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Cost per Mille - the cost of showing the ad per 1000 times.
Within more mature markets, less than one percent of traditional affiliate marketing programs today use cost per click and cost per mille.
This leaves the greater, and, in case of cost per mille, the full risk and loss (if the visitor can not be converted) to the advertiser.
Cost per mille requires only that the publisher make the advertising available on his website and display it to his visitors in order to receive a commission.
Cost per mille (CPM)
Effective cost per mille (eCPM)
Cost per thousand also known as cost per mille (CPM), uses pricing models that charge advertisers for impressions - i.e. the number of times people view an advertisement.
Cost Per Mille (CPM), also known as Cost Per Thousand (CPT)
Per mil, meaning per thousand, is a commonly used measurement for various things, including advertising where cost per mille (CPM) is a measurement of online advertising revenue generation.
Rather than using the popular pay per click or cost per mille method of charging advertisers for displaying ads on a website, AdTaily charges per day, per week, or per month.
CPM (Cost Per Mille) or CPT (Cost Per Thousand Impressions) is when advertisers pay for exposure of their message to a specific audience.
In internet marketing, effective cost per mille is used to measure the effectiveness of a publisher's inventory being sold (by the publisher) via a CPA, CPC, or Cost per time basis.
For site-targeted advertisements, the advertiser chooses the page(s) on which to display advertisements, and pays based on cost per mille (CPM), or the price advertisers choose to pay for every thousand advertisements displayed.
Cost per impression (also called Cost per mille) is a marketing strategy put in place by various Advertising networks, where an advert is placed on a relevant website, usually targeted to the content sector of that site.
Almost any website could be recruited as an affiliate publisher, but high-traffic websites are more likely interested in (for their own sake) low-risk cost per mille or medium-risk cost per click deals rather than higher-risk cost per action or revenue share deals.
For the majority of 2008 through 2010, Whiskey Media websites featured very little advertisements, being against cost per mille advertising and also with Mike Tatum noting that they have been, "incredibly lucky to have had the directive to focus completely on our product over the last few years."