy-Requirements-for-Ezoic-Access-Now.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **Monetag** — says there are **no strict website monetization requirements like minimum pageviews**. ([monetag.com](https://monetag.com/blog/website-monetization/?utm_source=openai)) Two caveats: - “No minimum traffic” usually means **no published traffic floor**, not automatic approval. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Basic-Ad-Policy-Requirements-for-Ezoic-Access-Now.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - Networks can still reject sites for content quality, policy issues, or invalid traffic. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Basic-Ad-Policy-Requirements-for-Ezoic-Access-Now.pdf?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to **best options for a new blog**, **U.S. traffic**, or **high-CPM alternatives**.
Which ad networks pay the most? transactional 50/mo
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For **website/app publishers**, the highest-paying ad networks are usually: 1. **Google Ad Manager + AdSense/AdX** - Often best overall for scale and fill rate. 2. **Mediavine** - Great RPMs for lifestyle, food, travel, home, etc. 3. **Raptive (AdThrive)** - Usually among the top for premium content sites with mostly US traffic. 4. **Ezoic** - Good if you don’t yet qualify for Mediavine/Raptive. 5. **Sovrn / Carbon Ads** - Can perform well for certain niches. 6. **Media.net** - Often solid for text-heavy or finance/business sites. 7. **Playwire** - Strong for gaming, entertainment, and high-volume sites. 8. **Publift** - Good monetization stack for mid-sized publishers. 9. **Adcash / PropellerAds** - Higher payouts in some niches, but often lower-quality ads. **Usually highest CPMs/RPMs come from:** - **US/UK/CA/AU traffic** - **Finance, insurance, legal, B2B, tech** - **Premium display, native, and video ads** If you mean **app monetization**, top networks are: - **Google AdMob** - **AppLovin** - **Unity Ads** - **ironSource** - **Meta Audience Network** If you want, I can give you the **best-paying ad networks for your niche** (blog, news site, gaming site, app, etc.).
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There isn’t one universal “highest-paying” ad network—earnings depend on traffic quality, country mix, niche, ad viewability, and format. But for **website publishers**, the networks most often considered top earners are **Raptive** and **Mediavine**; both are premium managed networks, and each publicly states a publisher revenue share of **at least 75%**. ([raptive.com](https://raptive.com/raptive-service-agreement/?utm_source=openai)) For comparison, **Google AdSense** says publishers receive **80% of the revenue** for AdSense for Content, but in practice it’s usually easier to join and often not the highest RPM option versus premium managed networks. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/adsense/answer/180195?hl=en&utm_source=openai)) A simple rule of thumb: - **Best chance at highest earnings:** Raptive / Mediavine ([raptive.com](https://raptive.com/raptive-service-agreement/?utm_source=openai)) - **Good all-around mid-tier option:** Ezoic or Monumetric (often used to optimize and compare demand sources) ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/blog/why-ezoic-is-not-your-ordinary-adsense-partner?utm_source=openai)) - **Easiest entry / broad eligibility:** AdSense ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/adsense/answer/180195?hl=en&utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can rank the **best-paying ad networks for your specific site/app** (blog, news site, gaming, YouTube, mobile app, etc.).
How much does it cost to use an ad network? transactional
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It depends on whether you’re **buying ads** or **monetizing with ads**. ### If you’re an advertiser You usually pay one of these: - **CPM** (cost per 1,000 impressions): often **$1–$20+** - **CPC** (cost per click): often **$0.10–$5+** - **CPA** (cost per action/sale): varies a lot, sometimes **$10–$100+** Typical platforms: - **Google Ads** - **Microsoft Advertising** - **Meta Ads** - **Amazon Ads** ### If you’re a publisher Many ad networks are free to join and take a cut of revenue instead of charging upfront. Common options: - **Google AdSense** — free to use, takes a revenue share - **Ezoic** — usually free to start, monetizes via revenue share - **Media.net** — free for publishers, revenue share model - **AdThrive / Raptive** — generally require higher traffic and take a share ### Extra costs to expect - Creative/design work - Landing page tools - Tracking/analytics - Minimum spend requirements on some networks If you want, I can give you: 1. **costs for advertisers**, 2. **costs for publishers**, or 3. a **comparison of the best ad networks for small websites**.
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It depends on **which side you mean**: - **Publisher / website owner:** many ad networks are **free to join**. For example, Google AdSense says participation is free, and they pay you for clicks or impressions. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/adsense/answer/32850?hl=en&utm_source=openai)) - **Advertiser / buyer:** you usually pay **per click (CPC)**, **per 1,000 impressions (CPM)**, or **per action/conversion (CPA)**. Some networks also require a **minimum deposit or test budget**; Adsterra, for example, lists minimum budgets/deposits depending on the payment method and campaign type. ([adsterra.com](https://adsterra.com/?utm_source=openai)) A good rule of thumb: - **Joining an ad network:** often **$0** - **Running ads:** cost varies widely by audience, country, and format - **Monetizing with ads:** the network usually keeps a **revenue share** rather than charging you upfront. Google says AdSense publishers keep 80% of AdSense for Content revenue, and about 68% when ads are bought via Google Ads. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/adsense/answer/180195?hl=en&utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can break this down for **publishers** or **advertisers** specifically.
What are the best ad networks with fast payouts? transactional
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If you want **fast payouts**, look for networks with **weekly / NET-7 / NET-15** terms and low minimum thresholds. Good options: ### Best ad networks with fast payouts - **Mediavine** — strong RPMs, **monthly payouts** but very reliable; best if you have higher traffic. - **Ezoic** — **monthly** payouts, fast setup, good for scaling sites. - **Raptive (AdThrive)** — premium earnings, **monthly** payouts, great for established publishers. - **Monumetric** — publisher-friendly, **monthly** payouts, decent for mid-size sites. - **Setupad** — often **NET-30**, but reliable and good header bidding monetization. - **Adsterra** — known for **weekly** payouts and low minimums; popular for faster cash flow. - **PropellerAds** — **weekly** payouts available, very easy to join. - **HilltopAds** — offers **weekly** payouts, good for broader traffic types. - **SHE Media** — generally **monthly**, better for lifestyle/female-focused publishers. - **BuySellAds** — can be fast depending on deal structure; good direct ad sales marketplace. ### Best picks for fastest cash flow 1. **PropellerAds** 2. **Adsterra** 3. **HilltopAds** ### Best for higher-quality, long-term earnings 1. **Mediavine** 2. **Raptive** 3. **Ezoic** If you want, I can also give you a list filtered by **lowest payout threshold**, **best for small websites**, or **best for US traffic**.
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If fast payouts are the priority, I’d start with these: 1. **Snigel** — **Net 30** payouts via wire transfer; minimum payout about **$150**. ([snigel.com](https://snigel.com/faq?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Ezoic** — default **Net 30**; default minimum is **$20**; you can also choose slower terms for a bonus. ([support.ezoic.com](https://support.ezoic.com/kb/article/ezoic-payments?utm_source=openai)) 3. **SHE Media** — **Net 35**; they say payments are sent 35 days after month-end. ([support.shemedia.com](https://support.shemedia.com/hc/en-us/articles/4587807626523-When-Do-I-Get-Paid?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Google AdSense** — monthly cycle; payments are typically issued between the **21st and 26th** if you hit the threshold. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/adsense/answer/7164703?hl=en&utm_source=openai)) 5. **Raptive** — **Net 45**; payments under **$25** are deferred. ([help.raptive.com](https://help.raptive.com/hc/en-us/articles/202052255-When-do-I-get-paid?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Mediavine** — **Net 65**, so good network but not “fast payout.” ([help.mediavine.com](https://help.mediavine.com/when-am-i-getting-paid?utm_source=openai)) 7. **Monumetric** — pays on the **5th and 25th**, but first payments can take **30–60 days** and advertiser terms are slower. ([monumetric.com](https://www.monumetric.com/propel-payment/?utm_source=openai)) **Best picks for fast cash flow:** **Ezoic** and **Snigel**. **Best mix of speed + premium network:** **SHE Media** or **Raptive**. ([support.ezoic.com](https://support.ezoic.com/kb/article/ezoic-payments?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them by **highest RPM**, **lowest traffic requirements**, or **best for beginners**.
Which ad networks offer revenue share models? transactional 10/mo
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Common ad networks/publisher platforms that use **revenue share** models include: - **Google AdSense** — publisher gets a split of advertiser revenue; Google keeps a cut. - **Google Ad Manager / AdX (via partners)** — typically rev share through the supply chain/partner setup. - **Mediavine** — publisher rev share program for content sites. - **Raptive** (formerly AdThrive) — premium publisher revenue share. - **Ezoic** — revenue-share / optimization-based monetization. - **Monumetric** — publisher revenue share, usually for mid-size sites. - **Snigel** — custom revenue-share ad management. - **NitroPay** — rev-share model, especially for gaming and niche publishers. - **Media.net** — contextual ads with publisher revenue share. - **Infolinks** — publisher revenue share on in-text/display formats. - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** — usually used in a broader monetization stack; revenue share depends on the setup/partners. If you want, I can also sort these by: 1. **best for small sites**, 2. **best for 50k+ sessions/month**, or 3. **highest-paying premium networks**.
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Yes—several do. Common examples include: - **Mediavine** — publisher revenue share from **75% to 90%** depending on program tier. ([help.mediavine.com](https://help.mediavine.com/revenue-share?utm_source=openai)) - **Monumetric** — a “revenue partner” / managed monetization setup; they position themselves as sharing ad revenue with publishers. ([monumetric.com](https://www.monumetric.com/join/?utm_source=openai)) - **Playwire** — explicitly uses a **revenue share** model; its terms say publishers receive **50% of net revenue for direct sales** and **75% for indirect sales**. ([playwire.com](https://www.playwire.com/terms-of-service?utm_source=openai)) - **Google AdSense for Platforms** — platform owners can keep a fixed **revenue share** and must disclose the split to publishers. ([developers.google.com](https://developers.google.com/adsense/platforms/transparent/sign-up-flow?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a shortlist by **website size** (small, mid, large) or **content type**.
What are the cheapest ad networks for publishers? transactional
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If by **“cheapest”** you mean **lowest barrier to start** for publishers, these are the usual picks: - **Google AdSense** — free to join, easiest baseline option - **Media.net** — free, good for content sites - **PropellerAds** — very low minimums, easy approval - **Adsterra** — free signup, works well for many niches - **Infolinks** — free, simple contextual ads - **Monetag** — low barrier, good for traffic-heavy sites If you mean **cheapest in fees/cuts**, look at: - **AdSense** — no monthly platform fee - **Mediavine** — great payouts, but not “cheap” to qualify for - **Raptive** — strong monetization, higher requirements - **Ezoic** — no upfront cost, but takes a revenue share **Best cheap starter stack:** 1. **Google AdSense** 2. **Media.net** 3. **Adsterra** or **PropellerAds** for extra fill If you want, I can also list the **highest-paying ad networks for small publishers** or the **best ones for low-traffic sites**.
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If you mean **lowest network cut / lowest direct cost to the publisher**, the usual cheapest mainstream options are: - **Google AdSense** — publishers keep **80%** of AdSense for Content revenue; Google’s help docs say that translates to about **68% of Google Ads revenue** after Google’s buy-side fee. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/adsense/answer/180195?hl=en&utm_source=openai)) - **Publift** — publicly states a **20% revenue share**, so publishers keep **80%**. ([publift.com](https://www.publift.com/blog/monetizemore-vs-freestar-vs-publift?utm_source=openai)) - **Ezoic** — says its core service is **“no fee” / no out-of-pocket cost** for publishers, though it also offers paid Premium services. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/blog/why-ezoic-is-not-your-ordinary-adsense-partner?utm_source=openai)) - **Mediavine** — current programs start at **75% publisher / 25% Mediavine** for many sites, with higher tiers reaching 80%–90% for qualifying publishers. ([help.mediavine.com](https://help.mediavine.com/revenue-share?utm_source=openai)) - **Raptive** — its service agreement says publishers receive **at least 75%** of ad revenue. ([raptive.com](https://raptive.com/raptive-service-agreement/?utm_source=openai)) **Short answer:** if you’re asking purely about the **smallest cut**, look first at **AdSense, Publift, and Ezoic**; among premium managed networks, **Mediavine and Raptive** are typically the lowest-fee big names. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/adsense/answer/180195?hl=en&utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can rank these by **lowest fee, easiest approval, or best for small sites**.
