Ads make money by charging brands for attention or action, then splitting that spend across platforms, publishers, and tech fees.
Advertising looks like a banner, a video, a sponsored post, or a search result with a small “Ad” label. Underneath that surface, it’s a payment system with rules. Brands pay to reach people. Platforms and publishers sell access to that attention. Ad-tech firms take fees for matching, measuring, and keeping fraud down.
If you run a website, buy ads for a small business, or you’re plain curious, the same question pops up: where does the money come from, and where does it go? Let’s trace the path from a single ad view to the final payout.
Where the money starts
Every ad dollar starts with an advertiser. That could be a local shop trying to get calls, a SaaS company chasing signups, or a global brand pushing a new product. They set a budget, pick a target, then choose a buying route.
Three common buying routes
- Direct buy: A brand pays a publisher straight up for a fixed set of placements, often with a guaranteed amount of views.
- Platform buy: A brand pays a platform that owns the audience and the ad space, like search or social networks.
- Programmatic buy: A brand uses automated marketplaces where ad impressions are bought and sold in real time across many sites and apps.
The route shapes everything: pricing, targeting, reporting, and the cut each middle layer takes.
What advertisers pay for
Ads earn revenue when a payment event happens. The event depends on the pricing model that the advertiser chose, or that the network offers by default.
CPM, CPC, CPA, and “pay on outcome”
- CPM: Cost per thousand impressions. You pay for views, even if nobody clicks.
- CPC: Cost per click. You pay when someone clicks.
- CPA: Cost per action. You pay when a tracked action happens, like a sale or lead.
- CPI: Cost per install. Common in mobile apps.
CPM is about reach. CPC is about traffic. CPA and CPI lean on tracking and clean attribution, which is why measurement tech is a large slice of the ad economy.
How pricing gets set in real time
In many channels, there’s no fixed price tag on an ad spot. The price is set by an auction that runs when the space becomes available. Search ads are the clearest case: a query triggers an auction, and the system decides which ads show and where. Google describes this as an auction that runs each time a search happens or a site visit loads an eligible ad placement. How the Google Ads auction works lays out the basics.
Two levers that decide who wins
Most major auctions balance two inputs:
- Bid: How much the advertiser is willing to pay for the event, such as a click.
- Quality signals: Relevance and user experience signals that try to keep junk ads out of top slots.
That mix explains a common surprise: the highest bid doesn’t always take the best spot. A lower bid can win if it’s a better match for the user and the page context.
Who gets paid when an ad runs
Once an ad is served, money can flow to several parties. The simplest chain is “advertiser pays platform.” The more common web chain is longer.
The core players in a typical web impression
- Publisher: The site or app showing the ad.
- Ad server: The system that decides which creative loads in a slot.
- Exchange: The marketplace that runs bids and returns a winner.
- Demand-side platform (DSP): The tool that buys on behalf of advertisers.
- Supply-side platform (SSP): The tool that sells on behalf of publishers.
Each layer can take a fee. Some fees are fixed. Some are baked into the auction price. That’s why two people can look at the same impression and quote two different “CPMs,” depending on which point in the chain they mean.
Taking an ad dollar apart: where it can end up
Let’s make this practical. Suppose an advertiser wins an impression at a $10 CPM. That means they pay $10 for 1,000 impressions, or $0.01 per impression. The publisher does not pocket the whole cent.
Tech fees, fraud filters, brand-safety tools, and measurement can all take slices. The split varies by setup and contract, so treat any single split you see online as a sketch, not a law of physics.
One way to anchor reality is to look at industry revenue totals, since they reveal where money pools at scale. The Interactive Advertising Bureau and PwC publish an annual benchmark that aggregates online ad revenue across major formats and sellers. IAB/PwC Internet Ad Revenue Report is a solid reference point for market-level context.
Table 1: Common ad money models and what they reward
| Model | What triggers payment | Who it tends to favor |
|---|---|---|
| CPM | An impression is counted | Large reach publishers, awareness campaigns |
| CPC | A click is recorded | Search, intent-driven pages, direct response |
| CPA | A tracked action completes | Advertisers with strong tracking and funnel control |
| CPI | An app install completes | App publishers, mobile networks |
| Flat sponsorship | Time period or placement bundle | Publishers with loyal readers and clear niche fit |
| Revenue share | Partner earns a percent of tracked sales | Creators with purchase-ready audiences |
| Hybrid deals | Base CPM plus a bonus on actions | Teams that can deliver both reach and outcomes |
| Guaranteed programmatic | Reserved inventory with automated delivery | Brands that want scale with predictable placements |
How publishers turn ad space into revenue
Publishers sell something scarce: attention on a page or screen. The more attention they can deliver, and the more predictable it is, the more they can earn.
Inventory, fill rate, and viewability
Publishers think in “inventory,” meaning the number of ad opportunities their pages create. Two other terms shape earnings:
- Fill rate: The share of ad slots that actually get an ad. Empty slots pay nothing.
- Viewability: Whether the ad was on screen long enough to count as seen under common measurement rules.
High traffic alone doesn’t guarantee strong earnings. A site with low viewability, weak ad placement, or messy tech can see decent pageviews and still struggle to monetize.
