Solve Media Transforms CAPTCHAs Into Ad Dollars

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What if the borderline-indecipherable cluster of characters that must be punched in to post interactive comments and make online purchases could be repackaged as clearly visible words carrying marketing slogans for brand advertisers and a new revenue stream for publishers? In other words, instead of typing a bundle of cluttered letters, users might enter “Moving Forward” (Toyota) or “Nothing Like A Pepper” (Dr. Pepper). Sounds like a win-win-win for all parties. That’s what Solve Media is banking on with the release of a secure platform that allows advertisers to layer messages as coded CAPTCHAs that readers must pass through to access particular pages.

CAPTCHA is a security program designed to protect Web sites against bots by issuing “grading tests” such as interpreting distorted characters that only humans can decode. For instance, when setting up a Gmail account, a user must complete a word verification like the one below.

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Solve Media has already recruited a fleet of national advertisers to join the pilot, businesses as diverse as Toyota, Microsoft, Universal Pictures and Dr. Pepper. Publishers jumping on board with ad-supported CAPTCHAs include AOL, Meredith Corp. and Tribune Co.

The value proposition for both parties is straightforward and alluring. Advertisers assume higher engagement because users must actually type in their message to access the requested page. As a result, Solve Media is able to charge on a per-engagement basis rather than CPM, perhaps with premiums as high as 25 cents to 50 cents per “type-in,” according to CEO Ari Jacoby (formerly a cofounder of VoiceStar, which sold to Marchex in 2007). The hope is that this will be an antidote to banner blindness and search clutter by necessitating action engagements.

Publishers enjoy a revenue slice from Solve Media for integrating the type-ins on their Web sites … and just as critical, do not have to invest any auxiliary costs to build out new platforms or content. “We’re making money in an area where we hadn’t before,” Andy Wilson, Meredith Publishing VP of digital marketing, told Ad Age.

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Naturally, questions about security arise considering the ease of use that Solve Media is injecting into a purposely intricate coding system designed to block digital interlopers. 

“We built a robust security platform that we battle tested for the better part of a year before layering on advertising technologies,” Jacoby told BIA/Kelsey. “We maintain the security that high-quality publishers are accustomed to, and we can ratchet it up or down depending upon their needs. We monitor traffic 24/7 from our NOC in Philadelphia, and each discreet image served is pixelated differently.”

The technology platform is a problem-solving solution and ad-enabling product, leading BIA/Kelsey to highlight Solve Media as an influential mover in the marketplace. “Solve Media has delivered a simple yet sophisticated platform with tangible benefits for multiple parties — advertisers, publishers and users,” said Matt Booth, BIA/Kelsey’s program director for Interactive Local Media. “As a result, we think it is positioned to capitalize on a significant market opportunity.”

For more on Solve Media, watch this short video introduction:

Solve Media

This Post Has 9 Comments

  1. Eric Lee

    Incredible! Getting someone to remember a brand like Roto Rooter vs joe plumber is HUGE! I see this working very well for national-local and regional local players. These guys come from the online local space so I hope they will work with the players in local.

  2. Hermes bags

    I see this working very well for national-local and regional local players. thanks

  3. Youryogi.com

    Have been using it for awhile and have not made one cent on it. So far the company has ignored my requests of information about when they actually start sharing revenue with you. Supposedly you need to have a certain amount of stats before any revenue is even split with you.

    It’s a great concept however I have not seen a single website talking about any revenue they have made…..and I will be the first to say it’s awful….really awful.

    I mean if I got just one cent for every type in I would be somewhat happy….not really….but just saying it’s better then nothing.

    Not sure how much longer I am going to keep using it.

  4. Michael

    LOL… the comments for this makes you use a traditional Captcha insted of solve medias… FAIL!!!

  5. Eric Krupit

    This works very well for our sites–we make more than $1000 on several sites per month

  6. swiss reoplica watches

    The hope is that this will be an antidote to banner blindness and search clutter by necessitating action engagements.

  7. symptoms observed

    Advertisers assume higher engagement because users must actually type in their message to access the requested page.

  8. Taylor

    I never really hated the captcha but I guess this innovation for advertisers is good. Well based on the comments above, some are really having benefits from this transformation created by Social Media, while others are not well benefited. I’m always into the online world and still much of the website I see is still using the traditional captcha. Well, like this blog it still using the old captcha and I have no problem about it. Maybe in the near future more websites will be using what social media has created and I hope it does well to them! And more income to the advertisers.

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  9. bloganize

    this is a great technique of monetizing from CAPTCHAs. :)

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