What are the best ad networks with a free account setup? transactional
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Here are some of the best ad networks with **free account setup**: 1. **Google AdSense** - Best for: beginners, blogs, content sites - Pros: easy setup, huge advertiser base, reliable payouts - Cons: strict approval and policy rules 2. **Ezoic** - Best for: growing websites that want higher RPMs - Pros: free to join, AI ad optimization, often better earnings than AdSense - Cons: needs some traffic and setup time 3. **Media.net** - Best for: content sites, especially in finance, news, and lifestyle - Pros: free signup, contextual ads, good for US/UK traffic - Cons: usually weaker for non-English traffic 4. **PropellerAds** - Best for: websites with mixed traffic or less traditional content - Pros: very easy approval, free signup, multiple ad formats - Cons: can be lower quality than premium networks 5. **Monumetric** - Best for: medium-sized publishers - Pros: managed ad service, strong support - Cons: has a setup fee for smaller sites, so not always fully “free” 6. **Setupad** - Best for: publishers wanting header bidding and premium demand - Pros: free account setup, good monetization tools - Cons: typically works best with more established traffic 7. **AdThrive / Raptive** - Best for: high-traffic sites - Pros: premium payouts, excellent support - Cons: strict traffic requirements; not easy for beginners **Best overall free option:** **Google AdSense** **Best for higher earnings later:** **Ezoic** **Easiest approval:** **PropellerAds** If you want, I can also rank these by **approval ease**, **highest payout**, or **best for small websites**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **easy, free publisher signup**, the best bets are: 1. **Google AdSense** — free account setup and the most universal starting point for small sites. 2. **Monetag** — free publisher registration; you can create an account with email or Google sign-in. ([help.monetag.com](https://help.monetag.com/en/articles/6726305-how-do-i-get-started-as-a-publisher-signing-up?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Infolinks** — explicitly offers “sign up free” for publishers. ([infolinks.com](https://www.infolinks.com/publishers/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Adsterra** — publisher signup is free; they say you just register, confirm email, add your site, and start monetizing. ([adsterra.com](https://adsterra.com/publishers/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **PropellerAds** — free account creation, but it’s a stronger fit for performance/remnant traffic than premium editorial sites. ([help.propellerads.com](https://help.propellerads.com/en/articles/1955649-how-to-register-as-an-advertiser-in-propellerads?utm_source=openai)) If you already have more traffic, consider: - **Media.net** — free publisher program signup, often used for contextual/native ads. ([media.net](https://www.media.net/ads/publisher-program/?utm_source=openai)) - **Ezoic** — can be free to join, but current standard access is much more selective; Ezoic says its main platform requires **250,000 monthly users**, with **Incubator** available below that. ([ezoic.com](https://www.ezoic.com/incubator?utm_source=openai)) - **Mediavine** — not really “easy/free for everyone”; standard ad management starts at **50,000 monthly sessions**, though they point smaller sites to **Journey by Mediavine**. ([mediavine.com](https://www.mediavine.com/mediavine-requirements/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall starter:** AdSense - **Best easy alternatives:** Monetag, Infolinks, Adsterra - **Best if you have real traffic already:** Media.net, Ezoic, Mediavine/Journey ([help.monetag.com](https://help.monetag.com/en/articles/6726305-how-do-i-get-started-as-a-publisher-signing-up?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can rank these for your specific site type: **blog, news site, adult, gaming, mobile app, or social traffic**.

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best ad networks for publishers?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
The best ad networks for publishers depend on your traffic type, volume, and niche. Top options: - **Google AdSense** — best for beginners and smaller sites; easiest to get started. - **Ezoic** — good for mid-sized publishers; strong AI optimization and decent earnings. - **Mediavine** — excellent for lifestyle/content sites with high-quality US traffic; usually best RPMs for eligible publishers. - **Raptive (formerly AdThrive)** — top-tier for large content publishers; strong support and premium demand. - **Monumetric** — good middle ground for growing sites; more hands-on than AdSense. - **Publift** — solid for premium publishers looking for header bidding and optimization. - **Media.net** — good contextual ads, often a nice AdSense alternative. - **PropellerAds** — better for high-volume or international traffic; can work well for push/pop formats. - **SHE Media** — strong for women-focused/lifestyle publishers. - **Sovrn //Commerce + Ad** — useful for publishers wanting monetization plus affiliate tools. Quick pick: - **Small/new site:** AdSense - **Growing site:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **Established content site:** Mediavine or Raptive - **International/high-volume:** PropellerAds or Media.net If you want, I can also rank them by **RPM, ease of approval, and minimum traffic requirements**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
The “best” ad network depends on your traffic, niche, and region, but the top publisher networks are usually: ### Best overall - **Google AdSense** — easiest to start, widely supported, low traffic barrier. - **Google Ad Manager** — best if you want more control and can manage direct deals/programmatic. ### Best for established content sites - **Mediavine** — excellent RPMs and support; usually for sites with solid monthly traffic. - **Raptive** — strong for premium content publishers; typically higher-traffic sites. - **Ezoic** — good for growing sites; more flexible entry point than premium networks. ### Best for niche/technical control - **Monumetric** — good middle ground for smaller to mid-size publishers. - **Snigel** — strong header bidding and monetization for larger sites. - **Setupad** — good programmatic yield optimization. - **NitroPay** — useful for publishers wanting more control over ad stack and UX. ### Best for app/web programmatic scale - **PubMatic** - **OpenX** - **Magnite** - **Index Exchange** ### Quick picks - **New site:** AdSense - **Growing site:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **High-quality content site:** Mediavine or Raptive - **Advanced publisher:** Google Ad Manager + Snigel/Setupad + direct deals If you tell me your **monthly pageviews, niche, and country mix**, I can recommend the best network for your site specifically.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
The “best” ad network depends on your traffic, niche, and geography, but these are top choices for publishers: ### Best overall / premium - **Google AdSense** — easiest to start with, broad advertiser demand. - **Google Ad Manager** — best if you want more control and to stack multiple demand sources. - **Raptive** — strong for larger content sites, especially lifestyle, food, finance, parenting. - **Mediavine** — excellent RPMs and support for established publishers. ### Good for smaller sites - **AdSense** - **Ezoic** — good for testing and optimization, more hands-on than AdSense. - **Monumetric** — solid for mid-sized publishers. - **Snigel** — strong for publishers wanting managed ad ops. ### Great for global / programmatic demand - **Index Exchange** - **OpenX** - **PubMatic** - **Magnite** ### Best for mobile apps - **AppLovin** - **Google AdMob** - **Unity LevelPlay** (ironSource) ### Best for video - **Teads** - **Primis** - **Media.net** (also good for display/contextual) ### Best for niche/content monetization - **Media.net** — especially for US/UK content sites. - **BuySellAds** — good if you want direct sponsorships and control. - **Carbon Ads** — great for developer/tech audiences. ### Simple recommendation - **New site:** AdSense + Ezoic - **Growing content site:** Mediavine or Monumetric - **Large site:** Raptive + Google Ad Manager + header bidding partners - **App:** AdMob + AppLovin If you tell me your site type, monthly sessions, and audience country, I can suggest the best 3 networks for your case.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
The best ad networks for publishers depend on your traffic, niche, and geo, but these are the strongest options: - **Google AdSense** — best starting point; easy approval, huge demand, good fill. - **Google Ad Manager** — best for publishers ready to manage multiple demand sources and optimize yield. - **Mediavine** — one of the best for lifestyle, food, travel, and similar content; strong RPMs, but requires meaningful traffic. - **Raptive (formerly AdThrive)** — premium network for established content sites; often excellent payouts. - **Ezoic** — good for smaller to mid-sized publishers wanting AI-based optimization; more flexible than premium networks. - **Monumetric** — solid mid-tier option; good support and easier entry than top premium networks. - **Sovrn Commerce / Sovrn Ads** — useful for publishers who want ad monetization plus commerce tools. - **Publift** — good for growing publishers, especially those wanting header bidding support. - **Setupad** — strong for header bidding and international traffic. - **Criteo** — best known for retargeting and commerce-focused demand, not usually a full standalone solution. - **Media.net** — decent contextual ads, especially for content-heavy sites. **Quick picks:** - **New/small site:** AdSense, Ezoic - **Growing site:** Monumetric, Setupad, Publift - **Established high-traffic site:** Mediavine, Raptive - **More control/advanced monetization:** Google Ad Manager + header bidding partners If you want, I can also rank them by **highest RPM**, **easiest approval**, or **best for low-traffic sites**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
The “best” ad network depends on your traffic type and volume, but these are the strongest options for publishers: ### Top ad networks for publishers - **Google AdSense** — best for beginners and small-to-medium sites; easy setup, reliable demand. - **Google Ad Manager** — best for scaling once you have multiple demand sources and want more control. - **Media.net** — strong contextual ads, good alternative to AdSense. - **Ezoic** — good for smaller publishers who want optimization tools and higher RPMs. - **Monumetric** — solid for mid-sized publishers with decent traffic. - **Raptive (formerly AdThrive)** — premium network for established content sites with high traffic, especially lifestyle/family/home niches. - **Mediavine** — excellent for lifestyle/content publishers; strong payouts and support. - **Sovrn** — flexible monetization and header bidding tools. - **PubMatic** — more advanced, better for larger publishers with programmatic setup. - **Xandr** — strong enterprise-level monetization and programmatic demand. ### Best by publisher type - **New/small site:** AdSense, Media.net, Ezoic - **Growing site:** Monumetric, Sovrn, Ezoic - **High-traffic premium site:** Mediavine, Raptive - **Advanced/large-scale programmatic:** Google Ad Manager, PubMatic, Xandr ### Quick recommendation If you want the safest default: - Start with **Google AdSense** - Move to **Mediavine** or **Raptive** once you qualify - Use **Google Ad Manager** for more control and multiple ad partners If you tell me your monthly pageviews, niche, and traffic sources, I can recommend the best network for your site specifically.
Which ad networks are most popular right now? 10/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
The biggest ad networks/platforms people use right now are: **For advertisers** - **Google Ads** (Search, Display, YouTube) — still the #1 overall - **Meta Ads** (Facebook + Instagram) - **Amazon Ads** - **TikTok Ads** - **Microsoft Advertising** (Bing) - **The Trade Desk** (programmatic display/video/CTV) - **LinkedIn Ads** (B2B) **For website publishers** - **Google AdSense** / **Google Ad Manager** - **Ezoic** - **Mediavine** - **Raptive** (formerly AdThrive) - **Media.net** - **Monumetric** **For native/content recommendation** - **Taboola** - **Outbrain** If you want, I can also rank them by: 1. **best for beginners**, 2. **highest payout for publishers**, or 3. **best for e-commerce/lead gen advertisers**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
The most popular ad networks right now are: - **Google Ads / Google AdSense / Google Ad Manager** — still the biggest overall - **Meta Ads** (Facebook + Instagram) - **Amazon Ads** — very strong for ecommerce - **TikTok Ads** — huge for consumer brands - **Microsoft Advertising** (Bing) - **LinkedIn Ads** — best for B2B - **YouTube Ads** (via Google Ads) - **The Trade Desk** — major programmatic platform - **Media.net** — common alternative for publishers - **Ezoic** and **Raptive** — popular for website monetization If you want, I can also give: 1. the **best ad networks for publishers**, or 2. the **best ad networks for advertisers**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
If you mean **publisher ad networks** (for websites/apps), the most popular right now are: - **Google AdSense** — easiest to start with, huge demand - **Google Ad Manager** — for bigger publishers with direct deals/programmatic - **Mediavine** — very popular for content sites with solid traffic - **Raptive** — strong for lifestyle, food, parenting, etc. - **Ezoic** — popular mid-tier option with optimization tools - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS / TAM)** — big for programmatic header bidding - **Media.net** — common contextual ads network - **Taboola** — native/recommendation ads - **Outbrain** — similar to Taboola, strong native ads - **Adsterra** / **PropellerAds** — popular for broad/global traffic, especially performance-focused sites For **mobile apps**, the most used are: - **Google AdMob** - **AppLovin** - **Unity Ads** - **ironSource / LevelPlay** - **Meta Audience Network** If you want, I can also rank the **best ad networks by niche** (blog, news site, gaming app, adult, low-traffic site, etc.).
