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AdbriteGuide.com - Business TimesWeb Doomsayer Changes Tune With Ad Service

Philip Kaplan made his name -- and money -- skewering Web companies on his F -- edCompany.com site during the dot-com collapse. Now, the chronicler of Internet doom has a Web-based start-up of his own and, in an odd twist of fate, is teaming up with some of the same tech-world figures his site once trashed.

His new company, AdBrite Inc., sells online advertising, competing with the likes of Google Inc. for a share of a rapidly growing U.S. market, estimated at about $10 billion a year. To expand and gain legitimacy, AdBrite recently landed funding from Sequoia Capital, a prominent Silicon Valley venture-capital firm that also was an early Google backer.

Mr. Kaplan's transformation from irreverent dot-com basher to well-funded San Francisco Internet CEO shows venture capitalists' enthusiasm for online advertising and the odd partnerships that sometimes result. The colorful 29-year-old, better known in some circles by his Internet nickname "Pud", confesses to running AdBrite in his underwear not that long ago and still lampoons some of Sequoia's failed dot-com investments.

AdbriteGuide.com - LA Times

Almost all of my businesses started out as something I thought would be fun to do as a distraction from real work,Mr. Kaplan says. "The main difference now is I have to wake up before noon."

Mr. Kaplan created F -- edCompany as a joke in 2000, yet the site quickly became an essential source of irreverent news, rumors and commentary on struggling tech companies. At its peak in 2001, the site attracted millions of visitors a month, 1,200 of whom paid $75 a month for access to a members-only area with additional rumors and the text of corporate in-house memos. F -- edCompany still brings in more than $300,000 annually, from a combination of ads and subscriptions.

Disappointed with existing Web ad brokers, Mr. Kaplan in 2001 created an online service to sell ads on the site. In 2003, he expanded the service to sell ads for other Web sites in a precursor to AdBrite -- putting him in competition with better-known names such as Google and Yahoo Inc., each of which offers an ad-brokering service.

AdBrite is a tiny player, with revenue around $1 million during the first six months of last year, compared with $1.4 billion for Google. But the service has attracted advertisers such as travel site Priceline.com Inc. as clients. AdBrite lets them choose from more than 2,500 Web sites on which to place their ads, including social-networking site LinkedIn Ltd. and popular blogs.

AdBrite charges flat weekly rates rather than billing advertisers each time a user clicks on an ad, as Google does (though AdBrite does calculate the price per click for comparison purposes). The Web sites where the ads are displayed get to review every ad before accepting it, something Google and others don't offer.

Priceline, of Norwalk, Conn., started buying advertisements through AdBrite last summer. The company's vice president of online marketing, Brian Harniman, is a F -- edCompany.com subscriber and heard about AdBrite through that site. Mr. Harniman says Priceline, which also places ads through Google and Yahoo, plans to increase its spending through AdBrite because it allows him to tailor ad copy to specific sites and more easily track which sites generate sales.

LinkedIn, of Mountain View, Calif., has placed ads from AdBrite on its Web pages since September, choosing the upstart over Google and Yahoo. Konstantin Guericke, LinkedIn's vice president of marketing, says the system is effective, selling out his site's ad slots several weeks in advance. In addition, AdBrite tweaked its system to accommodate LinkedIn's encrypted Web pages."For our market, AdBrite was by far and away the best solution," says Mr. Guericke.

Some of AdBrite's appeal can be traced to Mr. Kaplan, who ran an Internet consulting firm he founded until he sold it in 2001. As a demoecnstration for some of his dozen employees, Mr. Kaplan recently cold-called the marketing director for dating Web site eHarmony.com Inc., Steve Hartmann, using the office speakerphone. After a couple of rebuffs, Mr. Kaplan asked Mr. Hartmann if he had heard of F -- ed Company. "Is this Pud?" Mr. Hartmann replied."I owe it to you, from all of the pleasure you've given me over the past years." Mr. Hartmann says eHarmony likely will buy ads through AdBrite, though it hasn't done so yet.

The $4 million investment by Sequoia brings together a venture firm that backed high-profile dot-com busts such as Webvan Group Inc. and eToys Inc. with a voluble critic of those firms. Sequoia also backed both Yahoo and Google, both AdBrite competitors, and still holds a multibillion-dollar stake in Google.

