Shore Communications Inc. Logo - Link to Home Page where content, technology and people meet. (SM) Shore is a leading research and advisory service which specializes in supporting organizations that develop, purchase and use professionally-oriented content and the technologies that facilitate its use in individual and collaborative environments.
Shore Communications Inc. Logo - Link to Home Page  
RESOURCES
SITE MAP
HELP
CONTENTBLOGGER
INDUSTRY EVENTS
NEWS ANALYSIS
HEADLINE SUMMARIES

Read ShoreLines, our complimentary weekly newsletter. >sign up
RECENT ENTRIES
WEBLOGS: ARCHIVES
 
 
COMMENTARY:

Industry Events
Coverage of content and technology conferences, panels and events.
Subscribe to our XML feed (?) or add to: MyYahoo  Bloglines  Rojo  NewsGator Online  CNET Newsburst
 
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
SIIA Information Industry Summit 2010: Ken Doctor on the Tablet Era of News
News expert Ken Doctor of Content Bridges focused initially in his talk on the debuting Apple tablet and its promise, which is, in a nutshell, its big advertising potential with its better reading experience. Ken sees some potential for the Apple tablet to support news operations better, but he also noted that there is 40 percent less newsprint than there was a year ago and 20 percent less newsroom staff. The tablet looks great, but where is the content going to come from? A lot of it has, of course, migrated to the Web, oftentimes to startup operations founded by journalists laid off by traditional news operations. Scrappy operations such as these with highly affordable publishing infrastructure and simply implemented ad revenues will be the focus of may eyeballs that major news organizations would like to capture. Ken noted Outsell research shows that 57 percent of consumers go to the Web already in the U.S. for news, with 25 percent using the Web sites of broadcast news sites daily. Ten percent say that they would pay for news - which correlates nicely with Gordon Crovitz' seat-of-the-pants number that he's been using to promote his Journalism Online initiative with Steve Brill. I think that this is a good industry heuristic for consumer-oriented online content at this point, presuming that you have a strong online brand.

But Ken also pointed out that many companies are spending heavily on self-marketeing; in other words, what is traditional media when your advertisers know how to "do" media themselves? Ken noted that he believes that 12 or 15 large news companies will continue to dominate, but with due respect, I think that in five years we will see far closer to five large news players worldwide, with the remaining properties being either gone or relaunched by people who care about their local news markets as independent brands that are web-scaled, lean and mean, and able to gain good audiences through search engines and social media links instead of having to rely on services such as AP and large media companies to broaden the appeal of their content. I agree with Ken that major companies can become virtual aggregators themselves via licensing to use other outlets' content to build the reach of other content properties, but this is a technique that any publisher of any scale can use. Automated content licensing will accelerate this process to the most effective outlets, which may or may not be Ken's "digital dozen."

At the same time, Ken notes that News Corporation is an example of a diversified media company that is using revenues from entertainment properties such as the $2-billion hit movie "Avatar" to fuel their operations. That will work for some time as a scaling issue, but Ken noted that the cost structure for many of these conglomerates' operations will not sustain them on a reliable basis. Beats me how this math will work for long, especially when, as Ken points out, the Bit.ly link referral is processing two billion link referrals a month. Value each of those links at a dollar, which is not too far off the mark given online ad rates, then you have an "Avatar"'s worth of ad revenues being generated by Content Nation every day via social media.

Will the tablet be the convergence of social, mobile and video that many in the media industry hope that it will be? Well, I am sure that the tablet will be impressive, but given that we've had color screens staring us in our living rooms for fifty years and PC screens for thirty years, I am not sure what it is about Steve Jobs that will overcome decades of media company failure to learn how to tailor mass media to interactive content markets. The gains of online video services such as Hulu are impressive, but are dwarfed by Content Nation's production on services such as YouTube. Aggregating social media and traditional media will be the key to the emerging model of success in this environment, as Ken highlighted in a Seattle effort to aggregate area blogs and other content sources.

I do think that local aggregation efforts such as Ken's Seattle example are now feasible on a cost-effective scale and will represent one of the most exciting stories for news production in 2010. For a great example of this, I refer you to the emerging Patch local news service sponsored by AOL, which resembles a business plan that I floated for local news about ten years ago just prior to the dot-com crash in 2000. Ten years later, technologies, ad networks and pervasive social media are combining to make a combination of professional and citizen-generated content economically viable.

The other side of the news equation that Ken touched on is the transformation of advertising into contextual content placement, in which journalists find themselves increasingly working for the advertisers to generate content instead of the news outlets. It's cheap content, often, and far from high quality at times, but thinking of newspapers filled with lightly retouched press releases passed off as journalism and the fawning of media for leads and coverage that throws objectivity under the bus too often, it's a matter of the name of the master sometimes and not the evil.

At the end of the day, the issue is revenues. "There's not enough revenue to do what we used to do," notes Ken, and chasing what Ken calls "interim technology." There are no magic technology bullets that will return an era that no longer exists, but there are strategies to move forward. Ken suggests:
  • Make it social
  • Approach the "digital dozen"
  • Gather other people's content
  • Drive your publishing business with data
All good recommendations, though ones that any Web publishers can apply also, including enterprises reaching their markets directly via the Web. News is a great business, perhaps closer to its original roots today than it's been in many years, but it's not the "Mad Men" business that some yearn for even today. Great presentation, Ken, enjoyed it.