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
The most popular ad networks right now are: - **Google AdSense / Google Ad Manager** — still the biggest for website monetization - **Google Ads** — dominant for search and display buying - **Meta Ads (Facebook + Instagram)** — huge for social advertising - **Amazon Ads** — especially strong for ecommerce brands - **Microsoft Advertising** — Bing search ads, smaller but important - **TikTok Ads** — very popular for performance and brand campaigns - **Criteo** — strong in retargeting and ecommerce - **Taboola** / **Outbrain** — popular for native ads and content recommendation - **Media.net** — common alternative contextual network - **PropellerAds** — popular in pop, push, and direct traffic niches If you mean **publisher monetization networks**, the most used are usually: **AdSense, Mediavine, Raptive, Ezoic, PubMatic, and AppLovin**. If you want, I can also rank them by **website traffic monetization**, **app ads**, or **affiliate/display performance**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
The biggest ad networks/platforms right now are: - **Google Ads / Google AdSense / Google Ad Manager** — still the largest overall - **Meta Ads** (Facebook + Instagram) - **Amazon Ads** - **TikTok Ads** - **Microsoft Advertising** (Bing) - **YouTube Ads** (via Google) - **Apple Search Ads** - **Taboola** and **Outbrain** — big for native ads - **Criteo** — strong in retargeting/ecommerce - **LinkedIn Ads** — popular for B2B If you mean **publisher monetization networks** specifically, the most popular are usually: - **Google AdSense** - **Google Ad Manager** - **Media.net** - **Ezoic** - **Mediavine** - **Raptive** (formerly CafeMedia) - **Sovrn** - **Monumetric** - **Adsterra** - **PropellerAds** If you want, I can also rank them by **traffic volume**, **best for publishers**, or **best for advertisers**.
What are the top ad network companies? 10/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Top ad network companies include: - **Google AdSense / Google Ad Manager** — biggest and most widely used - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** — strong for programmatic display/video - **Media.net** — major contextual ad network - **Raptive** (formerly AdThrive) — premium publisher network - **Monumetric** — good for mid-sized publishers - **Ezoic** — popular AI-based ad optimization platform - **Sovrn** — publisher monetization network - **InMobi** — strong in mobile ads - **AppLovin** — major app/mobile ad network - **Unity Ads** — big for gaming app monetization - **PropellerAds** — large global network, especially performance traffic - **Taboola** / **Outbrain** — native advertising leaders If you want, I can also rank the best ones for: 1. **website publishers**, 2. **mobile apps**, or 3. **advertisers looking to buy traffic**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the top ad network companies are: - **Google AdSense / Google Ad Manager** — biggest overall for publisher display ads - **Google AdMob** — top choice for mobile app ads - **Meta Audience Network** — strong for mobile and social inventory - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** — strong programmatic demand - **Criteo** — well-known for retargeting and commerce ads - **The Trade Desk** — major programmatic ad platform - **Media.net** — popular contextual/display network - **Taboola** — native content recommendation ads - **Outbrain** — native and discovery ads - **PubMatic** — supply-side platform with broad ad network reach - **Magnite** — leading for CTV/video and programmatic - **Roku Ads Manager** — strong for connected TV - **TikTok Ads** — not a classic ad network, but a major ad platform for performance/social If you want, I can also rank them by: 1. **best for publishers**, 2. **best for app monetization**, or 3. **best for advertisers**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Top ad network companies include: - **Google AdSense / Google Ad Manager** — biggest for website display ads and publisher monetization - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** — strong for header bidding and programmatic demand - **Media.net** — popular contextual ad network, especially for content sites - **Ezoic** — AI-driven ad optimization for publishers - **Raptive** — premium publisher ad network for larger content creators - **Sovrn //Commerce + Sovrn Ad Exchange** — publisher monetization tools and ad demand - **Taboola** — native ads and recommendation widgets - **Outbrain** — native advertising and content discovery - **PropellerAds** — good for push, pop, and performance traffic - **Monumetric** — ad management for mid-sized publishers If you want, I can also give you the **top ad networks for mobile apps**, **small publishers**, or **advertisers**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the top ad network / ad platform companies: - **Google AdSense / Google Ad Manager** — biggest and most widely used for display and programmatic ads. - **Media.net** — strong contextual ad network, often used by publishers. - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** — good for header bidding and premium demand. - **Criteo** — major in retargeting and commerce ads. - **Taboola** — leading native ad network. - **Outbrain** — another top native/content recommendation platform. - **AppLovin** — very strong for mobile app monetization. - **Unity Ads** — popular for in-app and gaming ads. - **InMobi** — large mobile ad network, especially international reach. - **Sovrn** — publisher-focused monetization and ad management. - **PropellerAds** — broad global ad network, often used by smaller publishers. - **Monumetric** — good for mid-sized publishers. - **Raptive** (formerly CafeMedia) — premium publisher ad management. - **Ezoic** — AI-driven ad optimization for websites. - **PubMatic** — major programmatic ad exchange/platform. - **Magnite** — leading SSP, especially for CTV and video. If you want, I can also narrow this down by: 1. **best for websites/publishers** 2. **best for mobile apps** 3. **best for native ads** 4. **best for high-traffic sites**
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the top ad network companies: - **Google Ad Manager / AdSense / AdMob** — biggest overall ecosystem for web and app monetization - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** — strong for programmatic display and CTV - **The Trade Desk** — leading demand-side platform with huge reach in programmatic ads - **Criteo** — well known for retargeting and commerce ads - **PubMatic** — major publisher monetization platform - **Magnite** — one of the largest independent sell-side platforms - **Index Exchange** — premium programmatic ad exchange - **Microsoft Advertising** — search and audience network reach - **Media.net** — strong contextual ad network, especially for publishers - **AdThrive (Mediavine)** — top premium networks for content publishers If you want, I can also give: 1. **best ad networks for publishers**, 2. **best for app monetization**, or 3. **best for small websites**.
What are the best ad network options for websites?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
The best ad network depends on your traffic, niche, and how much control you want. Top options: ### Best overall - **Google AdSense** — easiest to start with, broad demand, good for small/new sites. - **Google Ad Manager** — best if you want more control and may grow into multiple demand sources. ### Best for higher revenue on content sites - **Mediavine** — excellent RPMs, strong support; usually requires ~50k sessions/month. - **Raptive** (formerly AdThrive) — premium for established publishers; usually stronger for larger sites. - **Monumetric** — good mid-tier option, works for smaller publishers than Mediavine. ### Best for small/medium sites - **Ezoic** — accessible, uses AI testing, often better than AdSense alone. - **NitroPay** — strong for gaming/tech/news and performance-focused publishers. - **Media.net** — solid contextual ads, especially for US/UK traffic. ### Best for programmatic/header bidding - **Setupad** — good monetization with header bidding. - **Sovrn** — useful for content publishers, affiliates, and mid-sized sites. - **Freestar** — strong managed service for larger publishers. ### Best for affiliate-heavy or niche sites - **Infolinks** — non-intrusive formats, useful as a supplement. - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** — good as an additional demand source, not usually standalone. ## Quick recommendation - **New site:** Google AdSense - **Growing site:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **50k+ sessions/month:** Mediavine - **Large established site:** Raptive - **Need control / scaling:** Google Ad Manager + Setupad/Freestar If you tell me your monthly traffic, niche, and country mix, I can recommend the best 2–3 options for your site.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best ad network options for websites, depending on your traffic and site type: ### Best overall - **Google AdSense** — easiest to start with, huge advertiser demand, works for almost any site. - **Raptive** (formerly AdThrive) — one of the best for premium content sites with strong traffic. - **Mediavine** — excellent RPMs and support, great for established blogs/lifestyle sites. ### Best for growing sites - **Ezoic** — good if you’re not yet big enough for Mediavine/Raptive; includes testing tools. - **Monumetric** — solid mid-tier option with more hands-on setup. ### Best for niche / contextual ads - **Media.net** — strong for content-heavy sites, especially finance/news-style content. - **Sovrn //Commerce** — good for publishers wanting ad + affiliate-style monetization. ### Best for higher control / direct deals - **BuySellAds** — good if you want to sell placements directly to advertisers. - **Carbon Ads** — niche, design/dev/tech-focused sites. ### Best for lower-quality traffic or global traffic - **PropellerAds** — easy approval, but usually lower-quality/user experience than premium networks. - **Adsterra** — similar use case, works well for global inventory. ### Best for ecommerce/content hybrid sites - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** — useful for header bidding and monetization stack. - **Amazon Native Shopping Ads** — good if you do product reviews and comparisons. ### Quick recommendation - **New site:** Google AdSense - **Medium traffic blog:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **Serious content site:** Mediavine or Raptive - **Need direct ad sales:** BuySellAds If you want, I can also give you the **best ad network by traffic level** (e.g. under 10k, 50k, 100k monthly sessions).
