A rapidly growing advertising segment: compelling content people flock to watch
A few months ago I wrote a piece about new business models for content, sparked by a fascinating dream I had. In the post I mused: My dream sparked off many thoughts about content business models, including the evident one of replicating the model in the dream – getting people to pay to skip ads. If you extend this far enough, you get to a model where you can price advertising by how much people are prepared to pay to skip it.
Consumers should be able choose how they pay for content – by payment or attention. Ultimately we should be able to move to dynamic content markets, where there is a different cost depending on whose attention you are capturing, and the context in which it is embedded. Perhaps people will pay a lot of money not to have an ad inserted in the middle of a chase scene in a movie, but they will even be prepared to pay to see the ads during the break in the Super Bowl.
Now the model of ads being presented as content is rapidly gaining prominence. People are not quite yet paying to watch the ads, but they’re certainly choosing to watch them. An article in the New York Times titled Now, the Clicking is to Watch the Ads, Not Skip Them and a piece in AdWeek called Ad Portals: Will Viewers Tune In? lay out some of the current and forthcoming offerings: VeryFunnyAds.com , an online version of a TBS show, is predicted to have reached 75 million viewers in its first year.
The ads are mainly 30 second TV commercials. Honeyshed , from Publicis and Droga5, will be an online space dedicated to branded entertainment. Didja.com (as in ‘didja like it?’) is due to be launched in early 2008 by NBC Universal will feature outstanding TV commercials, as well as other branded content.
AdPerk is an advertising network for opt-in viewers who choose to watch ads and branded network (this model pays people with magazines for watching content, but has a similar intent, says Gregg Hano, publisher of Popular Science, which has just launched AdPerk on its site, in a Beet.TV interview ). Sat Aug 2007 12:08 (1 year, 4 months ago)
Consumers should be able choose how they pay for content – by payment or attention. Ultimately we should be able to move to dynamic content markets, where there is a different cost depending on whose attention you are capturing, and the context in which it is embedded. Perhaps people will pay a lot of money not to have an ad inserted in the middle of a chase scene in a movie, but they will even be prepared to pay to see the ads during the break in the Super Bowl.
Now the model of ads being presented as content is rapidly gaining prominence. People are not quite yet paying to watch the ads, but they’re certainly choosing to watch them. An article in the New York Times titled Now, the Clicking is to Watch the Ads, Not Skip Them and a piece in AdWeek called Ad Portals: Will Viewers Tune In? lay out some of the current and forthcoming offerings: VeryFunnyAds.com , an online version of a TBS show, is predicted to have reached 75 million viewers in its first year.
The ads are mainly 30 second TV commercials. Honeyshed , from Publicis and Droga5, will be an online space dedicated to branded entertainment. Didja.com (as in ‘didja like it?’) is due to be launched in early 2008 by NBC Universal will feature outstanding TV commercials, as well as other branded content.
AdPerk is an advertising network for opt-in viewers who choose to watch ads and branded network (this model pays people with magazines for watching content, but has a similar intent, says Gregg Hano, publisher of Popular Science, which has just launched AdPerk on its site, in a Beet.TV interview ). Sat Aug 2007 12:08 (1 year, 4 months ago)
Related articles
1 year
after
after
- How Web Advertising May Go - Slashdot
- Computer Models vs Chicken entrails - Iain Hall
- Content Monetisation in a Digital World - Tech Events
- Business models for micro-blogging in the enterprise - Ross Dawson Blog
- Ten earnings dive spurs concerns about corporate advertising - Business Spectator media ...
- The FREE business model, as Chris Anderson explains - Beyond Digital Media
- Facebook to set up office in Australia - TECHGEEK.com.au
- Amazon.com hires Microsoft exec: NY Post (Reuters) - Yahoo!7 - Technology
- PROTECTING CHILDREN FROM JUNK FOOD ADVERTISING (BROADCASTING AMENDMENT) BILL 2008 - Greens MPs
- Business and Branding #4: Online Reputation Management - Thinking Home Business
11 months
after
after
- Post 's Weymouth: The Last Media Tycoon - Wired: Tech Biz
- Post 's Weymouth: The Last Media Tycoon - Wired: Science
9 months
after
after
7 months
after
after
- Clickfind launches competitive online attack for business listings - Computerworld eBusiness InDepth
5 months
after
after
- When Conversations Become Content (part 2) - nichodges.com
4 months
after
after
- Regulation could shape the future of targeted online advertising... and of media - Future of Media ...
1 month
after
after
- Advertising is not the only game online - Dilanchian Lawyers
- APML gains momentum – this could transform the personalization of advertising - Ross Dawson Blog
1 week
after
after
Selected Article
A rapidly growing advertising segment: compelling content people flock to watch
- Future of Media ...
3 weeks
before
before
- Engaging people rather than advertising in virtual worlds - Ross Dawson Blog
- Future of Media: Panel discussion on emerging business models - Ross Dawson Blog
1 month
before
before
- Key elements of media business models - Ross Dawson Blog
- Emerging media business model frameworks - Ross Dawson Blog
- The rapid progress of personalized advertising and the changing role of creative - Ross Dawson Blog