Mark Kvamme, a Sequoia partner who has joined AdBrite's board, says neither issue proved an impediment to investing in AdBrite -- even after Mr. Kaplan cracked a Webvan joke at a meeting with Sequoia's partners. "I hate to say it, but he was right" about many dot-coms, Mr. Kvamme says of Mr. Kaplan. Mr. Kvamme calls Mr. Kaplan a "world-class entrepreneur" who combines a good business head with computer-programming skills . "We like working with the irreverent guy," he says.

Mr. Kvamme says Sequoia's partners are "big believers in advertising on the Internet." He says AdBrite is well-suited to placing ads on small to midsized Web sites and blogs, but will reach bigger sites and advertisers over time.

Messrs. Kvamme and Kaplan both play down any competition between Google and AdBrite. But LinkedIn selected AdBrite over Google. And more advertisers could face similar choices between the two as AdBrite broadens its target market. Google declined to comment, and a Yahoo spokeswoman wasn't immediately available to comment.

Beyond the competitive aspect, AdBrite and Sequoia are strange bedfellows. F -- edCompany's home page contains links to nude "FC girls," and its message boards host sexually explicit exchanges. Mr. Kaplan runs another Web site (Mobog.com) that hosts photos, many sexually explicit, taken with cellphone cameras. Mr. Kaplan brags about his arrest for breaking a window with a slingshot as a high-schooler and the $3,000 fine he received for playing drums too loudly in his apartment in New York, where he lived until last year.

Some Internet luminaries regard Mr. Kaplan's transformation as a vindication of sorts. "It's a good indicator of the enduring culture of Silicon Valley as a magnet for entrepreneurs," says Marc Andreessen, the chairman of Opsware Inc. and co-founder of Internet pioneer Netscape Communications Corp.

Mr. Kaplan says he's wearing pants in the office these days, but laughs about running a growing company. When a newly hired saleswoman asked when her training would start, his response was "Training?" After an airline lost his AdBrite sign as he was traveling to an ad-industry conference in November, Mr. Kaplan spent the night creating a replacement from Kinko's photocopies and a supermarket-purchased painting set for kids.

Mr. Kaplan spent three months last year working out of Sequoia's offices until he secured office space for AdBrite. Mr. Kvamme jokes that his colleagues were eager to see Mr. Kaplan leave. "He ate a lot of our food," says Mr. Kvamme. "The guy is a high-octane guy."

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AdbriteGuide.com - LA Times

Internet's Bad Boy Grows Up

SAN FRANCISCO - It's Monday morning at an online-advertising conference, and the chief executive of AdBrite Inc. is talking about repurchase rates and average per-click costs. But he's seriously distracted by the busty models serving beer in the booth next door.

At the first opportunity - after getting through his sales pitch - he reaches over for a plastic cup of Amstel Light.

AdbriteGuide.com - SF Biz

Potential clients might recoil at the sight of a CEO behaving this way before lunch. But those who recognize Philip J. Kaplan would be disappointed if he didn't. Some drop by just to pay homage to the Internet's preeminent bad boy.

"I had to come talk to you because you're the creator of the best website ever," says Kevin O'Barr, a vice president for an online marketing company.

He's not talking about AdBrite. He's talking about Kaplan's other business, a website that made him one of the few people to get both rich and famous from the Internet crash of 2000 . a site with an obscene name that is a mocking twist on that of the new-media magazine Fast Company.

Five years ago this month, as a 24-year-old Web designer, Kaplan created what quickly became the Internet industry's wailing wall, a site that used leaked information and ruthless commentary to chronicle the disintegration of hundreds of Internet companies.

To laid-off workers, he was a hero. To employers, he was a curse.

Now, instead of tearing down companies, Kaplan . at 29 . is building one of his own.

He persuaded Sequoia Capital, the blue-chip Silicon Valley venture capital firm that backed such companies as Google Inc. and Apple Computer Inc., to invest $4 million in his method of placing ads on websites. He moved from New York City to San Francisco with dreams of turning AdBrite into the next billion-dollar company.

In some ways, Kaplan's story is the story of the Internet: Both worked through their youthful indiscretions and are coming back in a more sure-footed, sober way. After 10 years of booms and busts, the Internet has proved itself a medium capable of generating billions of dollars from the kinds of ads Kaplan is selling.

"C-E-O," says Web entrepreneur Greg Tseng, as he approaches Kaplan's booth and shakes his nametag. "Man, you're all legit now."

Legitimacy is something Kaplan is still coming to terms with. He says taking venture capital funding and trying to turn his tiny company into an Internet giant may be the most "punk" thing he's ever tried.