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
The best ad network depends on your traffic, niche, and how much control you want. Top options: - **Google AdSense** — Best starting point for most websites. Easy setup, huge demand, reliable fill. - **Google Ad Manager** — Best if you have higher traffic and want to manage multiple demand sources and direct deals. - **Ezoic** — Good for growing sites. Uses AI optimization and often improves earnings over AdSense. - **Mediavine** — Great for content sites with strong U.S. traffic. Usually better RPMs than basic networks. - **Raptive** — Strong for larger publishers, especially lifestyle/content brands with premium traffic. - **Monumetric** — Good mid-tier option for sites that want managed monetization. - **Media.net** — Solid contextual ads, especially for finance, news, and content-heavy sites. - **PropellerAds** — Better for pop, push, and lower-tier traffic; not ideal for premium brands. - **Infolinks** — Easy to add, but usually lower earnings than premium networks. - **Sovrn //Commerce / Commerce Content** — Good for content and affiliate-style monetization. Quick rule of thumb: - **New site:** AdSense - **Growing site:** Ezoic - **100k+ monthly pageviews / premium content:** Mediavine or Raptive - **Need advanced control:** Google Ad Manager If you want, I can recommend the **best network for your exact site** based on traffic, niche, and country mix.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
The “best” ad network depends on your traffic size, niche, and how hands-off you want it to be. Top options for most websites: - **Google AdSense** — best for beginners; easiest approval and widest demand. - **Google Ad Manager + AdSense/Open Bidding** — best if you want more control and are growing. - **Mediavine** — one of the best for premium content sites; great RPMs, but usually needs **50,000 sessions/month**. - **Raptive (formerly AdThrive)** — excellent for larger content sites; typically needs **100,000+ pageviews/month**. - **Ezoic** — good for smaller-to-mid sites wanting optimization and experimentation; more complex but can outperform AdSense. - **Monumetric** — solid middle-ground option for growing sites; easier than premium networks. - **Media.net** — good contextual ads, especially for content-heavy sites. - **Setupad** — good for header bidding and international traffic. - **Sovrn / Commerce** — useful for publishers, especially with affiliate + ad monetization. - **PropellerAds** — better for pop/redirect/native-style monetization, but usually lower-quality than premium display networks. ### Quick picks - **New site:** AdSense - **Growing site:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **High-traffic content site:** Mediavine or Raptive - **Need full control:** Google Ad Manager If you tell me your **monthly pageviews, country traffic, and niche**, I can recommend the best 2–3 options for your site.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
The best ad network depends mostly on your traffic, niche, and how much control you want. ## Top options ### 1) **Google AdSense** - Best for: beginners, low-to-medium traffic - Pros: easy approval, huge demand, reliable payouts - Cons: lower RPMs than premium networks ### 2) **Google Ad Manager + AdX (usually via a partner)** - Best for: larger sites - Pros: strong monetization, more control, good for header bidding - Cons: harder to access directly ### 3) **Ezoic** - Best for: sites with some traffic looking to optimize earnings - Pros: AI-based ad placement, good testing tools, easy to start - Cons: can slow sites if not configured well ### 4) **Mediavine** - Best for: content sites with solid traffic - Pros: high RPMs, great support, polished platform - Cons: traffic threshold required ### 5) **Raptive (formerly AdThrive)** - Best for: premium publishers and lifestyle/content sites - Pros: strong earnings, premium demand, good account support - Cons: selective approval ### 6) **Monumetric** - Best for: mid-sized publishers - Pros: easier than premium networks, decent support - Cons: setup fees on some plans, usually lower than top-tier networks ### 7) **Snigel** - Best for: publishers wanting advanced ad optimization - Pros: strong monetization, managed service - Cons: typically best for established sites ### 8) **Setupad** - Best for: publishers wanting header bidding monetization - Pros: good for international traffic, flexible setup - Cons: more technical than AdSense ## Quick picks - **New site:** Google AdSense - **Growing site:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **Premium content site:** Mediavine or Raptive - **Advanced monetization:** Setupad or Snigel ## My short recommendation If you’re just starting, use **Google AdSense** first. If you already have meaningful traffic, move to **Mediavine** or **Raptive** for the best earning potential. If you want, I can also give you the **best ad networks by traffic level** or **best for blogs, news sites, and niche websites**.
Which ad networks are most recommended for display ads?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
For **display ads on websites**, the most recommended networks are: - **Google AdSense** — best starting point; easiest to approve and use. - **Google Ad Manager** — best for larger publishers who want more control and direct deals. - **Mediavine** — strong RPMs, great for established content sites. - **Raptive** — premium network for high-traffic publishers. - **Ezoic** — good mid-tier option; lots of optimization tools. - **Monumetric** — solid for growing sites with decent traffic. - **Media.net** — good contextual ads, especially for content-heavy sites. - **PubMatic** / **Magnite** — more advanced programmatic options, usually for larger publishers. - **Taboola** / **Outbrain** — better for native/content recommendation placements than classic banners. **Quick pick by site size:** - **New/small site:** Google AdSense - **Growing site:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **Established traffic:** Mediavine or Raptive - **Advanced control:** Google Ad Manager + a header bidding setup If you want, I can also rank these by **RPM potential**, **ease of approval**, or **best for low-traffic sites**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
For **display ads**, the most commonly recommended ad networks are: - **Google AdSense** — best all-around starter network; easiest to use and widely supported. - **Google Ad Manager** — better for sites with larger traffic or multiple ad partners. - **Media.net** — strong contextual ads, often good for content sites. - **Ezoic** — great if you want AI-driven optimization and higher yield than basic AdSense. - **Monumetric** — solid option for publishers with moderate traffic. - **Raptive** — best for established content sites with strong traffic. - **Mediavine** — high-performing network for lifestyle, food, travel, and similar content sites. - **Sovrn** — good for smaller to mid-size publishers. - **PropellerAds** — useful for broader/global traffic, though quality can vary by niche. - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** — strong for header bidding and monetization stack support. If you want the **shortest recommendation**: - **New/small site:** AdSense - **Growing content site:** Ezoic or Media.net - **High-traffic content site:** Mediavine or Raptive - **More advanced setup:** Google Ad Manager + header bidding (APS, Prebid partners) If you want, I can also rank these by **eCPM, approval difficulty, and traffic requirements**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Top display ad networks depend on your traffic and site type, but these are the most commonly recommended: - **Google AdSense** — easiest to start with, best for small/medium sites. - **Google Ad Manager** — best if you want more control and direct deals. - **Mediavine** — strong for content sites with higher traffic; usually better CPMs. - **Raptive** (formerly AdThrive) — premium network for larger lifestyle/content publishers. - **Ezoic** — good middle ground for growing sites; more optimization tools. - **Media.net** — solid contextual ads, especially for US/English content. - **Monumetric** — good for smaller publishers who want managed display ads. - **PubMatic**, **Magnite**, **Index Exchange**, **OpenX** — strong SSPs for larger publishers using header bidding. - **Amazon Publisher Services** — useful as part of a header bidding setup. If you want the simplest recommendation: - **Small site:** Google AdSense - **Growing site:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **Established content site:** Mediavine or Raptive - **Advanced publisher setup:** Google Ad Manager + header bidding with PubMatic/Magnite/Index Exchange/OpenX If you tell me your monthly traffic and niche, I can recommend the best 2–3 options for your case.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
For **display ads on a website**, the most commonly recommended networks are: - **Google AdSense** — best starting point for most sites; easy approval and setup. - **Raptive** (formerly AdThrive) — excellent for higher-traffic sites, strong RPMs. - **Mediavine** — very popular for content sites with steady traffic and good user experience. - **Ezoic** — good if you want to test layouts and optimize earnings, especially for mid-size sites. - **Monumetric** — solid option for smaller-to-mid publishers with decent traffic. - **Sovrn** — useful for publishers who want multiple demand sources. - **Media.net** — good contextual ads, often used as an AdSense alternative. **Quick picks:** - **New/small site:** Google AdSense - **Growing site:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **Established content site:** Mediavine - **High-traffic site:** Raptive If you want, I can also rank them by **earnings potential**, **ease of approval**, or **best fit for your traffic level**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
If you mean **publishers monetizing a site/app**, the most recommended display ad networks are: - **Google AdSense** — best starting point, easiest to set up - **Google Ad Manager + AdX** — best for larger publishers and higher yield - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** — strong demand, good header bidding option - **Magnite** — major SSP for premium display inventory - **PubMatic** — solid programmatic monetization - **Xandr** — good enterprise/programmatic option - **Criteo** — especially strong for retargeting and commerce sites - **Media.net** — good contextual ads, often used as an AdSense alternative - **Ezoic / Mediavine / Raptive** — great for content publishers if you qualify **Quick picks:** - **Small site:** AdSense - **Growing content site:** Ezoic or Mediavine - **Large publisher:** Google Ad Manager + AdX + APS + Magnite/PubMatic If you meant **buying display ads** instead, the top choices are **Google Ads**, **Meta Ads**, and **The Trade Desk**.
What are the best ad networks for monetizing a blog?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
The best ad networks for monetizing a blog depend on your traffic and niche, but these are the top choices: ### Best premium networks - **Google AdSense** — easiest to join, good for beginners, works almost everywhere. - **Ezoic** — often a strong step up from AdSense for small to mid-sized blogs. - **Mediavine** — one of the best for lifestyle, food, travel, and similar content; usually requires **50K sessions/month**. - **Raptive (formerly AdThrive)** — premium payouts and support; usually best once you have **100K+ monthly pageviews**. - **Monumetric** — good mid-tier option; typically starts around **10K pageviews/month**. ### Other good options - **Media.net** — solid contextual ads, especially if your blog is in finance, tech, or business. - **Amazon Publisher Services** — better for larger sites with strong product-review/comparison content. - **Setupad** — header bidding network that can boost revenue for established blogs. - **SheMedia** — good for women-focused lifestyle and parenting blogs. ### Best by blog size - **New/small blog:** Google AdSense - **Growing blog:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **Established blog:** Mediavine - **High traffic premium blog:** Raptive If you tell me your blog niche and monthly traffic, I can recommend the best network for your exact case.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
The best ad networks for a blog usually depend on your traffic and niche: ### Top options - **Google AdSense** — Best for beginners. Easy approval, low barrier to entry, but usually lower payouts. - **Ezoic** — Good for growing blogs. Uses AI ad testing, often boosts revenue vs AdSense. - **Mediavine** — One of the best for established lifestyle/content blogs. High RPMs and strong support, but needs solid traffic. - **Raptive** (formerly AdThrive) — Great for premium publishers with high traffic. Often best for larger blogs. - **Monumetric** — Good mid-tier option if you want better monetization before reaching Mediavine/Raptive thresholds. - **SHE Media** — Strong for female-focused/lifestyle blogs. ### Best by blog size - **New blog:** Google AdSense - **Growing blog:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **High-traffic blog:** Mediavine or Raptive ### Quick pick If you want the simplest answer: **Start with Google AdSense, then move to Mediavine or Raptive once you qualify.** If you want, I can also give you the **best ad networks by traffic level and niche** in a simple table.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
The best ad networks for monetizing a blog usually depend on your traffic size and niche: ### Best overall - **Google AdSense** — easiest to start with, low traffic requirements, reliable payouts. Best for beginners. - **Mediavine** — one of the best for earning more once you have enough traffic; strong RPMs and good dashboard. - **Raptive** (formerly AdThrive) — premium network for larger blogs; often excellent earnings, especially in lifestyle, food, parenting, and finance. ### Best for smaller blogs - **Ezoic** — good if you’re growing and want ad optimization before you qualify for premium networks. - **Monumetric** — solid mid-tier option; good support and less intrusive than some networks. ### Best if you want simple setup - **Google AdSense** - **Ezoic** ### Best if you already have solid traffic - **Mediavine** - **Raptive** ### Best for niche sites - **Media.net** — strong for content with lots of search traffic, especially finance and news-style sites. - **BuySellAds** — good if you want direct ad sales or sponsored placements. ### Quick recommendation - **Under ~50k sessions/month:** start with **AdSense** or **Ezoic** - **50k+ sessions/month:** apply to **Mediavine** - **100k+ sessions/month:** consider **Raptive** If you want, I can recommend the best network for your blog based on your traffic, niche, and country audience.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
The best ad networks for blogs usually depend on your traffic and niche: - **Google AdSense** — easiest to start with, best for new/small blogs. - **Ezoic** — strong upgrade from AdSense, uses AI to test ad placements. - **Mediavine** — one of the best for established blogs; usually higher RPMs. - **Raptive (formerly AdThrive)** — excellent for high-traffic lifestyle/content blogs. - **Monumetric** — solid mid-tier option, more hands-on than AdSense. - **Freestar** — good for publishers with larger traffic and custom setups. - **Media.net** — decent contextual ads, especially for U.S./English content. - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** — useful as part of a header bidding setup. Quick rule of thumb: - **Under ~10k monthly sessions:** AdSense, Media.net - **10k–50k:** Ezoic, Monumetric - **50k+:** Mediavine, Raptive, Freestar If you want, I can also give you the **best ad network for your blog niche and traffic level**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
The best ad networks for monetizing a blog depend on your traffic, niche, and how much control you want. Here are the top options: ### Best overall - **Google AdSense** — easiest to start with, broad advertiser base, good for new and mid-sized blogs. - **Ezoic** — usually better payouts than AdSense once you have decent traffic; good optimization tools. - **Mediavine** — one of the best-paying networks for lifestyle, food, travel, and similar blogs; requires higher traffic. - **Raptive (formerly AdThrive)** — top-tier for larger blogs, especially in consumer niches; strong RPMs. ### Best for smaller blogs - **Google AdSense** - **Media.net** — good alternative, especially for content-heavy and finance/tech-style sites. - **Ezoic** ### Best for higher-traffic blogs - **Mediavine** - **Raptive** - **Ezoic** (if you want more control/testing) ### Best for niche/affiliate-heavy blogs - **Monumetric** — solid middle ground, easier to join than top-tier networks. - **SheMedia** — good for women’s lifestyle, parenting, food, and home content. - **Triton Digital** / **BuySellAds** — useful if you want direct ad deals or niche placements. ### Quick recommendation - **Under ~10k monthly sessions:** Google AdSense, Media.net - **Around 10k–50k sessions:** Ezoic, Monumetric - **50k+ sessions:** Mediavine, Raptive If you want, I can also rank these by **highest payout**, **easiest approval**, or **best for your blog niche**.
