My friend, Stuart MacDonald, was at an IAB conference recently where he sadly discovered the old-guard TV broadcasters aren't getting the Web either. In fact, it reminds him of a few years ago when the travel industry poo-pooed the Web's prospects. Tags: TV, IAB
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Tuesday, November 7
by
Mark Evans
on Tue 07 Nov 2006 04:52 PM EST
by
Mark Evans
on Tue 07 Nov 2006 12:12 PM EST
At ad|tech there's a lot of talk about online advertising - it's real, it's coming, it's very exciting, advertisers have no choice but to spend more of their money on the Web - but few people actually know how to walk to walk. In other words, no one has a strong idea or, for that matter, a particularly strong view on how to embrace online advertising. Instead, you get a lot of strategic mumbo-jumbo. For example, advertisers are struggling with how to approach the video market. Do they sponsor videos, do they make pre-roll placements, and do they get involved with user-generated content? What about virtual worlds such as Second Life? "I'm not a Second Life person but I feel we all better experiment there because more and more people are embracing it," said Peter Naylor, senior vice-president, digital media sales with NBC Universal, during a panel this morning. And what about social networks? Sure, Google is prepared to spend $910-million on MySpace but how do advertisers, in general, capitalize the social networking phenomena? What role will consumers play in creating advertising - a trend evident by the number of companies running contests that involve consumers creating ads for the Super Bowl. New York Times advertising columnist Stuart Elliot quasi-suggeseted that "two Super Bowls from now or five Super Bowls from now, all the major commercials will be created by consumers". |
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