"I knew that if I concentrated on AdBrite I could probably make a big company out of it," he wrote in a March e-mail to followers of his old site, which he calls "FC" to get past spam filters.

"But leave my cushy life in NYC? No more waking up at noon, updating FC for an hour, and spending the rest of the day cashing FC checks and watching porn? . It was a hard decision, but, like, I'm a man now. 29!"

Kaplan doesn't need to look too deeply into his childhood in Chevy Chase, Md., to find the irreverence that seeded FC. With a habit of cutting school to skateboard, he was often in the principal's office. He was expelled in fourth grade for getting in trouble too often and again in eighth grade for constantly skipping class. Slingshot target practice on the roof of a parking structure earned him a day in jail.

Six feet 4, rail-thin and into heavy-metal music, Kaplan says he had trouble making many friends in high school. But he loved computer programming and found camaraderie online.

His parents bought him a Hyundai personal computer and a phone line, and he spent most of his bar mitzvah money on a faster modem. He would often stay online until 3 a.m. or 4 a.m., with a towel stuffed under the door so his mother couldn't see the light from his monitor.

He began running his own online bulletin board, a messaging system that predated the World Wide Web, and it quickly became a popular place for finding the latest pirated game and other software, swiped credit card numbers and directions for making free phone calls. It was a closed community with 300 members, and he was the leader.

He found his stride at Syracuse University, where he made friends, played drums in a band and taught programming courses. He graduated cum laude with a degree in information management and technology and landed a job with a management consulting firm in Virginia, creating computer programs for running businesses.

A year later, on a whim, he moved to Manhattan to try his hand at a career producing music. He lived with his grandmother. To pay the bills, he worked at a Web design firm.

It was 1998, and he quickly got his first taste of how overheated the Internet business was becoming. One time, he was asked by his bosses to estimate how much to charge for a project. It was easy work, so he said $200. By the time the bid got to the client, his bosses had tacked on two zeros: $20,000. The client signed the contract.

After his firm won a $1-million bid for a project he thought he could do for a fraction of the cost, he says, he left to start his own firm, PK Interactive, out of a rented loft. He soon had four employees and more business than he could handle, as clients desperate for websites came in promising big contracts.

"It got so ridiculous that I was like, there's no way this is going to last," he says.

Nasdaq hit its high in March 2000 and then began falling. Kaplan, who was constantly hatching whimsical business plans and ideas for new websites, decided to create a "dot-com dead pool," where people could gain points predicting which Internet company would go out of business next. He spent that Memorial Day weekend building the site and told half a dozen friends to check it out, then left for a week's vacation in Brazil.

A phone call from a reporter interrupted his vacation. He was startled to learn that 20,000 people had signed up for FC, and it was growing fast.

In the late 1990s, legions of workers seeking quick riches left good jobs to join Internet companies with no business plans, and investors were happy to foot the bill as Nasdaq soared. But when it all collapsed, workers . instead of blaming themselves . turned their bosses into villains.

Kaplan's site became their megaphone. Known to his followers by his online handle, Pud, Kaplan became a champion for those facing layoffs, bitter about corporate hypocrisy or just fascinated by the spectacle of companies melting down every day.

"FC was a place where he told it like everyone knew it was," says Kaplan pal James Hong, a founder of HotOrNot.com.

As many as 500 e-mails a day poured in from company insiders dishing about obscene executive salaries, pending layoffs and companies shutting down. The site got as many as 4 million Web surfers a month.

He would post the items with snarky introductions. To mark the closing of the online pet store Pets.com in November 2000, for example, Kaplan gleefully bashed the company and its signature image in TV ads: "Woof woof!: I'm out of dog food and my cat's box needs new litter. I know what I'll do: I'll order Dog Chow and Fresh Step online from a sock puppet, and then I'll watch the dog starve and the cat [defecate] all over the house while I wait for it to be delivered! Pets.com is over.

Kaplan's readers would then chime in with their own coarse and withering commentary on the site's message boards, which he called the"Super Happy Fun Slander Corner."

But for the executives who were trying to keep their struggling companies going, FC was a nightmare. Some blocked access to the website from work.

Others took it personally. In 2002, while speaking at an online-ad conference in New York, Kaplan was heckled by Jason Wolfe, who ran MyCoupons.com.(FC had embarrassed Wolfe that year by posting a memo in which the CEO admitted the website was losing money.)The confrontation escalated, ending only after Wolfe . who said later that he had wanted to slug Kaplan . was dragged away by his employees.

