Glossary
You can use the Google Ad Manager glossary to learn more about frequently used terms or features. Use the filter box below to find terms on this page. You can find reporting definitions here: dimensions and metrics. |
Glossary |
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Ad requestAn ad request is sent by client-side code (such as GPT on a webpage) to an ad server. An ad request typically is transmitted to the server in the form of an HTTP or HTTPS request. The request is the first step of ad serving. |
Ad servingThe process by which Ad Manager chooses the best ads to serve to an ad request, and then returns the corresponding creative code. |
Ad slotAn ad slot is the HTML markup (usually between <div> tags) the defines where an ad appears. Ad slots can reference either unique ad units or, if on a single page, ad slots can also reference the same ad unit. |
Ad sourceThe network or entity from which advertising content is consumed by a given ad unit. Multiple sources may compete for display in a single unit (for example, AdSense or AdX as backfill challengers). |
Ad tagHTML tags or JavaScript code generated and then included in the webpage or app source where the ads should be displayed. |
Ad unitDiscrete spaces on your site for ads. You can define an ad unit on your site with a name, description, and dimensions. An ad unit may sometimes be referred to as "inventory unit." |
AdSenseA Google service that can help you display relevant, unobtrusive Google ads on your website's content pages and earn money. (Visit the Google AdSense Help Center to learn more.) |
AdSense (line item type)Line item type used to target AdSense ad units to specific inventory and audiences. |
AMPAn open-source initiative that aims to make the web better for all. The project enables the creation of websites and ads that are consistently fast, beautiful, and high-performing across devices and distribution patterns. |
AMPHTML AdsAMPHTML Ads load faster than standard ads and can be delivered anywhere on the web, not just on AMP pages. This applies AMP’s core philosophy of reliable fast performance and great user experience to ads. |
Anchor adAn ad that stays fixed at the bottom of the user’s screen, even as the user scrolls up or down on the page. Swiping would let the user dismiss the ad in a mobile-friendly manner. |
Aspect ratioRatio of width to height for a video or image. |
AssetThe art work or file associated with a creative object. |
Asynchronous codeCode that is split up into smaller pieces. Execution of the various pieces of code may "pause" or "wait" between each piece, allowing for other processing (such as rendering of other ads or page content) to be performed during the pauses. |
Audience ExtensionAllows a publisher to buy ad impressions (targeted to the publisher's own visitors) from other web or app properties. |
Availability forecastPredicts the availability of inventory. Availability forecast is used in two ways: during the sales process to estimate how much inventory is available for sale; and when an ad is booked to verify that enough inventory is available for the ad. Forecasts consider impressions that have been reserved for other line items. |
BackfillInventory that has not been pre-sold or reserved. As a verb, "backfill" means to serve ads to this inventory. Backfill inventory is often monetized with ads sold by ad networks, via non-guaranteed campaigns, or in an auction. Also see Non-guaranteed. |
BeaconA small (one pixel by one pixel) image displayed on a website or within other content. It forces the browser to make a request to another server so that server can read or write its own cookie (or otherwise track the web request). This allows you to record the basic actions of the user who is accessing the content. |
Booked inventoryIncludes "reserved" and "remnant" inventory that has been entered into the system. |
Bulk line itemsLine item type used to fill unsold inventory. Bulk line items have delivery goals and deliver evenly by default. |
Bumper adVideo bumper ads are short video ads that can play before or after a video ad or ad pod. They are often used to indicate that ads are either about to display, or to promote the next ad. Companion ads do not appear with bumper ads. |
CampaignAn order and all of its line items, or a proposal and all of its proposal line items. Can also refer to multiple orders or proposals. |
Click macroA small piece of code that allows you to track clicks for your third-party creatives. |
CodeThe "program or script" supplied by the advertiser that is used to generate (i.e., rich media) an ad. |
CompanyAn advertiser, agency, or organization that buys ad space and supplies the creatives for line items. Each order is associated with a company, and you can invite company contacts to view reports about their campaigns. (Learn how to add a company profile.) |
