Phrenzie.com

Blog on all things interesting!
Subscribe

Archive for the ‘Internet Advertising’

Gamers are Rock Stars Too

November 19, 2008 By: Sekou Murphy Category: Internet Advertising, Video Games

The New York Times wrote an interesting piece on how Dr. Pepper is using a professional gamer, Tom Taylor (aka, Tsquared) to promote it’s Dr. Pepper line.   DP also signed up his crew, Str8 Rippin.  

 

Honestly, I have to say it’s kinda cool.   While there’s the risk of being labeled a sellout or “gone corporate” if it’s the right brand (i.e, one with street credibility), it just puts the person/group on another level.  

 

For example, NO ONE would think twice of Red Bull sponsoring James “Bubba” Stewart, mega motocross racer.  

 

But I think it’s cool for gamers to come to the forefront.  Video games are massive business.  EA alone has revenue of $3.7 billion (with a “B”).   Activision, the next biggest, is not too far behind with about $2.8 billion thanks to a few blockbuster games and acqusitions (both numbers are from fiscal 2008…2009 revs s/b  be much higher)…by the way, I mentioned on TechMediums.com that video games tend to be much better positioned to work through recessions than many other companies.

Team Yahoo vs Google: Using Viral Marketing to Move Past Google

July 10, 2008 By: Sekou Murphy Category: Business, General, Internet Advertising, Tech

Yahoo is using viral marketing to push its search engine past Google.

 

Before I go there, I gotta admit, while I’m a free market kind of guy, I also don’t some companies that absolutely dominate a space (errr…unless I own stock in them at a good buy-in price). 

 

So when I see Google killing the competition in search, I want to see someone else to temper them (I don’t own stock in Google).

 

So Yahoo’s latest idea is to have other companies build search engines using Yahoo’s search technology, thereby saving these companies the cash necessary to build from scratch (Yahoo estimate: $300 million).  In return, Yahoo will sell ads on through those search engines.

 

I think it’s brilliant (barring a few possibly filled holes).  You have other developers customizing, and more importantly, marketing your technology, while you generate money through that method.  What it does is instantly make Yahoo bigger without the time, people and money to do it otherwise.

 

Classic viral marketing, in another form.

 The possible whole are the kinds of financial deals Yahoo would work the companies.  The NYTimes mentions Me.dium as an example of a partner-company that Yahoo has signed up (financial terms are uncertain).  Me.dium is a search engine (not yet fully released) that allows users to see what other websites their friends are going too.  The theory is that people place more weight on what their friends say than through other means.  This is true, for good or bad (if my friends are looking at ill-informed sites, then those are the ones that will probably pop up first in the search).

New Business Models: Family Guy, Jib Jab

June 30, 2008 By: Sekou Murphy Category: Business, General, Internet Advertising

Seth MacFarlane and Google

If you haven’t heard by now on NYTimes.com, Seth MacFarlane, creator of the Family Guy (I’m watching Blue Harvest on DVD as I type, btw) and American Dad is having his new creation, Seth MacFarlane’s Calvacade of Comedy, distributed over the internet, freeing up his creative juices and avoiding censorship from the FCC. 

 

MacFarlane has two key partners, Google and Media Rights Capital (MRC).  But instead of Google being used to distribute advertising, it’s being used distribute the actual show through its Google Content Network.  Using its algorithms, Google will identify the kinds of people who will be interested in the show.  It’s the same model as advertising, targeted with an enormous amount of metrics/data to refine the targeting.

 

Currently, TV can not provide this level of targeting. 

 

MRC, a niche production company that is also working with Raven-Symone through its Digital Rights arm, will take the lead on corralling advertisers or the show.  It can, thus, provide them with the same level of exacting ROI that the net offers and that TV can not.

 

I think this is an incredibly smart move on Seth and Google’s part.  Certainly Google, in using this as further proof of concept that its model can be applicable to ALL media, not just advertising.

 JibJab

This made me think of Jib Jab’s move to further develop its revenue model and how new media companies are continuing to figure out best ways to monetize the net.

 

So one product, Sendables, JibJab’s e-Card business, allows users to add themselves to videos.  Gregg Spiridellis, co-Founder/CEO of JibJab Media says the premise is that “Its all about personal expression.”  Users can put their face on someone else’s body for free, but then pay to share it with friends.  I did this Snoop Dogg video with my son’s baby picture to test it out (I would post it here, but I gotta admit, I was kinda sick seeing my son in a Snoop Dogg video – word to the wise…don’t do it).  I also didn’t want to pay the $3 to share the video.

 

Snoop’s got an interesting thing going…be everywhere his fans are and expand the JibJab brand.  Some fans use JibJab.

