We have a small php script, that displays random adverts on our site . The banners are served from any location we designate.
What I really would like to know, or be pointed in the right direction is, can we somehow collate the number of impressions each banner gets and possibly the click count on that banner.
I am sure this can be done in php, and stored in a db. Just havent got a clue. I searched on Google, and seemingly everything I could find harks back to 2002 and 2003 lol.
Here is our script:
<?php
$Img1 = "path to image folder/banner.png";
$Alt1 = "alt text for banner";
$Url1 = "http://www.externaldomain.com";
$Img2 ="path to image folder/banner.png";
$Alt2 = "alt text for banner";
$Url2 = "http://www.externaldomain.com";
$Img3 ="path to image folder/banner.png";
$Alt3 = "alt text for banner";
$Url3 = "http://www.externaldomain.com";
$Img4 ="path to image folder/banner.png";
$Alt4 = "alt text for banner";
$Url4 = "http://www.externaldomain.com";
$Img5 ="path to image folder/banner.png";
$Alt5 = "alt text for banner";
$Url5 = "http://www.externaldomain.com";
$num = rand (1,5);
$Image = ${'Img'.$num};
$Alt = ${'Alt' .$num};
$URL = ${'Url'.$num};
Print "<a href=\"".$URL."\"><img src=\"".$Image."\" alt=\"".$Alt."\" /</a>"; ?>
To initiate the above code ( we fire an include request )
<?php include ("../adserver/thescriptabove.php"); ?>
This ratio of clicks to impressions is measured by what's known as the click-through rate (CTR). To calculate CTR, simply divide the number of clicks by the number of impressions; for example, if your ad received 1,000 impressions and 25 clicks, you would have a 2.5% CTR.
A mobile app impression is counted when one or more pixels of the ad creative is visible on a device's screen.
Impressions are the total number of exposures to your advertisement. One person can receive multiple exposures over time. If one person was exposed to an advertisement five times, this would count as five impressions. Impressions are calculated by multiplying the number of Spots by Average Persons.
Each ad format has its own default CPM, except for Search, which is available for free as long as you have active billable campaigns in your account. Here's how impressions and budgets are calculated: Impressions × CPM ÷ 1,000 = Budget. Budget ÷ CPM × 1,000 = Impressions.
I see that you already selected an answer, so I'm not sure if you figured it all out, but I was writing out a little tutorial for you. Finally got it done, hope it still helps you out.
Your method seems to be working fine for serving banners, but if you're going to get into databases and tracking clicks/impressions, I would suggest that you go all in. So store your banner properties in the database as well. I'm going to get ahead and assume that your server/web host allows for a few free MySql databases.
What you need to do is create a database, as well as a User/Admin for the database. Then you're going to access the database with a MySql manager, most web hosts provide phpMyAdmin
. Once you're inside the database, you need to set up a table
to record your data.
Here's how I want you to set it up:
|Table Name: Banners |
|-------------------------|
|Field: | Type: |
|-------------------------|
|ID | int(5) | The Primary Key and Autoincrement attributes should be set on the ID field as well
|Image | varchar(100) |
|Url | varchar(100) |
|Caption | varchar(100) |
|Views | int(10) |
|Clicks | int(10) |
Now that you've got the database done, here comes the hard part, the PHP. I've pretty much done it for you, but it's untested, so I'm sure there will be bugs, that you will have to work out. But it should point you in the right direction, and help you learn.
<?PHP
// First of all, we need to connect to the MySql server
// For more info, check out: http://php.net/manual/en/function.mysql-select-db.php
$conn = mysql_connect("localhost", "username", "password");
if(!$conn){
die('Could not connect to the MySql Server ' . mysql_error());
}
// Now that we've connected to the MySql sever, we need to select the database
// More info can be found on the same link as above
$db_selected = mysql_select_db('my_database', $conn);
if(!$db_selected) {
die ('Could not select the MySql Database: ' . mysql_error());
}
// Now we need to check the URL parameters to see, if we came to this page normally or because a banner was clicked
// If normally, we serve a random banner and increment the Views field in the database
// Otherwise, we increment the Clicks field and direct the user to the banner's URL
if(!isset($_GET['Clicked'])){
// if the Clicked parameter is not set, we came to the page normally
// Let's select a random banner from the database
$result = mysql_query("SELECT * FROM banners ORDER BY RAND() LIMIT 1") or die(mysql_error());
$row = mysql_fetch_array(result);
// Now let's increment the Views field for the banner we selected
mysql_query("UPDATE banners SET Views = Views + 1 WHERE ID = '" . $row['ID'] . "'") or die(mysql_error());
// let's set the URL to this same page but with the Clicked parameter set
$url = "banner_server.php?Clicked=" . $row['ID'];
// Last but not least, we have to output the banner HTML
// Notice, I set the caption on both the 'alt' and 'title' attributes of the 'img' tag,
// that's because IE shows the value of the 'alt' tag when an image is hovered,
// whereas Firefox shows the value of the 'title' tag, just thought you might want that!
echo "<a href=\"" . $url . "\"><img src=\"" . $row['Image'] . "\" alt=\"" . $row['Caption'] . "\" title=\"" . $row['Caption'] . "\" /></a>";
}else{
// Otherwise, increment the Clicks field and redirect
// First, let's get the ID of the banner that was clicked from the Clicked parameter
$id = (int)$_GET['Clicked'];
// now let's increment the Clicks field for the banner
mysql_query("UPDATE banners SET Clicks = Clicks + 1 WHERE ID = '" . $id . "'") or die(mysql_error());
// now let's select the banner from the database so we can redirect to the URL that's associated with it
$result = mysql_query("SELECT * FROM banners WHERE ID = '" . $id . "'") or die(mysql_error());
$row = mysql_fetch_array(result);
// redirect to the URL
header("location: " . $row['Url']);
}
// Close the MySql connection
mysql_close($conn);
?>
Good luck
why dont you just let google analytics do it for you? Fire off an event when the link is clicked and let google capture it?
onclick="_gaq.push(['_trackEvent', 'Event Name', 'click', 'Button title/name']);"
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