Content bundleTargetable groups of videos that you can assemble based on filters or by selecting individual videos, or both. Bundles are automatically updated as new metadata that matches their criteria is ingested. For example, you could create a content bundle called "Kittens" based on a combination of metadata and manually-added videos, and then target ads for cat toys to that bundle. |
CookieA small text file containing a string of characters that is set on your computer when you visit a website. When you visit the website again, the cookie helps that site recognize your browser. Cookies may store user preferences and other information. DoubleClick cookies contain no personally identifiable information. |
Correlator valueA value passed in ad requests, handled automatically by the GPT libraries and the GMA/IMA SDKs. The correlator is common to all ads on a page, but unique across page views. Ad requests with the same correlator value received close together in time are considered a single Page View for serving purposes. |
CreativeA code snippet, file or link that generates an ad. (The terms creative and ad may be used interchangeably.) Ad Manager supports a variety of creative types, including Third party, Image, Campaign Manager 360 tag, and Studio. |
Creative assignmentType of assignment used to specify characteristics of how the creative is served, such as the click-through URL, the position of the creative in a sequential rotation, and so on. |
Creative codeHTML or JavaScript code used for third-party or custom creatives which tells the browser how to render or generate the creative. |
Creative rotationThe technique by which multiple creatives assigned to a line item are displayed, either evenly, weighted, sequential, or optimized. |
Creative wrapperSnippet of code that wraps around a creative when it is served. When Ad Manager serves a creative to an ad unit with (a) creative wrapper label(s) applied, it also inserts the creative wrappers into the code that is delivered to the webpage. You can use creative wrappers to implement third-party tracking software or for any other purpose. |
Custom renderingRender your own native ads in app code. You can implement highly custom renderings that take full advantage of the functionality of Android and iOS. |
Daisy chainingProcess whereby a creative is required to call to multiple third-party ad servers. |
DaypartingConfiguring day and time targeting settings for line items. The process of dividing the day into different parts in order to run ads only during specific times. |
Default ad impressionsA gray GIF system default ad (an “unfilled impression") will serve to inventory where no line items are targeted and the user will see a blank ad slot. |
Delivery goalThe amount of impressions or clicks that a line item is contracted to deliver. |
Delivery InspectorGives information on which ads were delivered. When unexpected ads deliver, use the Delivery Inspector to find out why. |
Delivery priorityThe priority level at which a line item is set to deliver. This can range from higher priorities (sponsorship and standard) to lower priorities (house). |
Delivery progress barA graphic in the UI that indicates whether or not a line item is on target to achieve its goal. |
Density-independent pixels (dp)Screen size is usually expressed in density-independent pixels, or dp. Here's a simple formula to convert screen pixels (px) to density pixels (dp): dp = px * (160 / dpi) Dots per inch (dpi) are pixels within an inch of the screen. |
DMADesignated Market Area. DMAs expose a specific regional market group to the same content or ads. They frequently cover one metropolitan area, in some cases grouping together multiple smaller cities. Many DMAs are available for targeting. |
Dynamic allocationA network-level mechanism designed to maximize your remnant and Ad Exchange revenue without compromising reservations. Both remnant and Ad Exchange line items are given a chance to serve if Ad Exchange/AdSense is eligible for the request (using line item targeting for Ad Exchange/AdSense or ad unit monetization for AdSense). |
Engaged viewIn the context of skippable ads: you have the ability to traffic reserve, CPM-based video ads that can be skipped or exited after a certain duration has elapsed. The "Skip" button appears after 5 seconds. If viewed to completion or for 30 seconds, whichever comes first, an "Engaged view" is counted in reporting. |
Even rotationA type of rotation of creatives, where all creatives in a line item are delivered in an approximately even proportion. |
EvenlyWith true even delivery, an ad is shown at a constant rate throughout the campaign duration. If an ad needs to appear on a website or app several thousand times over a week (for example, 7000 times over a week) with a true even delivery, it would serve 1000 impressions of the ad each day. In contrast, frontloading of the ad campaign serves more impressions during the start of the campaign, and the serving rate gradually decreases as the ad approaches its serving goals. |
