The New Economics of Advertising

October 1, 2008

YouTube Now Offering Second-by-Second Analytics

Filed under: MarSP — Dash @ 4:56 am

YouTube Now Offering Second-by-Second Analytics

Written by Marshall Kirkpatrick 

YouTube announced today an interesting addition to its Insights analytics dashboard. Called “Hot Spots,” the feature displays the “bounce rate” of viewers in any publisher’s video on a second-by-second scale.
Wondering if that joke you told went over well or not? YouTube will now tell you if a substantial number of viewers clicked away from your content at the moment your wisecrack went live.

The Insights analytics tool launched in May and offers free demographic data about viewers. We’d love to see these two features combined. Worried something you said might come across as sexist? If a whole lot of women stopped watching right after you said it – there might be some truth to that! (Who are we kidding? This is YouTube we’re talking about.)

Numbers are cool – benchmarks relative to the numbers of other related content are even cooler. That’s the kind of thing that no video startup could meaningfully offer – just YouTube with its giant network effect and perhaps some of the other giant video services.

youtubeinsightsscreen.jpg

September 25, 2008

HP announces an (almost) unbelievable blogger campaign

Filed under: MarSP, blog — Dash @ 2:04 pm

HP announces an (almost) unbelievable blogger campaign

HP, one of the country’s biggest computer companies, is boasting that it boosted its PC sales by 10 percent in May after it leveraged the blogging community to promote the launch of one of its computer systems.

I’d have shrugged off this announcement, had it not been so unbelievable. Bloggers? Boosting PC sales by 10 percent? In a sluggish economy like this? And how much did HP have to pay these bloggers for them to shamelessly pimp themselves and their blogs to promote the PCs to their readers?

Skeptical, I talked with Scott Ballantyne from HP, VP & General Managers for Personal Systems Group, who oversaw the program. He said HP didn’t pay the bloggers a dime. All HP did was give away 31 new HDX Dragon computer systems to 31 influential members of the PC blogging community, so that the blogs could give them away in a competition among their readers. The bloggers went nuts. They made videos of the systems, wrote up engaging posts and cross-linked to each other — all of their own accord. The publicity this created spurred an increase in sales, according to Ballantyne. Since the bloggers were credible to their readers, and they were talking about the HP systems on their sites, the readers went out and bought systems even if they didn’t win one in the competitions.

HP has strong evidence to back up this up. Until May, the Dragon system was already out on the market for nine months, and they weren’t performing as well as HP expected. Sales had flatlined. But in May, during the blogger competitions, sales of the Dragon system shot up by 85 percent compared to the average monthly sales of the three months before hand. More impressively, overall HP PC sales grew 10 percent higher in the U.S. than the company had forecast, as HP PC systems overall got more publicity from the Dragon campaign. Visits to HP.com increased by 15 percent.

So there you have it. Embracing blogs apparently paid off big time for HP. And HP didn’t pay a thing. “This was for the community, by the community, with the community,” said Scott Ballantyne. If this is true — and I have no reason to believe it isn’t after talking with HP — it’s amazing.

Here’s the list of the 31 blogs that participated.

Here’s an example of a blog post during the campaign.

Buzz Corps is the agency behind the campaign.


02 May – 09 May www.absolutevista.com
03 May – 10 May www.arstechnica.com
04 May – 11 May www.osnn.net
05 May – 12 May www.jkontherun.com
06 May – 13 May digitalmediaphile.wordpress.com
 
07 May – 14 May www.bostonpocketpc.com and www.techronical.com
08 May – 15 May www.the-gadgeteer.com
09 May – 16 May www.thedigitallifestyle.com 
 
10 May – 17 May www.digitalhomethoughts.com
11 May – 18 May www.windows-now.com
12 May – 19 May www.windowsconnected.com
13 May – 20 May www.geekstogo.com
14 May – 21 May bink.nu
 
15 May – 22 May www.mediablab.com
16 May – 23 May www.last100.com
 
17 May – 24 May www.labnol.org  
18 May – 25 May www.notebooks.com
19 May – 26 May www.slashdotreview.com
20 May – 27 May www.neowin.net
21 May – 28 May www.geek.com
22 May – 29 Mau www.lockergnome.com
 
23 May – 30 May www.planetx64.com
24 May – 31 May www.thegreenbutton.com
25 May – 01 Jun www.istartedsomething.com
26 May – 02 Jun www.bleepingcomputer.com
27 May – 03 Jun www.hardwaregeeks.com
28 May – 04 Jun www.geeknewscentral.com
 