In spite .or because . of the controversy it generated, FC soon became so popular that Kaplan realized he could make money from it. He sold $75 monthly subscriptions and created a system for advertisers to quickly and easily place their text and banner ads on his site.

At the peak of FC's success, Kaplan says, he was pulling in more than $90,000 a month from subscriptions, $10,000 from advertising and $2,000 from T-shirts, mouse pads and other merchandise.

He appeared in Rolling Stone and other magazines and on TV. Women.com named him Internet Bachelor of the Year in 2001. Simon & Schuster published his book, "F'd Companies: Spectacular Dot-Com Flameouts." At parties, fans waved Pets.com sock puppets and asked for his autograph."

But he never stopped looking for the next business opportunity, experimenting with a pornography site and a service for posting photos taken by cellphones that became filled with nude pictures.

And when FC began to wane . as Internet companies either shut down or started to turn around . Kaplan began to think about building on the advertising system he had set up for the site. He began offering the do-it-yourself ad service to other websites, taking a 25% cut for each ad he placed.

Kaplan knew he was good at finding interesting ideas and generating buzz for them, but he didn't know whether he could build a big business. He saw his chance to find out with AdBrite, and he looked to venture capital firm Sequoia to help him succeed.

The Sequoia partners knew Kaplan well . most of them had started companies that FC ridiculed. But they liked the AdBrite idea, and they thought he was ready to build a company.

"Great people all have colorful histories," says Sequoia partner Mark Kvamme, who now sits on AdBrite's board. "Would I approve of everything he's done? No. But we all learn."

Kaplan has made smart decisions and hired talented people, Kvamme says, including a salesman from Barry Diller's IAC/InterActiveCorp as his vice president of sales.

"He's not just Pud," Kvamme says. "He's a smart, business-savvy manager."

Kaplan is an expert in companies that have failed. That puts even more pressure on him to succeed.

He knows that on the surface, it looks like an ominously familiar story: twenty-something CEO of a fast-growing Internet company with millions of dollars in venture capital. He wears jeans, Adidas sneakers and glasses with thick green frames to work most days. He leased office space in San Francisco's South of Market neighborhood, ground zero for the dot-com boom . and bust.

But he's trying to run his business correctly, like a grown-up. He has largely abandoned many of his other ventures to focus on AdBrite (he still owns FC but hired someone to write the commentary). The AdBrite office is modest, with worn blue carpeting and used furniture. A pingpong table, free food and a drum set occupying the corner of Kaplan's office are the only nods at extravagance.

AdBrite is placing ads on more than 4,000 websites. Most are small, but it's beginning to win more big clients, such as Priceline.com Inc. The Oakland Raiders site is among those running ads brokered by AdBrite.

Kaplan also created a separate advertising network, AVN Ads, dedicated to sex-related ads and websites, to keep AdBrite squarely in the maiecnstream.

Even the AdBrite logo fits the new image. It's designed to look like a laundry detergent, as squeaky clean as the FC name was dirty.

For the most part his former victims are ready to move on, if not completely forgive.

At the online-advertising conference here, he greets a visitor to the AdBrite booth. Kaplan can't quite place the man, until the visitor asks whether Kaplan remembers the altercation they had at the New York show three years earlier.

It's Jason Wolfe, the CEO who almost knocked Kaplan's block off.

The two men shake hands. Wolfe says he heard that Kaplan had received financing from Sequoia.

"I don't know whether to congratulate you or punch you," Wolfe says.

This time, though, the conversation stays civil.

"So it's water under the bridge?" Kaplan asks.

"He hopes for a nice response. But Wolfe just stares back and says nothing."

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AdbriteGuide.com - Venture Mag

AdBrite: A dot-com rascal is back and gunning for Google

Lampooning their failed investments isn't usually a great way to bag bucks from VCs. Unless you're Philip Kaplan.

Kaplan is the creator of 5-year-old F***** Company, the snarky web site -- whose full name we can't print -- dedicated to skewering dot-com flops and their backers. He recently won $4 million from Sequoia Capital for his new online advertising site, AdBrite.

"It was like applying to college," said the 29-year-old of his request in a remarkably earnest tone, compared with that of his online persona 'Pud.' "Sequoia was my 'reach school', my first choice. And, fortunately I was theirs."

AdBrite began as a way for advertisers to create their own ads on F***** Company. Unable to find adequate Internet ad brokers, Kaplan, a former computer programmer, recluctantly created one himself in 2001, expanding the service to sell ads for other web sites in 2003.

