The company developed a technology known as "re-targeting" which catches users who have visited a shopping website without buying anything, and then showing them ads for similar items on other sites to tempt them back.
Criteo's customers, including travel website Hotels.com, telecom operator Orange, and retailer Macy's, only pay when a web surfer actually clicks on the ad.
In a rare move among French start-up founders, Rudelle moved to Silicon Valley to expand the company that is in 37 countries.
"The U.S. is our number one market today, and a very strategic market for us," said Rudelle, explaining the choice of listing in New York instead of Paris.
"Being listed on the Nasdaq says that we are here to stay and committed to our clients and partners."
Criteo has roughly doubled its revenues every year since 2010 to reach 271.9 million euros in 2012. It made a profit of 800,000 euros last year but swung to a loss of 4.9 million in the first six months of 2013 because of increased investments.
There have been 26 U.S. technology listings this year, according to Thomson Reuters data, compared with 30 in 2012.
The sale could herald a pay-day for venture capital firms, which have ploughed some $64 million into Criteo.
Geneva-based Index Ventures was the largest shareholder with a 23.4 percent stake before the share sale. Others include Idinvest Partners with 22.6 percent, Elaia Partners with 13.5 percent and Bessemer Venture Partners with 9.5 percent.
All the funds will be selling relatively small portions of their stakes in the listing, according to the offer documents.
Rudelle will own 8.4-8.6 percent of the group.
JP Morgan, Deutsche Bank Securities and Jefferies are the lead underwriters for the issue.
(Additional reporting by Alexandre Boksenbaum-Granier in Paris; Editing by Jane Merriman)
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