Exclusion labelA label that you can apply to a line item which prevents it from being delivered along with other line items that have the same label. For example, if you're doing business with both Airline X and Airline Y, you can apply the exclusion label 'airline' to their line items, which will prevent Airline X's line items from being shown on the same webpage at the same time as Airline Y's. |
First-party cookieA cookie that's set by the domain the user is visiting instead of by a different, third-party domain. |
FloatingA type of ad that floats on top of a page’s content. A floating ad can move with content as a user scrolls, or maintain a locked position on a page as a user scrolls. |
FluidA native ad size that allows more flexibility when styling your ad. Ad Manager automatically sizes the ad by filling the width of the enclosing column and adjusting the height as appropriate (just like a regular HTML div on your site). |
Forecast adjustmentAn adjustment made to the anticipated traffic to your website or app. With Forecast adjustments, you can make changes so traffic patterns are better reflected in forecasting numbers. This is helpful when you create new content or you have unusual traffic spikes during high-profile events. |
ForecastingThe process of estimating how much ad inventory a website or app will have in the future. |
Dynamic targetingTargeting option that you can use if you don't want to define values in advance, or if you need to define more than 50,000 key-value pairs. With dynamic targeting, you can have thousands of possible targeting values, because there's no need to define each value ahead of time. When you need to target a specific value, you can simply enter that targeting value into your line item. Once you target a line item to a dynamic targeting value, the value will be saved and you'll be able to select it from a list the next time you target a line item to that key. |
Frequency cappingHelps to limit how often an ad from a line item is served to the same user in a specific period of time. Supported time ranges are minutes, hours, days, weeks, or months, and multiple capping rules may be applied. For example, you can set a frequency cap limiting the same user to one impression per day and three impressions per week. |
FrontloadedIf an ad needs to appear on a website or app several thousand times over a week (for example, 7000 times per week) and the "Frontloaded" delivery option is selected, the platform will try to serve 25% extra ad impressions at the start of the week (1250 impressions) and continue to serve more than necessary until later in the week when delivery will tail off until all 7000 impressions have been served. |
Google Publisher ConsoleProvides troubleshooting tips and information about ad performance to publishers, overlaid directly onto their website or app. It’s another way for publishers to retrieve information and take action on their Google ads as they browse their site. |
Google Publisher Tag (GPT)A specific type of ad tag that uses a Google-provided JavaScript library to define and configure an ad request made to Ad Manager. |
Grace periodAn extension, in days, of a line item's end date. The line item will continue delivering until it reaches its goal or the end of its grace period, whichever comes first. |
GuaranteedLine items that are contractually obligated to deliver a requested number of impressions. Ad Manager ensures these items deliver in full through reserving inventory for the line item. Contrast this with Non-guaranteed line items, which are used to fill "leftover" or remnant impressions. Guaranteed line items include: Sponsorship and Standard. |
Hosted creativeCreative image files you can upload to Google for free. Google will then manage these files and serve them directly to your site visitors. |
House adA line item type typically used for ads that promote products and services chosen by you. |
IdentifierA value assigned to a particular user or device and is used to assist in ad serving functionality. The identifier contains no personally identifiable Information, can be reset by the user at any time, and respects user options to limit or opt out of ad tracking. Identifiers are used for audience list targeting, frequency capping, and sequential creative rotation. Examples of identifiers are cookies (used on web and mobile web), mobile advertising IDs (used within mobile apps), and publisher provided identifiers (PPID, used for cross-screen serving). Users always have the option of opting out of any identifier used by Google. |
IM expandingAn In-Page asset and an Overlay creative that expands onto the user's desktop. This creative type is used in instant messaging (IM) applications. |
In-displayAn ad format where an ad is displayed somewhere on the same page as a video that a user is watching. |
In-streamVideo ads that appear before, during, and after video content streams. Note: For the purposes of compliance with the Video inventory restrictions, the terms "instream" or "in-stream" in Help Center pages and in-product controls refer to both "In-stream" and "Accompanying Content" as defined in the Policies.