29 May – 05 Jun www.geekzone.co.nz
30 May – 06 Jun www.thetabletpc.net
31 May – 07 Jun www.gearlive.com
01 Jun – 08 Jun www.gottabemobile.com

September 22, 2008

Lean-back Use: Nearly 70% of Online Adults Use Social Media, Often Research Products

Filed under: MarSP, social media, social network — Dash @ 12:35 pm
markettools-frequency-visit-blogs-social-networks-august-2008.jpg

Nearly 70% of Online Adults Use Social Media, Often Research Products

More than two-thirds (68%) of online Americans say they visit online blogs, communities or social networks, and 33% engage in product research online to help them make purchase decisions, according to (pdf) the August/September 2008 Insight Report from MarketTools.

markettools-frequency-visit-blogs-social-networks-august-2008.jpg

The frequency of social media visits also is on the rise, with 42% of adults saying they visit these sites more now than they did six months ago.

Social Media by Generation

Nearly one in five of all adults (19%) say they visit blogs, communities or social networks daily, with a higher percentage of women saying so (22% vs. 16%). Percentages of daily visitors decrease as respondents get older:

  • 33% of Generation-Y respondents (people mostly in their 20s) visit these sites every day.
  • 17% of Generation X (mostly in their 30s and early 40s) visit these sites daily.
  • 11% of Baby Boomers (in their mid 40s to early 60s) visit social media sites daily.
  • 8% percent of Seniors visit daily.

Social Media for Product Research

Many Americans visit blogs, communities and social networks with the specific intent of researching products:

  • 33% of visitors say they visit these sites to engage in product research before making a purchasing decision.
  • Affluent visitors (with annual incomes of more than $75K) are most likely to research products online before buying (43%).
  • Baby Boomer visitors are significantly more likely than other groups to read or post comments about products and services on these sites (37%).
  • Baby Boomers (63%), along with Generation X (59%), are significantly more likely than other groups to visit the corporate websites of product or service providers.

Impact on Purchasing Decisions

The research also indicates that blogs, communities and social networks have a direct impact on purchasing decisions:

  • 47% of all respondents say that these sites have influenced their decision to purchase particular brands or services to at least some extent.

markettools-website-influence-purchase-decisions-august-2008.jpg

  • 26% of all respondents actually changed their minds about buying a product or service because of what they read on a blog, community or social network.
  • Women are significantly more likely (29%) than men (22%) to change their minds about a purchase because of these sites.
  • Those in middle-income households (those with yearly income of $35K to $75K), at 30%, and those from Generation Y (35%) and Generation X (30%), are the most likely to change their minds because of the information they read on social media sites…

September 17, 2008

Tumultuous Ad Market to Test New Ogilvy CEO

Filed under: MarSP — Dash @ 1:18 pm

Tumultuous Ad Market to Test New Ogilvy CEO

By GEOFFREY A. FOWLER and SUZANNE VRANICA

HONG KONG — Miles Young recently won the top job at ad company Ogilvy Group because of his strong track record in running its Asian operations. Now, the question is whether he can repeat that success in the U.S., a bigger, tougher market, and one in the grip of wrenching change.

After 13 years as head of Ogilvy’s Asia-Pacific business, the 53-year-old Englishman is moving from Hong Kong to New York to take the helm of the WPP Group unit, whose clients include American Express, International Business Machines and Unilever…

September 4, 2008

Choosing the Right Ad Network, Part 3 by Tessa Wegert

Filed under: MarSP — Dash @ 1:45 pm


Tessa Wegert

Tessa Wegert

Tessa Wegert is an interactive media strategist with Enlighten, one of the first full-service digital marketing strategy and services agencies, serving such brands as Bioré, Bratz, Food Network, illy, Hunter Douglas, Jergens, and Olympic Paints and Stains. An industry veteran, Tessa has worked in online media buying and planning, marketing, and online copywriting since 1999. She is an active freelance writer specializing in interactive marketing who has contributed to U.S. and Canadian publications, including “USA Weekend Magazine,” “Marketing Magazine,” “The Globe and Mail,” and “The Montreal Gazette.” She is frequently quoted as an industry expert and speaks regularly at industry conferences and events.

Recent articles by Tessa Wegert


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