First-time header bidding
Publishers who have only run AdSense to date. We start with two or three bidders, conservative timeouts, and standard price granularity. The goal is a clean launch with measurable yield lift, not maximum bidder count.
A parallel auction across demand partners, run with the discipline of a real ad server. Pub Clarity Media manages the configuration, the bidders, the floors, and the operational health.
Header bidding is a discipline. Bidder selection, timeout windows, floors, key-value mapping, and GAM line-item structure together decide whether qualified demand competes effectively.
Pub Clarity operates header bidding as a managed service — configuration, monitoring, tuning. The publisher sees yield improvements with no operational overhead.
Header bidding is a technique for running a parallel auction across multiple demand partners in the browser before the publisher's ad server is called. It evolved as the publisher-side response to Google's historical dominance over real-time bidding — by giving every demand partner a fair, simultaneous chance at each impression, publishers capture the genuine highest bid instead of accepting Google's priced floor.
In practice, header bidding is a tag (commonly Prebid.js) that sits in the page's <head>. When the page loads, the tag fires bid requests to each configured demand partner in parallel. Each partner responds within a configured timeout window (typically 1500ms). The highest bid above the slot's floor is sent to the publisher's ad server — usually GAM — as a key-value pair. GAM's line item structure decides how that bid competes against direct deals, AdSense, and other demand sources already trafficked.
The mechanics are simple; the operations are not. Bidder selection, timeout windows, floors, price granularity, key-value mapping, and GAM line-item structure all shape whether qualified demand competes effectively. Pub Clarity operates header bidding as a managed service — we configure, we monitor, we tune.
Publishers come to header bidding from different starting points. Pub Clarity's implementation approach adapts to the publisher's existing setup.
Publishers who have only run AdSense to date. We start with two or three bidders, conservative timeouts, and standard price granularity. The goal is a clean launch with measurable yield lift, not maximum bidder count.
Publishers already running Prebid.js with a stack of bidders. We audit the current configuration, identify timeout and granularity issues, and migrate the publisher to the Pub Clarity-managed setup with their existing bidders intact.
Header bidding complements direct deals; it does not replace them. We align line-item priorities so direct deals serve first, then header bidding competes with AdSense for the remaining inventory.
Network operators with multiple properties benefit from a centrally-managed header bidding configuration. Each site keeps its own auction floor and bidder selection; the core operational discipline is shared.
Header bidding for video is a different operational discipline than display. We separate the two configurations and tune them independently.
Bidder selection differs significantly across South and Southeast Asia. We have working knowledge of which bidders perform on Indian, Indonesian, Vietnamese, and Thai inventory.
The choices that decide whether header bidding earns its yield lift or quietly drags performance.
Adding bidders without testing them dilutes yield because slow bidders push timeouts. Two well-tuned bidders typically outperform six poorly-configured ones.
1500ms is the default; we tune up or down based on observed response times. Faster timeouts forfeit bids; slower timeouts hurt page speed.
Above-the-fold slots warrant higher floors than below-the-fold. We tune floors per-publisher based on observed bid density.
Granular pricing buckets in Prebid require matching GAM line items. Misalignment wastes bids. We configure both sides in sync.
Bidders without consented identity signals earn 40–70% less. UserSync setup, consent handling, and identity provider selection are first-order operational concerns.
Bidder reports must reconcile to GAM delivery. We pull bidder-side reports through their analytics adapters and compare against GAM Query Tool weekly.
What publishers ask before they activate a managed header bidding setup.
Properly configured, header bidding adds 200–400ms to ad-load time without affecting page load (LCP, INP). The bid requests fire async; they do not block content rendering. Page-speed regressions during header bidding launches are almost always misconfiguration.
Across publishers who migrate to a managed setup from a passive AdSense-only configuration, the typical yield lift is 12–28% over the first quarter. Lift scales with traffic quality and demand-partner relevance to the publisher's content vertical.
We propose a bidder shortlist based on your vertical, geo mix, and inventory characteristics. You approve the list. Pub Clarity manages the configuration and monitoring; the relationship with the bidder is the publisher's contract.
AdSense continues to serve. Header bidding runs alongside it in GAM's auction. If header bidding wins above AdSense's bid, our line item serves; otherwise AdSense serves. Net result is consistent yield lift without losing AdSense fill.
Bidders are evaluated quarterly against revenue, fill rate, response time, and CPM. Underperformers are paused. Pub Clarity's reporting surfaces the data; the decision is the publisher's.
Yes. The Pub Clarity dashboard's Real-Time view shows live bid requests, responses, and winners as they happen. Useful during launch and for debugging.
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