CPA (Cost Per Acquisition)
Updated
Definition & Explanation
Cost Per Acquisition (CPA) is the cost incurred for a completed user action, such as a purchase, sign-up, or form submission. It measures the efficiency of an ad campaign by dividing total ad spend by the number of conversions. CPA is widely used as a KPI across paid channels including PPC, affiliate, display, and social media to evaluate the financial return of advertising efforts.
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Ad Tech Glossary
- Ad Density
- Ad Exchange
- Ad Fraud
- Ad Refresh
- Ad Tech Glossary
- Authorized Digital Sellers (ads.txt)
- Bid Request
- Bot Traffic
- Brand Safety
- Broken Supply Chain
- Click Spamming
- CPA (Cost Per Acquisition)
- CPC (Cost Per Click)
- CPM (Cost Per Mille)
- CTV (Connected TV)
- DMP (Data Management Platform)
- Domain Spoofing
- DSP (Demand-Side Platform)
- eCPM (Effective CPM)
- Exchange Quality
- First-Party Data
- Fraud Rate (IVT Rate)
- Geo Masking
- GIVT (General Invalid Traffic)
- Header Bidding
- Impression
- IVT (Invalid Traffic)
- Long-Tail Inventory
- Lookalike Audience
- MFA (Made For Advertising)
- Modeled Conversions
- Open Exchange
- Optimization Score
- PMP (Private Marketplace)
- Pre-Bid Filtering
- Quality Score
- Reseller
- RTB (Real-Time Bidding)
- SIVT (Sophisticated Invalid Traffic)
- SSP (Supply-Side Platform)
- Supply Path Optimization (SPO)
- Tagging (Data Tagging)
- Third-Party Data
- Traffic Shaping
- Undisclosed Resellers
- User Engagement
- Vertical Fraud
- Viewability
- Walled Garden
- Whitelisting
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