A friend introduced Kaplan to the Sequoia team, whom he met in their Menlo Park offices last July.

"It wasn't a Power Point pitch or your standard 'beg for money' plan," Kaplan said of his first meeting at Sequoia. Rather, he asked if they could grow the company together. AdBrite was already profitable, with roughly $1 million in revenue in the first half of 2004. (Kaplan said it makes "significantly more" now.)

The VCs were game. "Everybody knows the ad space was hot. Google's IPO showed people that," he said. Indeed, online ad sales are estimated at about $10 billion a year in the United States. And Sequoia was an early investor in Google, whose ad-brokering service competes against AdBrite.

Even Kaplan's online roasting of Sequoia's flamboyant flops such as Webvan and eToys, didn't discourage them.

Sequoia partner Mark Kvamme, now an AdBrite board member, has been quoted as saying Kaplan's cyber-critiques had merit.

He has also been quoted as saying that the irreverent entrepreneur sucked down a lot of the firm's food during his three-month stint in their offices. (Kaplan operated out of Sequoia's incubator area from September until December, when the company opened its SoMa headquarters).

Kaplan, who moved to San Francisco from New York City to be near AdBrite's benefactors, said the $4 million is paying for personnel expansion. The start-up hired ten people since September, now employs 13, and may hire more programmers and salesfolk this year.

Customers such as Priceline and Mountain View-based LinkedIn praise the service, which allows them to choose from 2,500 web sites on which to place their ads, and read every ad before approving it.

Google and Overture don't have that type of flexibility," said Konstantin Guericke, VP of marketing at LinkedIn, a social networking site.

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StartXchange Traffic Exchange

AdbriteGuide - Wall Street Journal

AdBrite announces appointment of Jim Benton to VP of sales

San Francisco, CA.- AdBrite, the Internet's Ad Marketplace, has announced the appointment of Jim Benton to Vice President of Sales. Mr. Benton previously served as a Senior Director of Sales at IAC/Interactive Corp, where he managed sales and strategic partnerships for Ticketmaster, Match.com, Citysearch and Evite.

At AdBrite, Mr. Benton is responsible for further developing the advertising sales team, growing the advertising base to AdBrite's network of sites, and managing trade show efforts. Mr. Benton, who is passionate about continuing to provide innovation in the interactive media space, brings a strong media background to AdBrite and shares its can-do product approach.

During Mr. Benton's five years at IAC/InterActiveCorp, he served as the Senior Director of Sales, where he was responsible for Partner Marketing across the entire network of IAC sites. Mr. Benton also held the positions of Director of Sales Development for Ticketmaster Media Group within IAC and Director of Ad Programs for Evite.

There he launched Evite's first advertising program, developed successful guerilla marketing efforts in major metropolitan areas, and designed and implemented several new proposal tools, which resulted in increased sales productivity and revenues. Mr. Benton began his career at AT&T Growth Markets where he won several notable awards, including Highest Electronic Commerce Sales Award and The Gold Club Award, which is the second highest honor at AT&T.

"Jim is our secret weapon," said Philip J. Kaplan, founder and CEO of AdBrite. "Where I've made waves as an independent web publisher, Jim is a recognized leader in the world of major publishers and advertisers. Though now that I think of it, I guess he's not such a secret anymore, with us putting out this press release and all. Nevertheless, Jim is incredibly sharp, knowledgeable, and it's an honor to work with him. He's also a snappy dresser and gets to work on time - a good role model for me."

A native of California, Mr. Benton holds a Bachelor of Science in Commerce from Santa Clara University.

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Net jester who mocked dot-com flop gets serious SignOnSanDiego

ASSOCIATED PRESS

March 28, 2005

SignOnSanDiego.com
JEFF CHIU / Associated Press - AdBrite CEO Phil Kaplan is now part of the San Francisco dot-com scene he once mocked.
When the dot-com bubble burst, Philip J. Kaplan made money mocking the entrepreneurs and venture capitalists who flushed away billions of dollars.

The fun began with a scathing Web site often referred to by its initials, FC, because it sported a name unprintable in family newspapers. The frivolity continued with a bawdy book that mused upon the era's many follies.

Now, one of the Internet's best-known jesters is turning serious.

As chief executive of a rapidly growing startup called AdBrite, Kaplan hopes to disrupt the status quo and strike it rich, just like all the dot-com dreamers he once ridiculed mercilessly.