Radio One and AllHipHop.com Make Beautiful Websites Together

May 16, 2008 By: Sekou Murphy Category: General, Internet Advertising, Music

In a move to increase its page views it offers to advertisers looking to reach the African-American demographic, Radio One, through its digital arm, Interactive One, has worked a 5-year multi-million dollar deal to exclusively provide advertising to AllHipHop.com, one of the most popular hip hop/urban focused sites on the web.

 

The deal allows Radio One to exclusively fill AHH’s advertising with its inventory.  The press release reports that AHH has more than 500 million pages a month from more than 4 million unique visitors per month. 

 

In April 2008, Radio One also acquired Community Connect, which owns social networking sites BlackPlanet.com and AsianAvenue.com, among other social networks for $38 million.  That acquisition provided Interactive One with millions of page views.  According to Community Connect, in 2007, BlackPlanet.com alone served over 400 million pages views and averaged 4 million unique monthly visitors.

 

The deal makes conceptual sense (barring analysis of financial terms).  The demographic for Radio One, which is one the largest holders of radio stations and the largest that focuses on African-Americans, crosses AllHipHop’s audience very well (although a p[orto.  Further, AHH has been on the internet since 1998 and has the kind of brand and digital footprint that will allow Radio One to distribute its advertising inventory quickly.

  

These kinds of deals, presuming they financially make sense, definitely make sense conceptually for traditional advertising based media companies was mentioned before.

 

Here is the press release.

Who Wins in Battle for Internet Advertising?

April 14, 2008 By: Sekou Murphy Category: General, Internet Advertising

The battle for Middle Earth (I mean, internet advertising) is getting VERY interesting.  So you have the 400 lb sumo wrestlers in the ring (based on traffic), Yahoo & Google, each having 139 million and 137 million uniques/month, respectively.  AOL comes in 4th (behind Microsoft) with 111 million uniques according to comScore.  

 

Next up, Yahoo is to use Google’s Adsense to deliver relevant ads alongside its own ads on a test basis (two weeks).  It’s looking more and more like a move to tease Microsoft just enough so that it will either increase its offer to something more acceptable to Yahoo or make them go away (how did Microsoft become the kids that no one wants to play with…more of a rhetorical question).

 So Let’s Play This Out…

No secret that a few online properties dominate online advertising, which is estimated to be about $21 billion in 2007 (online ad spending is expected to hit about $51 and about 15.4% of total media buys billion by 2012). 

 

So if Yahoo expands its “test” with Google and completely runs Google (which I don’t think will happen – 1) it would shift Yahoo power to Google, 2) that would allow Google to dominate in ways it doesn’t/can’t now and 3) it’s shaping up to be a bluff anyway), then that exposes advertisers to potentially more than 270 million unique visitors (or if you look at ad networks’ overall reach, a combined Yahoo and Google ad network would be 310 million uniques).

 Monopolies

That’s a heck of a lot of control over ad rates that a combined Yahoo/Google network would control.  That would force smaller players to combine, which I think will happen anyway as a defensive tactic:

 

  1. While internet advertising is growing at a great pace, overall actual dollar spend is still finite…there’s so much money in corporate coffers, and
  2. the number of online properties that can be created is infinite – thus, you have an infinite number of online properties competing for finite dollars. 

 Offline Going Online

No. 2 above, combined with internet advertising growth, is driving traditionally offline media to partner and acquire online properties. 

 

Radio One, the biggest urban terrestrial radio company, announced on April 10 that it is acquiring Community Connect, owner of BlackPlanet.com and AsianAve.com, for $38 million (Black Planet was one of the FIRST social networking sites, and it focused on the niche model which has gotten hot – it’s lost a little luster with the propensity for being spammy, like MySpace,  but it’s still one of the go to sites for people and studios pushing certain films).

 

Hearst Media, known for its offline properties (magazines, newspapers and TV stations), has been acquiring websites as well.

 

The Goal: offer advertising clients a greater reach off AND online.  One point of contact for a wider reach.  Of course, the main goal is to maximize revenue since terrestrial radio and magazines have been having a tough time growing revenue.

 Smaller Sites

How do smaller sites, that have a few tens or hundreds of thousands of visitors, compete? 

 

Get this – borrow from the big boys and merge.  If not merge, then create a network of sites that can drive pricing power with advertisers.  This could be a lot more lucrative if done right. 

 Competitive Landscape

So you basically have the following groups in this order

 

  1. Search – Yahoo, Google, AOL
  2. Traditionally offline who already are online – NY Times, LA Times, Fox Interactive
  3. Large Social Networking – MySpace, Facebook, etc.
  4. Traditionally offline media going online – Hearst, Radio-One
  5. Smaller sites that combine to form a larger network – ?