What ad networks do publishers use most? 170/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Most publishers use a mix, but the biggest names are: - **Google AdSense** — the most common starting point for small publishers - **Google Ad Manager + Google AdX** — the standard stack for larger publishers - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS / TAM)** — very widely used for header bidding - **PubMatic** - **Magnite** (especially strong in video/CTV) - **Index Exchange** - **OpenX** - **Criteo** - **Media.net** — popular for contextual ads, especially content sites For smaller publishers, the most common managed platforms are: - **Ezoic** - **Mediavine** - **Raptive** (formerly AdThrive) If you want the short answer: **Google AdSense/GAM, Amazon APS, PubMatic, Magnite, Index Exchange, and OpenX** are among the most used. If you tell me your site type and traffic level, I can recommend the best ones for you.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Most publishers use these ad networks the most: - **Google AdSense** — the most common for small/new publishers - **Google Ad Manager** — used by larger publishers to manage and sell inventory - **Mediavine** — popular with content sites that get decent traffic - **Raptive** (formerly AdThrive) — big for established lifestyle, food, parenting, and travel sites - **Ezoic** — common with growing publishers trying to optimize ad revenue - **Monumetric** — smaller-to-mid publishers - **Sovrn Commerce / Sovrn Ads** — used by niche publishers - **Media.net** — often used as a contextual ad option, especially alongside AdSense If you mean **most widely used overall**, it’s usually **Google AdSense** and **Google Ad Manager**. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best ad networks by traffic level**, or 2. the **highest-paying networks for publishers**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Most publishers use a mix, but the biggest/common names are: - **Google AdSense** — most common for small/medium publishers - **Google Ad Manager** — the standard ad server for many larger publishers - **Mediavine** — popular with content publishers/blogs - **Raptive** (formerly **AdThrive**) — premium for higher-traffic sites - **Ezoic** — common for mid-size publishers - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** — often used for header bidding - **OpenX**, **Magnite**, **PubMatic**, **Index Exchange** — major programmatic ad exchanges For native/content recommendations: - **Taboola** - **Outbrain** If you want, I can also rank these by: 1. **small publishers**, 2. **high-traffic publishers**, or 3. **best ad revenue potential**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Publishers most commonly use a mix of these ad networks/partners: - **Google AdSense** – the most common starting point for small and mid-size publishers - **Google Ad Manager** (with Google demand/AdX) – very widely used by larger publishers - **Mediavine** – popular with content sites, blogs, and mid-sized publishers - **Raptive** (formerly CafeMedia) – common for high-traffic publishers - **Ezoic** – used by many smaller and growing publishers - **Monumetric** – common for mid-tier sites - **Media.net** – strong contextual ads, often used as a secondary network - **Amazon Publisher Services** – more common with larger publishers/programmatic setups - **Infolinks** / **BuySellAds** – used by some niche publishers and direct-sold inventory If you mean **most used overall**, the short answer is usually: 1. **Google AdSense** 2. **Google Ad Manager** 3. **Mediavine / Raptive / Ezoic** depending on site size If you want, I can also rank them by **publisher size** (small, medium, large) or by **highest revenue potential**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
The most-used ad networks for publishers are usually: - **Google AdSense** — the most common starting point for small/new publishers - **Google Ad Manager** — for larger publishers managing direct deals + programmatic - **Mediavine** — very popular with lifestyle, food, travel, and content sites - **Raptive** (formerly **AdThrive**) — strong for established high-traffic publishers - **Ezoic** — widely used by mid-sized publishers and newer sites - **MonetizeMore** — popular for publishers wanting yield optimization - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** — often used alongside other networks for header bidding - **Taboola** and **Outbrain** — common for native/content recommendation ads - **PubMatic** and **Magnite** — major programmatic platforms for larger publishers - **Revcontent** — another native ad network used by many publishers If you want, I can also rank them by: 1) easiest to get approved, 2) highest payout, or 3) best for small websites.
Which ad networks are good for small websites?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
For small websites, the best ad networks are usually: - **Google AdSense** — easiest to join, works for most small sites, good starting point. - **Media.net** — solid contextual ads, especially for content sites. - **Ezoic** — good once you have some traffic; can improve earnings, but setup is a bit more involved. - **Monumetric** — friendly for smaller publishers, but has traffic minimums and setup fees for the smallest tier. - **NitroPay** — good for gaming/tech/audience-heavy sites. If you want the simplest choice, start with **Google AdSense**. If you have a bit of traffic and want to earn more, try **Ezoic** next. Avoid bigger premium networks like **Mediavine** and **Raptive** until your traffic is much higher.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
For small websites, the best ad networks are usually: - **Google AdSense** — easiest to get started, very reliable, good for low traffic. - **Media.net** — strong if your site is in finance, tech, or lifestyle. - **Ezoic** — good once you have some traffic; usually better earnings than AdSense, but setup is more involved. - **Monumetric** — solid for small-to-mid sites, but they require about **10,000 monthly pageviews**. - **SHE Media** — good for women-focused/lifestyle content, but not ideal for every niche. If you’re very small, start with **AdSense** first. If you want better revenue later, try **Ezoic** or **Monumetric** once traffic grows. If you want, I can also give you the **best ad network by traffic level** (under 1k, 10k, 100k visits/month).
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Good options for small websites: - **Google AdSense** — easiest to start, broad advertiser demand, good for most general sites. - **Media.net** — strong for content sites, especially if you get traffic from the US/UK. - **Ezoic** — good once you have some traffic; can boost earnings with testing/optimization. - **Monumetric** — friendly for small-to-mid publishers, but usually has a traffic minimum. - **Mediavine** — excellent payouts, but requires much higher traffic. - **Raptive (formerly AdThrive)** — top-tier for large sites; not ideal for very small sites. - **SheMedia** — good for lifestyle/family/food niches, depending on traffic and content. - **NitroPay** — can work well for gaming/tech communities and small publishers. Best starting picks: 1. **Google AdSense** 2. **Media.net** 3. **Ezoic** if you already have decent traffic If you tell me your niche and monthly traffic, I can suggest the best 2–3 networks for your site.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
For small websites, the best ad networks are usually: - **Google AdSense** — easiest to join, works well for low traffic, very beginner-friendly. - **Ezoic** — good if you have some traffic and want better optimization than AdSense. - **Monumetric** — solid for small-to-mid sites, but they usually want around **10,000+ monthly views**. - **Media.net** — decent alternative, especially if your content is niche or US/UK-focused. - **SHE Media** — better for lifestyle/female-focused sites, but traffic requirements apply. - **Infolinks** — easy to add, but earnings are often lower than AdSense/Ezoic. If you’re just starting out, I’d pick: 1. **Google AdSense** 2. **Ezoic** (once traffic grows) If you want, I can also give you the **best ad network based on your monthly traffic**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For small websites, the easiest ad networks to start with are: - **Google AdSense** — best default choice; easy approval, simple setup, good fill rate. - **Media.net** — solid if your content is mostly US/UK traffic and text-heavy. - **Ezoic** — good once you have some traffic; can improve revenue, but setup is more involved. - **Monumetric** — friendly for smaller publishers, but usually requires some minimum traffic. - **Infolinks** — easy to join, but earnings are often lower than AdSense. - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** — better for larger sites, but worth knowing about as you grow. If you’re just starting, I’d recommend: 1. **Google AdSense** 2. **Media.net** 3. **Ezoic** once traffic picks up If you want, I can also suggest the **best ad network based on your traffic level and niche**.
What are the best ad networks for video ads? 10/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
The “best” video ad network depends on whether you’re a **publisher** (monetizing traffic) or an **advertiser** (buying traffic). Top picks: ### Best overall video ad networks - **Google Ad Manager / Google AdX** — best for premium display + video inventory, especially if you have scale. - **The Trade Desk** — best for programmatic video buying with strong targeting and transparency. - **Magnite** — one of the strongest independent video SSPs for publishers, especially CTV/OTT. - **PubMatic** — solid video monetization for publishers with good header bidding support. - **Roku Advertising** — best for CTV/video reach in the Roku ecosystem. - **Amazon DSP** — excellent for video ads tied to Amazon shopping data and CTV. ### Best for publishers - **Magnite** - **PubMatic** - **Google Ad Manager** - **Index Exchange** - **OpenX** ### Best for advertisers - **The Trade Desk** - **Google Ads / YouTube** - **Amazon DSP** - **Roku Ads Manager** - **TikTok Ads** for short-form video ### Best for CTV/video - **Magnite** - **Roku** - **The Trade Desk** - **Amazon DSP** ### Best for small budgets / easy setup - **Google Ads (YouTube)** - **Meta Ads** - **TikTok Ads** If you tell me whether you’re a **publisher or advertiser**, plus your **traffic type** (website, app, or CTV), I can narrow it to the best 3.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
The “best” video ad network depends on whether you’re an **advertiser** or a **publisher**. Top picks: ### Best overall - **Google Ads / YouTube Ads** — biggest reach, strongest targeting, easiest to scale. - **The Trade Desk** — best for advanced programmatic video buying and CTV. - **Amazon DSP** — great if you want to target shoppers and retail audiences. - **TikTok Ads** — excellent for short-form, high-engagement video. - **Xandr (Microsoft Advertising)** — strong programmatic video and CTV options. ### Best for publishers - **Google Ad Manager** — industry standard for monetizing video inventory. - **Magnite** — one of the best SSPs for premium video and CTV. - **PubMatic** — strong video/CTV monetization and header bidding. - **Index Exchange** — good quality demand and efficient auction dynamics. - **OpenX** — solid for premium programmatic video. ### Best for app/mobile video - **AppLovin** - **Unity Ads** - **ironSource (Unity LevelPlay)** ### Best for CTV/streaming - **The Trade Desk** - **Magnite** - **Roku Ads Manager** - **Amazon DSP** If you tell me **your goal** (advertiser vs publisher, website vs app vs CTV, budget, and country), I can narrow this to the top 3 for your case.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
The best video ad networks depend on whether you’re a **publisher** or an **advertiser**, but the top names are usually: ### Best for publishers - **Google Ad Manager + Google AdX** — biggest demand, strong fill rates, best all-around option - **Magnite** — one of the strongest video/CTV monetization platforms - **PubMatic** — good for programmatic video inventory - **Teads** — premium outstream video, strong brand demand - **Unruly** — good video ad exchange, especially for quality inventory - **Primis** — popular for outstream/in-content video ads - **OpenX** — solid header bidding/video demand ### Best for advertisers - **Google Ads / YouTube Ads** — best reach and targeting - **The Trade Desk** — premium programmatic video buying - **Amazon DSP** — strong for shopping/retail audiences - **Xandr (Microsoft)** — good programmatic video inventory - **DV360** — enterprise-grade buying across premium video inventory ### If you want the simplest pick - **Small/medium publisher:** Google Ad Manager + Primis or Teads - **Large publisher/CTV:** Magnite + PubMatic + Google Ad Manager - **Advertiser:** YouTube Ads + The Trade Desk If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best video ad networks for publishers only**, or 2. the **best networks by niche** (gaming, news, streaming, CTV, etc.).