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Inflated page viewsEach webpage should only register one pageview but when Analytics tracking code is present within a framed page as well as the framing page, Analytics is likely to register two pageviews for that visit. This causes a pageview count that is higher than it should be. |
Insertion orderAn order form for the placement of an advertising request. For example, publishers who want to run a rich media publisher-paid campaign must sign an insertion order provided by a Google Marketing Platform representative. |
InterstitialAn interstitial is a display or video ad played without the presence of any other streaming video content in a transition between content, where the ad is the primary focus of the page and takes up the majority of the viewport. |
Inventory forecastA feature that is used to estimate how much ad inventory will be available in the future. |
Inventory hierarchyThe relationship between different types of inventory. Premium customers can have more than one level of inventory. They can have parent ad units which themselves have child ad units. |
Inventory levelOne level of an inventory hierarchy (top-level ad unit, lower-level ad unit, etc.). |
Inventory typeIdentifies kind of inventory or medium in which an ad serves. Values include (but are not limited to) the following:
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JackpottingProcess where the same creative serves to multiple ad units on the same page at the same time. The Google Ad Manager ad server tries to ensure that this does not happen. |
KeyIn custom targeting, the first part of a key-value pair (key=value). For example, in the key-value pair car=X, car is the key and X is the value. Keys can have multiple values assigned to them. |
Key-value pairA set of two linked data items, known as the key and the value. The format of a key-value pair is key=value. |
LiftIn the context of yield management, this is the percentage by which an ad was optimized. It is calculated by finding the percentage difference between the optimized group and the control group. |
Line itemAn advertiser's commitment to purchase a specific number of ad impressions (CPM), user clicks (CPC), or time (CPD), on certain dates at a specified price. A line item specifies where an advertiser's ads will appear, and may specify when an ad may be shown. |
Line item discountThe percentage or dollar amount by which you can reduce a line item's cost. In general, this field simply serves as a reminder that the advertiser received a discount. Discounting doesn't affect a line item's priority based on cost or value CPM. Also, discounts aren't reflected in reporting. |
Lower-level ad unitAny ad unit that is not at the highest level in a multi-level ad unit hierarchy. Can also be called "child" or "descendant" depending on context. |
MasterThe primary ad in a roadblock, which allows for the synchronization of ads on the same webpage or app. |
MediationIncreases your mobile app revenue by calling a series of third-party ad networks to fill an ad request, ordered by expected yield. Each ad network has the opportunity to fill an ad request; however, if one ad network does not fill the request, the next ad network in the sequence gains an opportunity. |
Multiple Customer Management (MCM)Lets a “child” publisher delegate management of their Ad Manager inventory to a third-party “parent” publisher through an invitation process. Depending on the chosen MCM delegation type (Manage Inventory or Manage Account), the parent publisher manages the child’s inventory in their own account or the child’s account. Note: MCM replaces SPM in early 2022. The migration from SPM to MCM is in progress. |
Native adA type of ad that mirrors the visual design of the user experience it lives within, and looks, feels, and behaves like natural content on the publisher property in which it’s displayed. |
Native ad formatDefines the variables that make up a native ad. Variables comprise the content that will appear in the ad (such as Headline, Image, and Body Text). You can select Standard (system-defined) formats or create your own Custom (user-defined) formats. |
Native stylesManage the look and feel of your native ads within Ad Manager, for both web and apps. Ad Manager handles the rendering of your native ads based on native styles you specify within the product. |
Network
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Non-delivery causeExplains why a line item that was eligible for an ad request didn’t deliver. This can help troubleshoot unexpected behavior and assure you that line items are behaving as intended. |
Non-guaranteedLine items that are most commonly used to fill your site's unsold inventory if not contractually obligated to deliver a requested number of impressions to other Guaranteed line items. Non-guaranteed line items include: Network, Bulk, Price Priority, House, AdSense, and Ad Exchange. Under Programmatic Direct, Preferred Deal line items are also non-guaranteed. |
Noscript blockA block of code used as an alternative when a user blocks JavaScript in their browser or when their browser can't support client-side scripting. Same as noscript code. |