"I decided I wanted to change my life drastically," Kaplan said. "I can't sleep in until noon and just goof off whenever I want anymore."

Kaplan, 29, moved to San Francisco from New York late last year, planting AdBrite and its 15 employees in the same neighborhood that became a dot-com graveyard a few years ago.

"If you are going to be a movie star, you have to go to Hollywood, and if you are going to try to build an Internet business, you have to be in Silicon Valley," Kaplan said.

He already has navigated a significant rite of passage by raising $4 million from Sequoia Capital, a leading venture-capital firm that has funded such successes as Apple, Yahoo! and Google.

Doors quickly opened when Kaplan came knocking. Venture capitalists, like almost everyone else in the high-tech industry, know him from his days skewering dot-coms. It didn't take long for Sequoia Capital partner Mark Kvamme to conclude that Kaplan's business acumen may be even keener than his sense of humor.

"He has all the instincts of a high-quality entrepreneur," Kvamme said, citing Kaplan's ability to capitalize on the dot-com meltdown and then conceive a business plan to profit from the dot-com comeback.

Richard Kyanka, an AdBrite customer who runs Something-Awful.com, puts it this way:

Kaplan "is just one of those guys who can spot an opportunity and know how to take advantage of it."

AdBrite spun out of FC, Kaplan's online spoof of Fast Company, one of several high-tech magazines that profiled the rapid rise of Internet startups during the late 1990s.

The satirical site focused on the mania's inane side. Filled with tart remarks and insider tidbits, Kaplan's site attracted as many as 4 million visitors a month, helping him attract advertisers.

Looking to minimize his workload, Kaplan created a program to automate advertising sales. That program eventually evolved into AdBrite.

Online advertising is ripening almost as quickly as dot-coms were rotting when Kaplan started to trash rancid companies.

About $11.5 billion has been budgeted for Internet advertising this year, nearly doubling the $6 billion spent in 2002, according to eMarketer, an online research firm.

Much of it goes to keyword ads, which are distributed based on how much bidders are willing to pay to be linked to specific terms used in a search-engine request. For instance, entering the word "mortgage" might produce text-based ads from lenders who agreed to pay Google or Yahoo! $10 each time a user clicks on the sponsored link.

Although this system is profitable, it requires advertisers to spend a lot of time monitoring the bidding to ensure that their links still have a good chance of being displayed. Participating Web sites also have little control over the types of ads shown.

AdBrite offers an alternative. Web site publishers set a fixed ad price, no matter how frequently the links get clicked. Potential advertisers are able to select the sites most compatible with their marketing objectives.

Web sites also can reject ads that could offend their target audiences. That's the main reason the professional networking Web site LinkedIn has so far turned away roughly half of the advertisers that have tried to buy spots through AdBrite, said Konstantin Guericke, LinkedIn's vice president of marketing.

"Making sure we don't turn anyone off is more important to us than trying to get as much advertising as possible," Guericke said.

Because AdBrite remains privately held, Kaplan won't disclose the company's finances other than to say sales have been increasing by 20 percent to 40 percent each month.

AdBrite's network spans about 3,400 Web sites, generating more than 100 million daily page views.

Kaplan is managing AdBrite cautiously, knowing many people would delight in his failure.

He considers himself very frugal – a trait that Kvamme also has noticed. The venture capitalist says his firm sometimes has to prod Kaplan to hire more workers.

Kaplan no longer spends time on his satirical site, having turned the writing duties over to a woman who he says isn't nearly as funny as he.

But can Kaplan be a serious success?

AdBrite customer Kyanka believes so: "He spent so much time watching companies fail that he should be able to create one that doesn't."

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In The News

Sitezine

AdBrite vs Adsense

According to AdBrite's CEO, Philip "Pud" Kaplan, AdBrite wants to be the Internets marketplace for ads, the first and last place you go to promote you business online. But when you cut through the hype you find that AdBrite is remarkably similar to Google's AdSense. Both display text adverts on your page (AdBrite also displays banners), but there is a large difference in the openess between the two.

To begin with AdBrites allows you to sell your own adds, so a user can buy an ad you on your site with AdBrite taking 25% commission. Google on the other hand doesnt, it sells its own inventory. More to the point Google doesnt ever reveal its commission, since both buyers and sellers are forbidden from revealing the true cost.

If you have a well established site with a loyal advertising population, then AdBrite is probably best for you. However, if you're just starting out then Google AdSense is the easiest to make work and start the pennys flowing in.

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