German Blogger Robert Basicpoints me to a new blog by Google, which does not promote Google services, but instead it writes about how the CPG industry is tackling online marketing. Which makes this whole blog a service to this industry. And lets us guess about the relative importance of this industry for Google…
Our motto: all the news from Google’s ad team that fits in your fridge or pantry…and maybe a little bit more. […] Our sales teams are organized by industry so that we can focus on the distinctive qualities and business needs of our advertisers and marketers.
[..] Our goal for the blog is to communicate with you, our advertisers and agencies. We’ll talk about the ways in which CPG is tackling the changing world of online marketing and how we work with advertisers to create the best experience for their customers. We’ll also strive to keep you on top of relevant news from Google that can affect CPG.
A good idea. But will people read it? Only the long tail run can tell us.
PVR Wire has a good analysis of the YouTube acquisition by Google.
Google itself is already the 3rd busiest site on the internet, and now that it owns YouTube the company has control over a tremendous number of internet users, probably a higher percentage than anyone else!
Here is an Alexa comparison of Google Video and YouTube:
So Google has bought themselves a few eyeballs, since Google Video didn’t perform quite as well:
Putting criticisms aside you need only look a the amount of users and growth of YouTube to see why Google bought them. 20 million regular users, the Top 10 site on the net, and 100 million video views a day.
According to PVRWire there are three main things Google can do now with the new pool of content:
Video adverts in YouTube videos: selling adverts within or rather after the clips of users, preferrably context-sensitive.
Selling premium video, just like on google video.
Licensing content to TV stations like Blib.tv. Actually, a colleague of mine suggested to me today, that Google could start or at least support an extensive TV Network with channels broadcasting those thousands of clips clustered by topic, user votes, relevance, etc. per channel.
Regardless of these benefits, there are two winners these days, and they may look like your average around-the-corner geek, but take care, they’re multi-millionairs now, with only about a year or two worth of work:
The quality is a typical average user quality, with the little mishaps at the end – true user style, I like that. It has been viewed 560,859 times in the last two days, which makes it not top-video (yet), but I am confident they’ll make the top ten of their own site.
Yahoo today announced the launch of what is expected to be the world’s largest time capsule in history. Starting today, Yahoo! is encouraging people from around the world to contribute personal photos, stories, thoughts, ideas, poems, prayers, home movies, music and art to an online anthropology project designed to celebrate and understand life and global culture in 2006. Content from the time capsule will be broadcast directly onto the 216-foot tall Pyramid of the Sun in Teotihuacan and sent into space through a light beam from the historic monument.
ZDNet writes about Swicki tapping communities for search and really describes a new way of making search more relevant. This is the question most search engines are currently trying to solve and the model of Swicki seems to be similar to Rollyo:
„Rollyo offers the ability to search the content of a list of specified websites, allowing you to narrow down the results to pages from websites that you already know and trust.“
… but then again, not quite. Since they don’t only allow for predefined filters, but also measure user behaviour to identify which results will be relevant in the future. This also what might differentiate them from Google: it’s not just about what people „voted for“ by placing a link but also about what they actually visited.
Swickis combine Web crawling with filters defined by site owners and algorithms that analyze user behavior (keywords and pages accessed) anonymously and automatically, re-ranking results based on the community’s search actions.
(Just as I typed this I thought: who knows, if Google isn’t already measuring our behaviour anyway? – I mean, how would we be able to tell? In theory, they can measure our clicks on the pages of the search results – but in addition they can track us on any page that has Google Adsense Advertising – which would mean a lot of pages across the hit- and niche-websites of the web.)
Seems to be an interesting tool – if I have some time over the weekend, I might start my own Swicki search in this blog…
It’s not really a new fact, that advertisers are trying to do all sorts of stuff for getting the attention of consumers. However, in the last couple of days I read about two new payment models introduced by startups that want to offer a better, more efficient way than traditional media buys to place ads where they can find the attention of people. TechCrunch writes about a start up called Pay per Post. This company pays bloggers to write (positive) reviews about their products:
There does not appear to be any requirement that the payment for coverage be disclosed. There is a requirement that PayPerPost.com must approve your post before you are paid.