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
The “best” video ad network depends on where you’re running ads: ### Best overall - **Google Ad Manager + Google AdX** — best reach and demand for publisher video inventory. - **The Trade Desk** — best for premium programmatic video/CTV buying. - **Magnite** — strong for publisher monetization, especially video and CTV. ### Best for YouTube / social video - **Google Ads (YouTube)** — strongest for video reach and targeting. - **Meta Ads** — best for Instagram/Facebook video placements. - **TikTok Ads** — best for short-form vertical video. ### Best for CTV / OTT - **Roku Ads Manager** - **Samsung Ads** - **Amazon DSP** - **Magnite** - **PubMatic** ### Best for publishers - **Google Ad Manager** - **Magnite** - **PubMatic** - **Xandr / Microsoft Monetize** - **Rise** ### Best for performance-focused video ads - **Google Ads** - **The Trade Desk** - **Amazon DSP** - **TikTok Ads** If you tell me whether you’re a **publisher, app owner, or advertiser**, I can narrow this to the top 3 for your use case.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For **video ads**, the best ad networks depend on whether you’re a **publisher** or an **advertiser**. Top picks: ### Best overall video ad networks - **Google Ad Manager + Google AdX** — best scale and demand; strong for in-stream and outstream. - **The Trade Desk** — best for premium programmatic video buying. - **Magnite** — one of the strongest video-focused SSPs for publishers. - **PubMatic** — solid video monetization, especially for premium inventory. - **Triton Digital** — great for **audio/video** publishers and broadcasters. - **Xandr (Microsoft)** — good premium video demand, though less dominant than before. - **Media.net** — better for contextual/display, but can work well for some video setups. - **SpotX / Beachfront** — widely used for video ad monetization (SpotX is now under Magnite). ### Best for publishers - **Google Ad Manager** - **Magnite** - **PubMatic** - **Beachfront** - **Triton Digital** (if you’re OTT/CTV) ### Best for advertisers - **The Trade Desk** - **Google Ads / YouTube** - **Xandr** - **Amazon DSP** - **StackAdapt** (easy to use, strong for native + video) ### Best for CTV / OTT video - **Magnite** - **The Trade Desk** - **Triton Digital** - **SpringServe** - **PubMatic** If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best video ad networks for small publishers**, 2. the **best CPM networks**, or 3. a **top 5 list by niche** (mobile apps, CTV, YouTube, OTT, etc.).
What are the top programmatic ad networks?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Top programmatic ad networks / SSPs to know: 1. **Google Ad Manager (GAM) / AdX** — biggest reach, strong demand, great for publishers already in Google ecosystem 2. **Magnite** — major independent SSP, especially strong in CTV, video, and large publishers 3. **PubMatic** — solid publisher-focused SSP with good transparency and optimization tools 4. **Index Exchange** — strong premium inventory and high-quality buyer demand 5. **OpenX** — well-known SSP with broad demand and solid header bidding support 6. **Xandr Monetize (Microsoft)** — good enterprise option, especially for premium inventory 7. **TripleLift** — strong in native, display, and rich media 8. **Criteo Commerce Grid** — strong for commerce/media inventory and retail data 9. **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** — valuable for access to Amazon demand via **Transparent Ad Marketplace (TAM)** 10. **Adform** — good international footprint, especially in EMEA If you want, I can also rank them by: - **best for publishers** - **best for CTV/video** - **best for small sites** - **best for premium inventory**
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Top programmatic ad networks/platforms (by reach and adoption) include: 1. **Google Ad Manager / Google AdX** Huge publisher inventory, especially for web and mobile. 2. **The Trade Desk** Leading independent DSP for buying display, video, CTV, and audio. 3. **Amazon DSP** Strong for retail media + off-site targeting using Amazon data. 4. **Microsoft Advertising** Good for search and native, with growing programmatic capabilities. 5. **Criteo** Strong retargeting and commerce-focused display/video inventory. 6. **Magnite** Major sell-side platform; strong in CTV, video, and premium publisher inventory. 7. **PubMatic** Premium publisher access, especially display, video, and CTV. 8. **Xandr (Microsoft)** Programmatic exchange and audience buying, especially for premium inventory. 9. **Index Exchange** Large exchange known for high-quality publisher supply and transparency. 10. **OpenX** Solid exchange with strong mobile, video, and CTV inventory. If you want, I can also give you: - the **best programmatic networks for advertisers vs publishers**, or - a **top 10 by channel** (display, video, CTV, native, app install).
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Top programmatic ad networks/exchanges (publisher-side) are: - **Google Ad Manager / AdX** — biggest demand pool; usually the default starting point - **Magnite** — strong in CTV, video, and display - **PubMatic** — solid global SSP with good omnichannel coverage - **Index Exchange** — strong header bidding and display/video performance - **OpenX** — well-known exchange with strong brand demand - **Xandr Monetize (Microsoft)** — good enterprise/CTV reach - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS/TAM)** — valuable for access to Amazon demand - **Criteo Commerce Grid** — strong for retail/media and commerce audiences - **Sovrn** — popular with mid-size publishers and blogs - **TripleLift** — good native and high-quality display If you mean **DSPs** (buy-side platforms) instead, the top ones are: - **The Trade Desk** - **Google Display & Video 360** - **Amazon DSP** - **Adform** - **StackAdapt** If you want, I can also rank these by **best for publishers, CTV, mobile, or small sites**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the top programmatic ad networks / platforms: 1. **Google Ad Manager (GAM)** + **AdX** Best overall for scale, inventory access, and publisher demand. 2. **The Trade Desk** One of the strongest independent demand-side platforms (DSPs) for programmatic buying. 3. **Amazon DSP** Great for e-commerce and retail media targeting using Amazon’s shopper data. 4. **Xandr (Microsoft)** Strong enterprise programmatic platform with broad marketplace access. 5. **PubMatic** Popular sell-side platform (SSP) for publishers optimizing ad yield. 6. **Magnite** Major SSP, especially strong in CTV/video and large-scale publishers. 7. **OpenX** Well-known SSP with quality inventory and strong header bidding support. 8. **Index Exchange** Premium SSP, often favored by publishers for transparent, high-quality demand. 9. **Criteo** Strong for retargeting and commerce-focused programmatic ads. 10. **Sovrn** Good for mid-size publishers and content sites. If you want, I can also give you: - the **best networks for publishers** - the **best DSPs for advertisers** - or a **top 10 list by category** (display, video, CTV, native).
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Top programmatic ad networks/platforms include: - **Google Ad Manager / AdX** — biggest overall ecosystem for publishers - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** — strong demand, especially retail/media - **The Trade Desk** — top independent DSP for advertisers - **PubMatic** — major publisher-focused supply platform - **Magnite** — large SSP, strong in CTV/video - **Xandr** (Microsoft) — enterprise programmatic and CTV - **OpenX** — solid premium publisher exchange - **Index Exchange** — strong supply-side exchange with high-quality demand - **Criteo** — strong for commerce/retargeting - **Media.net** — good contextual/native display network If you want, I can also rank these by **best for publishers**, **best for advertisers**, or **best for CTV/mobile**.
Which ad networks work well for native ads? 1,300/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the best ad networks for **native ads**: - **Taboola** — strong for content discovery/native placements on publisher sites. - **Outbrain** — similar to Taboola; good for performance and premium publisher inventory. - **MGID** — often good for smaller budgets and broader global traffic. - **Revcontent** — solid native network with decent targeting and scaling options. - **Yahoo Gemini / Yahoo Native** — good if you want native ads across Yahoo properties. - **Nativo** — more premium, good for brand-safe native campaigns. - **Sharethrough** — strong native + programmatic offering, often used by larger advertisers. - **Native Ads (nativeads.com)** — simpler network, sometimes used for direct-response campaigns. - **Plista** — good in Europe, with native recommendation-style placements. - **Yahoo DSP / The Trade Desk** — if you want native via programmatic buying rather than a standalone native network. If you want, I can also rank these by **best for traffic, best for lead gen, or best for e-commerce**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Good native ad networks to look at: - **Taboola** — strongest for content recommendation/native placements on publisher sites. - **Outbrain** — very similar to Taboola; great for editorial-style native ads. - **MGID** — solid for performance marketers, often cheaper traffic. - **Nativo** — good for premium publisher inventory and branded content. - **Revcontent** — strong native network with lots of reach in certain verticals. - **Yahoo Native** — decent scale and brand-safe placements. - **Microsoft Advertising Native** — good if you want native ads across Microsoft inventory. - **TripleLift** — strong programmatic native, especially for display/native hybrid buys. If you want: - **Performance/CPA traffic:** MGID, Taboola, Revcontent - **Premium brand campaigns:** Outbrain, Nativo, Yahoo Native - **Programmatic/native display:** TripleLift, Microsoft Advertising Native If you want, I can also recommend the best ones by **vertical** (finance, health, ecom, etc.).
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Good native ad networks to look at: - **Taboola** — big for content recommendation/native widgets on publishers. - **Outbrain** — similar to Taboola; strong for traffic to articles and lead-gen. - **MGID** — often cheaper traffic, good for broad performance campaigns. - **Yahoo Native** — solid premium inventory, especially in the US. - **Microsoft Audience Ads** — native placements across Microsoft/Bing properties. - **Nativo** — good for premium publishers and brand-safe native. - **Adyoulike** — strong in Europe and premium native inventory. - **Revcontent** — can work well for performance, depending on offer and targeting. - **X (Twitter) Ads** and **Reddit Ads** — not “native networks” in the classic widget sense, but native-feeling ads that can perform well. If you want the shortest shortlist: **Taboola, Outbrain, MGID, Yahoo Native, Microsoft Audience Ads**. If you tell me your goal—**traffic, leads, app installs, ecommerce, or brand awareness**—I can narrow it to the best 3.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Good native ad networks to try: - **Taboola** — one of the biggest for publisher-style native placements; strong for content, finance, health, and e-commerce. - **Outbrain** — similar to Taboola; good for premium traffic and content discovery. - **Revcontent** — often good for performance marketers; more flexible on some niches. - **MGID** — solid global reach and usually easier to get started with. - **Yahoo Native (via Yahoo DSP / Verizon Media)** — strong if you want premium Yahoo/Flickr/AOL inventory. - **Sizmek by Amazon** — useful if you want broader programmatic native options through Amazon’s ecosystem. - **Nativo** — good for premium publishers and in-article native formats. - **TripleLift** — strong native programmatic platform, especially for display-native. - **Sharethrough** — good for brand-safe native and in-feed placements. - **StackAdapt** — great if you want native plus broader multi-channel programmatic buying. Quick pick: - **Best overall reach:** Taboola, Outbrain - **Best for performance:** Revcontent, MGID - **Best premium/programmatic native:** TripleLift, Sharethrough, Nativo If you want, I can also rank them by **CPM, traffic quality, or best niches**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the strongest ad networks for native ads are: - **Taboola** – huge reach, especially for content recommendations - **Outbrain** – strong for premium publishers and content marketing - **MGID** – good for global traffic and performance campaigns - **Revcontent** – solid native performance network, often on smaller/premium sites - **Nativo** – good for branded/native placements and publisher integrations - **TripleLift** – strong programmatic native ads - **Sharethrough** – good native programmatic inventory - **Yahoo Native** – broad reach through Yahoo’s ecosystem - **Adyoulike** – native and programmatic native ads, especially in Europe - **Criteo** – useful if you want native plus retargeting/performance If you want the best fit: - **Content promotion:** Taboola, Outbrain - **Performance/CPA traffic:** MGID, Revcontent - **Premium/programmatic native:** TripleLift, Sharethrough, Nativo If you want, I can also narrow this down by **publisher**, **advertiser**, **budget**, or **country**.
