Skip to main content
CPC (Cost Per Click)
Updated
Definition & Explanation
Cost Per Click (CPC) is the price paid each time a user clicks on an ad. It is a core pricing model in pay-per-click (PPC) advertising across search engines, social media, and display networks. CPC is calculated by dividing total ad spend by the number of clicks received, and is influenced by factors like keyword competitiveness, quality score, and bid strategy.
Table of Contents
-
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)
- 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
- Show Remaining Articles (34) Collapse Articles