The Scobelizer expresses his opinion on the fact that bloggers should disclose whenever they write something based on money or free product samples. He specifically says:
I will try to keep my advertising and editorial separate and easily identifyable. […]
Why is disclosure so important? Because I, as a reader, need to know about potential conflicts of interest.
And he is right about that, credibility is the most important asset any media souce has (unless you’re writing for the „national enquirer“, „the sun“ or the „Bild“ – those papers I’d rather classify as entertainment).
I don’t agree with this kind of „advertising“ at all. I think it is utterly important for any content producer to stay independent and make that clear.
But I can see how advertisers (being one myself) are trying to „buy“ attention in any way they can – even if that means buying the time and space of non-professionals, who already have the attention of other non-professionals. (Which is exactly the reason why this non-professional content is so promising: I myself like to read bloggers content, because I consider it true and non-biased by anything.)
At the same time, funnily enough, I read news on Informationweek about another startup called Jellyfish paying consumers for spending their time reading or viewing ads. It is a comparison shopping site like many others, with the one single edge to it, that might make consumers prefer using this platform instead of others:
The company […] plans to give the customer half the ad revenue it collects from the advertiser upon making a sale.
The result is that Jellyfish users can get products for less because half the marketing dollars spent by advertisers go directly their customers instead of to a third party. […] the cash returned can result in discounts of up to 24%, according to the company. This number will rise and fall daily as merchants bid for consumers‘ business.
Users can collect their cash once products can no longer be returned, in order to prevent abuse of the system.
In this model, advertisers clearly benefit from the fact, that they place their ads on this site. Question is: will people go to jellyfish first to find out about things and then buy whatever they found? Or will they search for stuff anywhere on the web and then buy at jellyfish to get the discount – which means that advertisers will still have to also advertise „anywhere on the web“ to get the attention of these people?
On the Motley Fool this whole thing is also covered, and they state on thing which is fairly certain to happen:
Jellyfish’s arrival is only going to make things harder, since consumers will now expect discounts.
As advertisers are trying to find new ways of „buying“ the attention these two approaches might be ways to succeed. But I doubt it in the longterm.
The first will only be effective as long as the credibility issue rises to steam and bloggers realise that their audience reacts to advertising on their blogs just like they would in the traditional media.
The second one will only work out for everyone, as long as it has not become the normal procedure on the web to share ad revenue with the target audience. Once this model has been applied on all shopping sites, consumers will only experience a general drop in prices across all websites. A general rebate on all things bought online funded by advertising. And, realistically speaking, once this becomes common practise, advertisers will start to look for ways decreasing spending across the board.
Either way – paying bloggers or paying shoppers – I am still not convinced you get quality-attention by paying anyone. As soon as the flow of money decreases, you loose your audience. Instead, you need to involve your target audience, engage them in your brand and the story of your brand. Get them to buy your product, because they value that – and not the discount.
PS: How BS is this Quote from the article in the informationweek?
The name „Jellyfish,“ says president Mark McGuire, reflects the company’s intent to bring transparency to the ad market.
Hey, get real: this was a domain you still had from the late 90s and it makes more sense than any domain or artificial web2.0 name you could get nowadays, right?
Terry Heaton writes about „The Economy of Unbundled Advertising“ which is about TV News and advertising in a Postmodern World – an interesting article in The Digital Journalist.
But now we’ve entered the world of unbundled media, where people download individual songs instead of buying CDs, watch programs when and where they want (without the commercials), and read news stories or snippets of stories
His advice to advertisers is to leverage this and fill the space with microchunks of your message ready to be picked up by smart aggregators crawling the web for information that users requested.