What are the most reliable ad networks for publishers?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
For **reliability** (steady fill, on-time payment, low risk), these are the most trusted publisher networks: 1. **Google Ad Manager + Google AdSense** - Most reliable baseline for almost any site - Huge advertiser demand, strong fill rates, dependable payments 2. **Raptive** (formerly AdThrive) - One of the most dependable premium networks - Best for content sites with strong traffic, especially in the US/UK 3. **Mediavine** - Very solid for lifestyle, food, finance, travel, and similar content sites - Known for stable payouts and good support 4. **Setupad** - Reliable header bidding monetization partner - Good for publishers wanting access to multiple demand sources 5. **Monumetric** - Good balance of reliability and ease of use - Often a fit for mid-sized publishers 6. **Freestar** - Strong for larger publishers and those wanting managed monetization - Good support and programmatic demand 7. **Ezoic** - Reliable technically, but quality can vary by setup - Better for smaller sites that want a managed optimization platform **Best overall choice by site size:** - **Small/new sites:** AdSense - **Growing sites:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **Established content sites:** Mediavine or Raptive - **Large publishers:** Google Ad Manager + Freestar/Setupad If you want, I can also give you the **best ad networks by niche** (news, finance, gaming, adult, etc.) or **by traffic level**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
For **publisher reliability** (stable demand, timely payouts, and low risk), these are the safest bets: 1. **Google AdSense** - Best all-around starter network - Very reliable payments and easy setup - Good for most small to mid-size sites 2. **Google Ad Manager + Google AdX** - Best for bigger publishers who want more control - Strong demand and very reliable infrastructure - Usually used with a partner/SSP to access AdX 3. **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** - Very reputable and stable - Strong competition for display ads via header bidding - Good complement to Google demand 4. **Mediavine** - Excellent for content publishers, especially lifestyle, food, travel, etc. - Known for reliable payouts and strong support - Best for sites with meaningful traffic 5. **Raptive** - One of the most trusted premium networks - Good RPMs and dependable service - Best for established content sites 6. **Sovrn** - Solid mid-tier network - Easy to use, generally dependable - Good backup monetization source 7. **PubMatic** - More of an SSP than a classic ad network - Reliable for larger publishers and header bidding setups - Good enterprise-grade option ### If you want the safest picks: - **Small site:** Google AdSense - **Growing site:** AdSense + Amazon Publisher Services - **Established content site:** Mediavine or Raptive - **Large publisher:** Google Ad Manager + AdX + PubMatic + APS If you tell me your **traffic level, country mix, and niche**, I can recommend the best specific network for your site.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
For most publishers, the most reliable ad networks are the ones with strong fill rates, consistent payouts, good support, and low policy risk. ### Top reliable options - **Google AdSense** — best starting point; very stable and easy to use. - **Google Ad Manager** — best for larger publishers needing more control and direct deals. - **Mediavine** — excellent for lifestyle/content sites with solid traffic; known for strong RPMs and reliable payments. - **Raptive (formerly AdThrive)** — premium network for established publishers; great support and monetization. - **Ezoic** — flexible and accessible for mid-sized sites; good tech, though results vary by site. - **Monumetric** — good for smaller-to-mid publishers; relatively straightforward onboarding. - **Sovrn //Commerce + MonetizeMore** — useful if you want header bidding and ad ops support. - **PubMatic / OpenX / Index Exchange** — more SSPs than “easy signup” networks, but very reliable for programmatic monetization at scale. ### Best by publisher type - **New/small sites:** Google AdSense, Ezoic - **Mid-sized sites:** Monumetric, Mediavine - **Large premium sites:** Raptive, Google Ad Manager - **Advanced programmatic:** PubMatic, OpenX, Index Exchange ### Quick rule If you want the safest all-around choice, start with **Google AdSense**. If you already have meaningful traffic and content quality, **Mediavine** or **Raptive** are usually the most reliable premium choices. If you tell me your niche, monthly pageviews, and country mix, I can suggest the best 3 networks for your site.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
For most publishers, the most reliable ad networks are: - **Google AdSense** — best for getting started; very reliable, easy to use, broad advertiser demand. - **Google Ad Manager** — best if you want more control and can manage multiple demand sources. - **Mediavine** — excellent for content sites with strong U.S./Tier 1 traffic; high reliability and good support. - **Raptive (formerly CafeMedia)** — strong for established publishers with decent traffic; premium demand. - **Ezoic** — flexible and accessible for smaller sites; good for testing and optimization. - **Monumetric** — solid mid-tier option, especially for growing publishers. - **Sovrn** — simple, widely used, and dependable for standard display monetization. - **Publift** — good managed monetization partner for mid-to-large publishers. - **Infolinks** — lightweight supplemental ad monetization. - **MGID** / **Taboola** / **Outbrain** — best for native content monetization. If you want the safest default: 1. **AdSense** 2. **Google Ad Manager** 3. **Mediavine** or **Raptive** if you qualify If you tell me your **monthly pageviews**, **country traffic mix**, and **site niche**, I can recommend the best 2–3 networks for your situation.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For publishers, the most reliable ad networks are usually the ones with strong fill rates, on-time payments, and stable policies. Top picks: - **Google AdSense** — easiest to trust, widely used, very reliable payments - **Google Ad Manager** — best if you already have direct deals or multiple demand sources - **Mediavine** — excellent for content sites; strong RPMs and reliable payouts - **Raptive** — great for established publishers with significant traffic - **Monumetric** — solid managed service for mid-sized sites - **Freestar** — strong programmatic setup, good for larger publishers - **Snigel** — good for publishers wanting hands-off monetization - **Sovrn** — reliable for contextual/programmatic monetization - **PubMatic** — more SSP than classic network, but very dependable at scale - **Index Exchange** — highly trusted for premium inventory - **Ezoic** — accessible and feature-rich, though results can vary by site If you want the safest default: **Google AdSense + Google Ad Manager**. If you want better earnings and qualify: **Mediavine** or **Raptive**. If you tell me your traffic level and site niche, I can narrow this to the best 3 for you.
What are the best ad networks for online media sites?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
For online media sites, the “best” ad networks usually depend on traffic size, audience geography, and content type. Top options: - **Google Ad Manager + Google AdX** — best overall for scaling display/video inventory and running header bidding. - **Raptive** — strong for premium publishers with quality content; great monetization and support. - **Mediavine** — excellent for lifestyle/content sites with solid US traffic; easy setup and good RPMs. - **Ezoic** — good for mid-size sites wanting AI-driven testing and optimization. - **Playwire** — strong for media and entertainment sites, especially with video and premium direct deals. - **Sovrn** — solid for smaller-to-mid publishers, with monetization tools and affiliate options. - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** — useful as a demand source, especially alongside header bidding. - **Taboola** / **Outbrain** — best for native content recommendation ads. - **Magnite** — strong for video/CTV and larger publisher inventory. If you want a simple stack: - **Small/medium media site:** Ezoic or Sovrn - **Established content publisher:** Mediavine or Raptive - **Large media site:** Google Ad Manager + AdX + APS + header bidding partners - **Video-heavy site:** Playwire or Magnite If you tell me your monthly pageviews, traffic countries, and whether you use display, native, or video ads, I can narrow it to the best 3.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
For online media sites, the “best” ad network depends mostly on your traffic quality, GEOs, and whether you want **premium display**, **programmatic**, or **native** ads. ### Best ad networks for media sites - **Google Ad Manager + AdSense** Best baseline stack for most publishers. Great fill, strong controls, easy to scale. - **Raptive (formerly AdThrive)** Best for larger content sites with strong US traffic. Typically strong RPMs and premium demand. - **Ezoic** Good for small-to-mid publishers who want AI-driven ad testing and decent monetization without huge traffic requirements. - **Mediavine** Excellent for lifestyle/content media sites with solid traffic. Known for high-quality ads and strong revenue. - **Freestar** Good for publishers wanting managed monetization and programmatic optimization across display/video/native. - **Xandr Monetize (Microsoft)** Strong for programmatic publishers with more advanced setup needs. - **Index Exchange** One of the best SSPs for premium programmatic demand; often paired with a header bidding stack. - **PubMatic** Strong SSP for media publishers, especially if you have meaningful scale. - **OpenX** Good demand source for premium display inventory. - **Taboola** Best-known native ad network for recommendation units on media sites. - **Outbrain** Strong native advertising platform, especially for news and editorial sites. ### Quick picks - **Small site:** AdSense, Ezoic - **Growing site:** Mediavine, Freestar - **Large premium site:** Raptive, Google Ad Manager + header bidding - **News/media publisher:** Taboola, Outbrain, Index Exchange, PubMatic If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best networks by traffic level**, or 2. a **recommended ad stack** for your specific site.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
For most online media sites, the best ad networks are usually: - **Google Ad Manager (GAM)** — best overall for larger sites that want full control, direct deals, and multiple demand sources. - **Google AdSense** — easiest to start with; best for small/new sites. - **Mediavine** — one of the best for content sites with strong traffic; great RPMs and support. - **Raptive** — excellent for established publishers; often top-tier monetization for editorial sites. - **Freestar** — strong for publishers that want managed monetization and header bidding. - **Ezoic** — good for growing sites that want optimization without a big setup. - **Monumetric** — solid mid-sized publisher network with more hands-on help. - **Sovrn** — useful for smaller publishers and affiliate-heavy media sites. - **Taboola** / **Outbrain** — best for native content recommendations and extra revenue. Quick picks: - **New/small site:** Google AdSense - **Growing editorial site:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **Established media brand:** Mediavine, Raptive, or Freestar - **Advanced / multi-demand setup:** Google Ad Manager If you tell me your monthly pageviews, country mix, and content niche, I can recommend the best 2–3 options.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
The best ad networks for online media sites depend mostly on your traffic level and content type. Top picks: - **Google Ad Manager + AdSense** — best baseline setup for most publishers; strong demand and control. - **Raptive (AdThrive)** — best for premium content sites with strong U.S. traffic and higher pageviews. - **Mediavine** — excellent for mid-size publishers; strong RPMs and easy setup. - **Ezoic** — good for smaller-to-mid sites that want optimization and testing tools. - **Monumetric** — solid for smaller publishers who want managed ads. - **PubMatic** — strong programmatic monetization for larger media brands. - **Magnite** — best if you have meaningful scale, especially video/CTV and premium inventory. - **Index Exchange** — high-quality programmatic demand, good for premium publishers. - **OpenX** — reliable SSP for larger sites with diversified demand. - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS / TAM)** — great as an add-on for header bidding and extra competition. Quick rule of thumb: - **Under ~50k sessions/month:** AdSense, Ezoic, Monumetric - **50k–500k+ sessions/month:** Mediavine, Raptive - **Large media brands:** Google Ad Manager + header bidding with PubMatic, Magnite, Index Exchange, OpenX, APS If you want, I can recommend the best network for your site based on your monthly traffic, audience country mix, and content niche.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For most online media sites, the best ad networks are: 1. **Google Ad Manager + AdX** Best overall if you want strong demand, good reporting, and flexibility. Common default for publishers. 2. **PubMatic** Great for premium media sites with programmatic inventory and direct-sold support. 3. **Magnite** Strong for large publishers, video, CTV, and premium display. 4. **OpenX** Solid for quality programmatic demand and transparent auction access. 5. **Index Exchange** Often strong CPMs and good for high-quality editorial sites. 6. **Raptive** Best for content creators and lifestyle/media publishers; good managed monetization. 7. **Mediavine** Excellent for mid-sized content sites with strong RPMs and hands-off management. 8. **Ezoic** Good for smaller publishers that want AI-driven ad optimization. 9. **Sovrn** Easy to use, good for smaller-to-mid publishers, especially content-heavy sites. 10. **Monumetric** Good managed service for publishers who want help optimizing ads. **Best picks by site type:** - **Big media brand:** Google Ad Manager, PubMatic, Magnite, Index Exchange - **Mid-sized content site:** Mediavine, Raptive, Monumetric - **Smaller publisher:** Ezoic, Sovrn If you want, I can also give you: - the **highest-paying networks** - the **best networks for news sites** - or a **recommended stack** based on your traffic level.
