Remove 2011 Remove Ad network Remove Impressions Remove Retargeting
article thumbnail

30. Dave Zinman – on the first ad server, BlueLithium and beyond

Paleo AdTech

In 2006, Dave joined the team as SVP/GM at BlueLithium, a high-flying ad network. BlueLithium was founded by a controversial serial entrepreneur and had an impressive growth streak starting in 2003, bringing together multiple publishers to provide efficient, scaled buys for larger advertisers. ”

article thumbnail

30. Dave Zinman – on the first ad server, BlueLithium and beyond

Paleo AdTech

In 2006, Dave joined the team as SVP/GM at BlueLithium, a high-flying ad network. BlueLithium was founded by a controversial serial entrepreneur and had an impressive growth streak starting in 2003, bringing together multiple publishers to provide efficient, scaled buys for larger advertisers. ”

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

32. John Ferber – putting the dot-com in Advertising.com

Paleo AdTech

John was the co-founder with his brother Scott Ferber of the very well-known Baltimore-based ad network eventually called Advertising.com, which began in 1998 and sold to AOL for a reported $435 million (plus about $60 million cash) in the summer of 2004. The brothers stayed at AOL for two years, John working as a Chief of Product.

CPC 52
article thumbnail

PropellerAds Review: Examining One of the Best Traffic Sources Available

Lemonads

We’ve seen thousands of lemonads members try out dozens of different ad networks with mixed results, especially if opting for more obscure networks. This platform is one of the best networks for affiliates because it offers traffic from 195 countries and multiple ad formats that are suitable for marketers of all levels.

article thumbnail

32. John Ferber – putting the dot-com in Advertising.com

Paleo AdTech

John was the co-founder with his brother Scott Ferber of the very well-known Baltimore-based ad network eventually called Advertising.com, which began in 1998 and sold to AOL for a reported $435 million (plus about $60 million cash) in the summer of 2004. The brothers stayed at AOL for two years, John working as a Chief of Product.

CPC 52