Labels: , , ,


posted by John Blossom at 6:28 AM - permalink     Add to del.icio.us    digg it!
0 comments (click to view or post) 
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
SIIA Information Industry Summit 2010: Google's View on Ad Technologies In The Content Mix
When Google acquired DoubleClick, one of the assets that came over was Ari Paparo, who now serves as a Product Management Director focused on ad services. Ari was introduced and interviewed by David Sidman, Founder & Chairman of Linkstorm. Ari noted that 100 percent of ad agency holding companies are developing demand-side platforms, with 72 percent of Ad Exchange volume leveraging retargeting and 24 percent now regularly using behavioral targeting. Ari also noted that today's ad model is like a mutual fund, but that we're moving towards a "day trading" like model for ad buys, with more precise tactical acquisitions.l Research from Google is indicating that digital media is 50 percent less efficient versus other media in terms of overhead dollar spent, with 28 percent of video buyers noting that workflow efficiency a key issue holding back online video ad spends and 43 percent of U.S. marketing execs agreeing that brand measurement is holding back the growth of online marketing. So although the eyes are all turning to online content, the ad industry is still in its infancy in understanding how to compel audiences in online environments efficiently, even though online portals are getting to be more efficient in tracing an audience's footpaths.

The question becomes, though, when is an ad slot something more than a pork belly-like commodity? The premium value comes in when you can show that you can do something special in online environments. Sometimes that's "wow factor" via videos and online animated graphics, but Ari notes that in general the high-end creative approach works best when it's intense and impactful. Ari provided an example of a Harley Davidson campaign keyed to Veterans Day that enabled people to send tributes to troops overseas - combining altruism with sex appeal as a path to branding via a different approach. He notes that video is expected to be 15 percent of online spend in the next few years, but the efficiency factor is not encouraging. Getting overnight delivery of creative material and other basic logistics need to be overcome to make video a cost-effective choice, but in the meantime it's good groundwork that's needed to build expertise.

Data enrichment is key for effective ads also, such as data on specific real estate listings instead of just a generic ad for a realtor. Packaging for categories of users instead of categories of content is key also, enabling advertisers to target effectively to people who may be looking at more cost-effective ad inventory available in sections such a religion-oriented portion of a newspaper site. This can enable an ad sales force to raise their inventory up from "remnant" status to inventory that can be packaged more effectively for specific marketing targets.

David keyed off his questioning with a probe on paywalls; is paid content or ad-supported content going to pay the bills? Ari sees no one answer, but he sees it vitally important to segment effectively before you make decisions on what gets thrown behind a paywall. David notes that the ad side has the granular data, which can help publishers to make these kinds of decisions. However, Ari notes that publishers have lots of data that shows how site visitors move through a site. "There are gray areas," he notes, such as who is allowed to use cookie-derived data. Or, when someone buys something, would that site be allowed to advertise sporting goods based on what they have learned from inbound data? He recommends that publishers monitor their data and metadata rights carefully to control these kinds of opportunities carefully. The big mistake is to divide up inventories and missing the opportunity for in-depth understanding and analysis of data related to users. Publishers are now starting to monetize their on-site data off-site, renting lists to marketing and online services - an old business made new.

David and the audience probed on a few fronts in his questions for Ari:
  • The benefits of content management and categorization tools to improve ad revenues, but Ari notes that much of the potential for these types of technologies has been realized already.
  • On premium ad units, the cost-benefits of rich media are focused mostly now on super-premium brand advertisers, who do get some value as they connect to consumers. But down the value chain to typical retailers, Ari notes that it's not clear that rich media makes the cash registers ring.
  • On semantic processing in ad placement, Ari was not forthcoming in detail, but he noted that some smaller vendors are working with focusing terminology. He hasn't seen that semantic technologies have brought that much to the table yet.
  • On the ComScore panel/cookie hybrid measurement model, in which publishers are being charged for being ranked, he thinks that the panel approach is useful
  • Agencies are having to step up their technology commitments in a big way, they are trying to adapt rapidly, he things that they are adaptable and will be around in the excxhange-oriented future of ads
  • Mobile markets: advertisers are frustrated but very excited about mobile, formats and measurement still in its early days
Ari gave a great presentation, but the larger question does seem to be what marketers need to do in general to extract the most efficiency out of online advertising. Certainly improved data, audience analysis and measurement and better ad production techniques can be important advances. However, to some degree marketing itself is changing in the face of a Web that finds people spending a huge amount of time online in social media services that encourage one-to-one exchanges. Managing millions of individual personal selling relationships online is a far cry from managing CPMs. So although there is more efficiency coming in ad networks, the broader question of how companies like Google can help companies to measure success with online marketing is still a work in its early progress.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , ,


posted by John Blossom at 7:50 AM - permalink     Add to del.icio.us    digg it!
0 comments (click to view or post) 

To top of page To Top of Page

   
shorename.gif (1190 bytes)
[HOME] [US] [SERVICES] [COMMENTARY] [RESEARCH] [COMMUNITY] [PRESS] [CONTACT]
Copyright © 1997-2006 Shore Communications Inc.  All Rights Reserved - Click Here to Read Terms of Use
Corporate Privacy Policy

 

 

 

 

 

 

 This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?