Direct deals vs open auctions
Direct deals can pay more per impression, since the advertiser is paying for certainty and context. Open auctions can pay less per impression, but they can scale across a wide pool of buyers. Many publishers blend both so they don’t rely on one channel.
Why programmatic needs trust signals
Programmatic buying moves fast, which invites problems: spoofed inventory, misrepresented sellers, and bot traffic. That’s why the market leans on simple transparency files that buyers can check.
One widely used standard is ads.txt, a text file placed on a publisher’s site that lists authorized sellers. IAB Tech Lab maintains the standard and explains how it works and why it reduces counterfeit inventory. ads.txt (Authorized Digital Sellers) is the plain-language overview.
What ads.txt changes in plain terms
- Publishers publicly list which exchanges and resellers may sell their inventory.
- Buyers can filter out sellers that are not on that list.
- Less room for a bad actor to sell fake versions of a real site’s ad space.
It’s not a magic shield. It’s a clean, checkable signal, and markets run on signals.
Compliance and trust: why disclosures matter
Money follows trust. If users feel tricked, ad performance tanks. If regulators step in, brands back off. This is where clear labeling and honest endorsements come in.
In the US, the Federal Trade Commission explains how endorsement rules apply to creators, reviews, and influencer posts, with a focus on material connection disclosure and non-misleading claims. FTC’s Endorsement Guides Q&A is a practical read for anyone publishing sponsored content.
Three habits that protect revenue
- Label paid placements clearly: Sponsored posts, paid reviews, and advertorials should be obvious to a reader.
- Keep claims tied to evidence: If a claim can’t be backed up, don’t run it.
- Don’t hide incentives: Free products, paid partnerships, and affiliate commissions should be disclosed as required by your jurisdiction.
How platforms earn money from ads
Platforms that own the user session—search engines, social apps, video hubs—earn money by selling placements inside their own feed or results. They handle targeting, auction logic, and reporting. Publishers don’t sit in the middle, since the platform owns the screen where the ad appears.
Search ads: intent is the product
Search ads monetize user intent. A query hints at what the person wants right now, so advertisers pay a premium for the chance to meet that intent. That premium shows up as higher CPCs in competitive categories.
Social and video ads: attention at scale
Social and video channels monetize repeated exposure. The user may not be shopping in that moment, so the pitch leans on interest targeting, creative, and frequency. That tends to map well to CPM pricing.
How Do Advertisements Make Money? in a simple flow
Here’s the clean mental model you can carry around:
- A brand sets a goal and a budget.
- The brand bids for placements, often by auction.
- The ad shows, then a billable event is logged.
- Money moves from the brand to the selling platform or exchange.
- The seller pays the publisher where the ad ran, after fees and policy checks.
That’s it. The real-world mess lives in steps 3 through 5: tracking, fraud, invalid traffic, disputes, and payment terms.
What makes one ad impression worth more than another
Two pages can show the same size ad and earn wildly different CPMs. A few drivers explain most of that gap.
Audience fit
Advertisers bid more when the audience matches their buyers. A page that attracts people ready to buy hiking boots will out-earn a general interest page for that same brand.
Context and content category
Brands pay more when the page context matches their message and feels brand-safe. Clear topics also help ad systems match ads without guesswork.
Geography and device
Ad rates vary by country and device. A US desktop impression can price differently than a mobile impression in another region, driven by advertiser demand.
Ad format
Video, native placements, and high-attention units often command higher rates than a small display banner, since they capture more time on screen.
Table 2: A quick way to spot the revenue driver you can control
| If your revenue is low | Check this first | What to change |
|---|---|---|
| Lots of traffic, weak earnings | Viewability and placement | Move ads into visible zones, reduce clutter, improve speed |
| Good RPM, big swings day to day | Demand sources and floor prices | Add more bidders, test floors, review ad stack timeouts |
| High clicks, low payout | Invalid traffic filtering | Audit referrers, block bot patterns, tighten ad rules |
| Strong US traffic, still low | Content categories and buyer fit | Publish clearer intent pages, improve internal linking |
| Video plays, no lift | Player setup and demand | Use standard players, enable viewable metrics, add demand partners |
| Lots of ads, user complaints | Layout and ad density | Cut low-performing units, keep content readable, reduce sticky clutter |
| Brand deals feel rare | Media kit clarity | Show audience stats, define placements, sell packages |
How this piece was checked
The mechanics in this article follow standard ad buying and selling flows used across search, social, and programmatic. Definitions and policy notes were cross-checked against the linked primary sources from Google Ads, IAB/PwC, IAB Tech Lab, and the FTC pages cited below. Where splits and fee levels vary by contract, the text stays at the “how it works” layer rather than giving a single percent that may not fit your setup.
References & Sources
- Google Ads Help.“How the Google Ads auction works.”Explains the auction process that selects ads and placements for searches and eligible inventory.
- Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) & PwC.“Internet Ad Revenue Report 2024.”Provides market-level revenue benchmarks across major digital advertising formats.
- IAB Tech Lab.“ads.txt (Authorized Digital Sellers).”Describes ads.txt as a transparency standard that helps buyers identify authorized sellers and reduce counterfeit inventory.
- Federal Trade Commission (FTC).“FTC’s Endorsement Guides: What People Are Asking.”Answers common questions on disclosures and non-misleading endorsements in advertising.