Which ad network is best for website monetization?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
There isn’t one “best” ad network for every site. **Best overall for most sites:** **Google AdSense** - Easiest to get approved - Good for beginners/small sites - Lowest barrier, but usually lower revenue than premium networks **Best for higher-traffic content sites:** **Mediavine** or **Raptive** - Usually pay better than AdSense - Better for established publishers - **Mediavine** is great for lifestyle, food, travel, and general content sites - **Raptive** is strong for larger publishers and creators **Best middle-ground option:** **Ezoic** - Easier to join than premium networks - Can improve RPM with testing/optimization - Good if you want more revenue than AdSense but don’t qualify for premium networks yet **Other solid options:** - **Monumetric** — good for mid-sized sites - **NitroPay** — strong for gaming/tech/community sites - **Setupad** — good for international traffic - **Publift** — good managed monetization option ### Quick recommendation - **New site / low traffic:** Google AdSense - **Growing site:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **High traffic content site:** Mediavine - **Very large site:** Raptive If you want, I can recommend the **best ad network for your site specifically** if you share your niche and monthly pageviews.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
There’s no single “best” for every site, but for most publishers: **Best overall for beginners:** **Google AdSense** - Easiest to get approved - Solid fill rates and reliable payments - Best if your traffic is still low or you’re just starting **Best for higher earnings:** **Mediavine** - Usually much better RPMs than AdSense - Great for content sites with **~50k+ sessions/month** - Strong support and good ad quality **Best for premium publishers:** **Raptive** - Often top-tier revenue for established sites - Best for larger traffic sites with strong content - More selective than Mediavine **Good “middle ground” option:** **Ezoic** - Works well for many sites below Mediavine thresholds - Can outperform AdSense, but results vary a lot **Simple recommendation:** - **Under 50k sessions/month:** start with **Google AdSense** or **Ezoic** - **50k+ sessions/month:** **Mediavine** - **Large, established site:** **Raptive** If you tell me your **monthly traffic, niche, and country mix**, I can tell you which network will likely earn the most for your site.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
There isn’t one “best” ad network for every site, but these are the top picks: - **Google AdSense** — best for most small/medium sites; easiest to start, very reliable. - **Ezoic** — best for sites with decent traffic that want higher RPMs and AI ad optimization. - **Mediavine** — best for content sites with strong US/UK traffic and lots of pageviews; usually higher earnings. - **Raptive (AdThrive)** — best for premium content publishers with high traffic and mostly Tier 1 audience. - **Monumetric** — good middle-ground option for growing blogs. - **BuySellAds** — best if you want direct sponsorship-style placements, especially in niche tech/business sites. **Quick recommendation:** - **New site / low traffic:** AdSense - **Growing blog:** Ezoic or Monumetric - **Established content site:** Mediavine or Raptive If you tell me your **traffic per month, top countries, and niche**, I can recommend the best one for your site specifically.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
There isn’t one “best” ad network for every site—it depends on your traffic and niche. **Best overall for most new sites:** **Google AdSense** - Easiest to join - Good for low traffic - Reliable, but usually lower earnings **Best for established content sites:** **Mediavine** - Excellent RPMs - Great support and UX - Best if you have roughly **50k+ sessions/month** **Best for larger sites:** **Raptive** - Often top-tier earnings - Strong for lifestyle, food, finance, home, etc. - Usually best at **100k+ monthly pageviews** **Good middle-ground option:** **Ezoic** - Easier entry than Mediavine/Raptive - Can improve revenue over AdSense - Results vary a lot by site **If you have video content:** **MonetizeMore** or **Primis** can be worth a look. ### Quick recommendation - **Just starting:** **Google AdSense** - **Growing site:** **Ezoic** - **Strong content site:** **Mediavine** - **High-traffic premium site:** **Raptive** If you want, I can recommend the **best ad network for your exact site** if you share your **monthly traffic, niche, and country mix**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
It depends on your traffic and niche, but the usual best options are: - **Google AdSense** — best for **new/small sites** and easiest to start with - **Mediavine** — best for **content sites with strong U.S. traffic**; often higher earnings than AdSense - **Raptive** (formerly AdThrive) — best for **larger publishers** and premium content sites - **Ezoic** — good middle ground if you want to test ad layouts and optimize earnings **Quick rule:** - **Under ~50k monthly sessions:** start with **Google AdSense** or **Ezoic** - **50k+ sessions:** look at **Mediavine** - **Very large sites:** **Raptive** If you want, I can recommend the best one for your site based on your **traffic, niche, and country mix**.
What are the most common ad network platforms?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
The most common ad network platforms are: - **Google AdSense / Google Ad Manager** - **Google Ads** - **Meta Audience Network** - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** - **Media.net** - **Criteo** - **Taboola** - **Outbrain** - **AdRoll** - **PropellerAds** If you want, I can also break these down by **display, native, mobile, video, or affiliate** ads.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
The most common ad network/platforms are: - **Google AdSense / Google Ad Manager** - **Google Ads** - **Meta Ads (Facebook/Instagram)** - **Amazon Advertising** - **Microsoft Advertising (Bing Ads)** - **TikTok Ads** - **X Ads (Twitter Ads)** - **LinkedIn Ads** - **Taboola** - **Outbrain** - **Criteo** - **AppLovin** - **Unity Ads** - **IronSource** - **Media.net** If you mean **website display ad networks** specifically, the biggest names are usually **Google AdSense**, **Google Ad Manager**, **Media.net**, **Taboola**, and **Outbrain**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
The most common ad network platforms are: - **Google AdSense / Google Ad Manager** – biggest for website display ads and monetization - **Google AdMob** – major mobile app ad network - **Meta Audience Network** – ads for apps and websites through Meta - **Amazon Publisher Services (APS)** – strong for publishers, especially retail-focused inventory - **AppLovin** – very common for mobile app monetization - **Unity Ads** – popular for game apps - **InMobi** – large mobile ad network, especially international traffic - **Media.net** – contextual ads, often used as an AdSense alternative - **Taboola** – native/content recommendation ads - **Outbrain** – native advertising and content discovery - **Criteo** – strong retargeting and commerce ads - **Xandr** (now under Microsoft) – programmatic ad tech/network platform If you want, I can also break these down by: - **website vs mobile app** - **display vs native vs video** - **best AdSense alternatives**
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
The most common ad network platforms are: - **Google AdSense** — very common for website publishers - **Google Ad Manager** — used by larger publishers to manage ad inventory - **Google Ads** — huge for search, display, YouTube, and app ads - **Meta Audience Network** — Facebook/Instagram ecosystem - **Amazon Ads** — strong for ecommerce and retail media - **Microsoft Advertising** — Bing search ads - **Taboola** — native/content recommendation ads - **Outbrain** — native ads and content discovery - **Criteo** — retargeting and commerce ads - **Media.net** — contextual ads, often used as an AdSense alternative - **AdMob** — Google’s mobile app ad network - **AppLovin** — popular for mobile app monetization - **Unity Ads** — common in gaming apps - **ironSource** — mobile app monetization and mediation - **InMobi** — mobile-focused ad network If you want, I can also group them by **publisher monetization**, **app ads**, or **advertiser platforms**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
The most common ad network / ad platform names are: - **Google Ads** (Search, Display, YouTube, **AdMob** for apps) - **Meta Ads** (**Facebook** and **Instagram**) - **Amazon Ads** - **Microsoft Advertising** (Bing) - **TikTok Ads** - **LinkedIn Ads** - **Snapchat Ads** - **X Ads** (Twitter) - **Apple Search Ads** (iOS app installs) - **Pinterest Ads** Common **native/display ad networks** also include: - **Taboola** - **Outbrain** - **Criteo** - **Media.net** - **Unity Ads** (mobile games/apps) - **AppLovin** - **ironSource** (now part of Unity) If you want, I can also break these down by **search**, **social**, **display**, **native**, or **mobile app** networks.

All 72 prompts run for Equativ

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is Equativ known for?
  • 2 What are Equativ's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use Equativ? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does Equativ compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with Equativ?
  • 6 What is a typical ad network known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What are the best ad networks for news websites? discovery
  • 2 Which ad networks work well for lifestyle blogs? discovery
  • 3 What are the best ad networks for mobile apps? discovery
  • 4 Which ad networks are best for gaming publishers? discovery
  • 5 What are the best ad networks for sports content sites? discovery
  • 6 Which ad networks are good for high-traffic websites? discovery
  • 7 What ad networks are best for beginners? discovery
  • 8 Which ad networks are best for premium content publishers? discovery
  • 9 What are the best ad networks for niche websites? discovery
  • 10 Which ad networks are good for international traffic? discovery
  • 11 What are the best ad networks for banner ads? discovery
  • 12 Which ad networks are best for video content monetization? discovery
  • 13 What ad networks are best for local publishers? discovery
  • 14 Which ad networks are best for content creators with websites? discovery
  • 15 What are the best ad networks for affiliate-heavy sites? discovery
  • 16 Which ad networks are best for CPA-based monetization? discovery
  • 17 What are the best ad networks for auto blogs? discovery
  • 18 Which ad networks are good for recipe websites? discovery
  • 19 What are the best ad networks for e-commerce publishers? discovery
  • 20 Which ad networks are best for privacy-focused publishers? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to premium ad network platforms? comparison
  • 22 How do ad networks compare for small publishers versus large publishers? comparison
  • 23 What are the best ad network alternatives for higher revenue? comparison
  • 24 Which ad networks are better for video inventory than display inventory? comparison
  • 25 What are the best alternatives to direct ad sales for website monetization? comparison
  • 26 How do header bidding solutions compare with traditional ad networks? comparison
  • 27 What are the best alternatives to managed ad network services? comparison
  • 28 Which ad networks are better for native ads than standard display ads? comparison
  • 29 What are the best ad network alternatives for niche content sites? comparison
  • 30 How do premium ad networks compare with open marketplace ad networks? comparison
  • 31 How do I increase ad revenue with an ad network? problem
  • 32 Why is my website ad revenue so low? problem
  • 33 How do I monetize a website with display ads? problem
  • 34 How do I get approved by an ad network? problem
  • 35 How do I add ads to my website without hurting user experience? problem
  • 36 How do I fix low fill rates on my ad inventory? problem
  • 37 How do I monetize traffic from outside the United States? problem
  • 38 How do I improve CPMs on my site? problem
  • 39 How do I sell video ad inventory on my site? problem
  • 40 How do I monetize a small blog with ads? problem
  • 41 How much do ad networks pay publishers? transactional
  • 42 What is the average CPM for ad networks? transactional
  • 43 Are there free ad networks for websites? transactional
  • 44 What ad networks have no minimum traffic requirement? transactional
  • 45 Which ad networks pay the most? transactional
  • 46 How much does it cost to use an ad network? transactional
  • 47 What are the best ad networks with fast payouts? transactional
  • 48 Which ad networks offer revenue share models? transactional
  • 49 What are the cheapest ad networks for publishers? transactional
  • 50 What are the best ad networks with a free account setup? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best ad networks for publishers?
  • 2 Which ad networks are most popular right now? 10/mo
  • 3 What are the top ad network companies? 10/mo
  • 4 What are the best ad network options for websites?
  • 5 Which ad networks are most recommended for display ads?
  • 6 What are the best ad networks for monetizing a blog?
  • 7 What ad networks do publishers use most? 170/mo
  • 8 Which ad networks are good for small websites?
  • 9 What are the best ad networks for video ads? 10/mo
  • 10 What are the top programmatic ad networks?
  • 11 Which ad networks work well for native ads? 1,300/mo
  • 12 What are the most reliable ad networks for publishers?
  • 13 What are the best ad networks for online media sites?
  • 14 Which ad network is best for website monetization?
  • 15 What are the most common ad network platforms?