Noscript codeA block of code used an alternative when a user blocks JavaScript in their browser or when their browser can't support client-side scripting. Same as noscript block. |
On-schedule indicatorThe on-schedule indicator (OSI) is a metric that provides an indication of the pacing of an ad's delivery. This is done by comparing the average number of ads delivered each day with the optimal daily delivery. |
Optimized creative rotationAn option where Ad Manager gives roughly 75% of the impressions to the creative with the highest click-through rate, and the remaining 25% to the other creatives (to validate that the previously chosen "best" creative still has the highest click-through rate). |
OrderAn agreement between an interactive advertising seller and a buyer that specifies the details of an advertising campaign. Orders contain one or more line items. |
Open BiddingPublishers and exchanges optimize yield management with server-to-server real-time bidding that uses a publisher’s existing tagging or SDK implementation. The unified Google Ad Manager technology stack also provides simplified trafficking, reporting and billing. Open Bidding was previously known as Exchange Bidding. |
Open AuctionA Transaction type or "Deal type" where inventory which is available to all buyers is auctioned. |
Out-of-pageA creative that is displayed outside of a webpage or app (for example, pop-ups and pop-unders). |
OverbookTo book an ad (or multiple ads) for a greater number of impressions or clicks than are forecasted to be available. In most cases, this leads to underdelivery of one or more ads. |
Page awarenessThe process where Ad Manager records which impressions occurred together when a page is viewed, when you run a forecast on roadblock ads. |
Page viewA common concept across the web, representing a particular user loading and viewing a webpage one time. In Ad Manager ad serving, all ad requests corresponding to a page view are considered together because the behavior of any one of these ads affects what else might be eligible to serve. For example, an Exclusion Label prevents two ads with the same label from serving in the same Page View. |
ParentThe upper level in a hierarchical system, such as the ad unit structure. The lower level is known as the child. |
Parent inventory unitThe upper level of an inventory hierarchy. Every ad unit you define in your network has a parent inventory unit based on where you create the ad unit in the inventory hierarchy. |
Peel downA creative that shows a glimpse of your ad in the corner of a webpage. When the user interacts, the rest of the ad peels down to reveal the full message. |
Personally Identifiable Information (PII)Any information that could be used to identify a specific user, such as an email address or a phone number. In the interests of protecting end-user privacy, Google ads product policies mandate that publishers must not pass any data to Google that Google could use or recognize as personally identifiable information. |
PlacementA collection of one or more ad units that can be targeted as a group. You can add ad units to a placement to simplify the targeting of ads. |
PodFor video ads, this is a dynamic grouping of ads next to each other. Pods allow groups of video ads to be shown in sequence. Two types of pods exist:
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Policy violationMalware, misrepresentations, phishing, and other components of ads that prevent a safe and positive experience. Google scans creatives for policy violations, which you can then attempt to remove. |
Poster imageFor native video ads, image file to be shown while the video is loading, or until the user clicks to play the video. If this is not included, the first frame of the video is used. This image also displays after video completion. |
PretargetingPretargeting is how Yield partners decide which bid requests they want to receive from publishers. |
ProgrammaticAutomated, machine-based selections for purchasing display advertising. |
Push-downA type of expanding ad that pushes down the content of a webpage when the creative expands, moving the site out of the way to display the ad. Sometimes written as "push down". |
Real-time bidderA server-to-server integration option for network buyers that allows networks to evaluate and bid on each available impression. |
Redirect creativeCreative you use to track image or Flash ads that aren't hosted and served by Google. Redirect creatives are commonly used for ads from a third-party network or affiliate provider. |
ReleaseReleasing inventory is the opposite of reserving it. When inventory is released, the reservation is "canceled", and the inventory is freed up for forecasting and future ad booking. Inventory cannot be released without first being reserved. |
RemnantRefers collectively to the line item types most commonly used to fill your site's unsold inventory. Remnant line item types include Network, Bulk, Price Priority and can be used for various non-guaranteed transactions. They can satisfy an ad request when there are no guaranteed campaigns eligible to serve. Also see Non-guaranteed.
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Remnant inventoryA phrase sometimes used to describe ad space (inventory) that you were unable to sell via guaranteed line items and, thus, was sold via either non-guaranteed line items or via Ad Exchange or AdSense line items, which make inventory available to auctions. Guaranteed line items are considered more desirable channels to sell inventory as they generally generate more revenue. Ad space (inventory) can be thought of a neither remnant nor non-remnant, however, as this designation depends on what was eligible to serve to that inventory for any given ad request. Any inventory may be available to guaranteed line items, non-guaranteed line items, or to Ad Exchange or AdSense line items, depending on how your Ad Manager network is set up. Designating inventory as remnant (or premium) is subjective and dependent on perceived value. The perceived value of inventory can shift over time. Ad space on a sport page may be perceived more valuable during playoff season rather than off season, for instance.
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RenderTo generate a creative on a user's browser. |
ReserveWhen guaranteed (non-remnant) line items are booked in Ad Manager, Ad Manager "reserves" the inventory for this line item. This inventory reservation means that the impressions are considered to be "blocked off" for other ads running at a lower priority. Ad Manager forecasting accounts for inventory reservations when calculating future impression availability. |
Rich media creativeAn ad containing animation, sound, video, or interactive features. Rich media creatives can be used either on their own or in combination with technologies such as streaming media and sound. |
RoadblockSeveral creatives being served from a line item together on the same webpage. Roadblocking blocks off the ad slots on a page and fills them with creatives from one line item. |
Run-of-networkAn ad scheduled to run across an entire network of sites, except explicitly excluded sites, according to available inventory. |
Sell-throughThe percentage of available traffic that has been reserved for standard or sponsorship line items. |
Session ad rulesUnlike standard ad rules, session ad rules are frequency-based and apply across multiple video streams. They control how long a visitor can watch content across streams before an ad shows, and how many ads that visitor sees. Like standard ad rules, session ad rules control the type of ad formats that appear and what the source of the ads should be. |
Single-request modeA GPT mode where tags call all ads once in the header, instead of requesting each ad separately inline with the ad slot. This is also sometimes called "Single Request Architecture" or SRA. |
Start indexA pagination mechanism used with the max-results parameter for situations when totalResults exceeds 1000 and you want to retrieve items indexed at 1001 and beyond. |
Sticky adSee Anchor ad. |
Targeting criteriaKey values that specify data like content information and an audience for the video, for example, age: 16-65; geo: US UK FR. |
Targeting keyEach targeting key represents a category to which a line item is targeted, where a "category" is represented by a value assigned to the key. Consider a targeting key of "color", where allowable values are "red" and "blue". In this case, "color = red" represents a key/value pair that can be passed in the ad request and used for targeting an ad. |
Targeting pickerAlso known as a targeting selector or widget, this is the area on the Line item details page where you can select various targeting criteria for the line item. |
Targeting valueA value passed for a specific targeting key, which can be used in line item targeting. For example, the value in the key-value pair for "color = red" is "red". |
Tear sheetOne or more screenshots of webpages or apps showing specific ads, for the purpose of proving to the advertiser that they ran in the way that the advertiser wanted. |
Top-level ad unitThe highest-level ad unit in a hierarchy that consists of multi-level ad units. Can also be called "parent" or "upper-level" ad unit depending on context. |
Traffic forecastView historical traffic alongside future impression opportunities to find better ways to segment and package inventory. |
TraffickerSomeone who works at a publisher and configures the ads to run in the ad server. |
TraffickingThe process of creating orders and ads, controlling ad delivery, and targeting ads and keywords. |
Unfilled impressionAn unfilled impression, or blank ad, is an ad request that didn’t return an ad because none were eligible to serve. Avoid this by populating your network with widely targeted (run of network) ads like House ads or Ad Exchange ads. |
Uplift feeA fee that is paid for the increased value of Rich Media over standard ad serving. |
VASTA video format designed to standardize communication between video players and servers, facilitating traffic across all kinds of publishing platforms. Acronym for Video Ad Serving Template. |
Video ad tagContains all the information required for a video ad request, including information about the master video ad and, if applicable, its companion ads. A master video tag is a URL used by the video player to retrieve the video ad and a companion tag is JavaScript in the webpage that indicates where the companion ads should show. |
WaterfallFor video ads, a waterfall involves having a hierarchy of ads ready to serve. If the first one doesn't serve, the second one will; if the second doesn't serve, the third one will, etc. This is commonly referred to as a fallback. |
WeightFor line items, the portion, as a percentage, that you want a sponsorship line item to serve. For creatives, the portion, as a percentage, that you want a particular creative to serve within a creative rotation. |
Weighted rotationA type of creative rotation. Each creative will rotate based on the frequency that you specify. |
YieldRevenue and impression data for both direct sales (standard and sponsorship) and house or remnant inventory. |
Header biddingA system for bidding which requires custom configuration by publishers. Learn more about the difference between Open Bidding and header bidding. |
Reserve priceThe minimum price a buyer needs to bid in order to be eligible for the auction. |
Yield groupName of the group of ad networks or exchanges which allows you to specify what inventory you want to sell with Ad Exchange, Open Bidding, or Mediation. |
Yield partnerThe term for "ad network" companies in Ad Manager. These companies can be used for Mediation for mobile apps or Open Bidding, depending on the settings. |
Manage AccountOne of the delegation types available for Multiple Customer Management publishers. This relationship grants a parent publisher edit access to manage inventory directly in a child publisher’s account. The other delegation type is Manage Inventory. |
Manage InventoryOne of the delegation types available for Multiple Customer Management publishers. This relationship lets a parent publisher manage ad requests that a child publisher delegates to the parent’s account. The parent manages the delegated inventory from their own account. Child publishers have no visibility into the parent’s account and vice versa. The other delegation type is Manage Account. |
Child publisherIn Multiple Customer Management, a third-party publisher that delegates the management of their inventory to a parent publisher. Child publishers can grant parent publishers edit access to their account (Manage Account), or delegate inventory to the parent account (Manage Inventory). |
Parent publisherIn Multiple Customer Management, a third-party publisher that manages a child publisher’s inventory. Depending on the MCM relationship, parent publishers manage inventory in their own account (Manage Inventory) or in the child’s account (Manage Account). |
Non-in-streamVideo ad placements that do not have accompanying video. In Google Ad Manager, these can include: in-banner video ads (including in-article and in-feed video ads), native video ads, interstitial video ads, rewarded video ads, and app open video ads.
Non-in-stream was formerly referred to as "outstream".
Learn more about these video ad formats or related Video publisher policies |
OriginThe origin of a URL consists of its schema (protocol), domain (hostname), and port number (which can be implicit). Example: the origin of |
Try your keywords on Google Web Search. |