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Video Snacking on Mobile Growing with RhythmFebruary 15, 2008 The mobile ad industry runs the risk of getting over-hyped, but firms working in the If you think of mobile advertising as being in its teen-age years, then you probably expect it to feel a lot of growing pains, in addition to the euphoria that comes at that time of life. Maybe there are growth spurts, mixed with bouts of anxiety. Regardless of its maturity level, it’s increasingly becoming a cluttered space, but a smattering of companies say the outlook is getting better for several reasons. Network speeds have advanced, and phone functions – not just the iPhone – are improving. Brands are devoting more of their budgets this year to mobile advertising beyond the experimentation stage. People are starting to use more data services. Perhaps more telling: Mobile ad firms are getting calls from agencies rather than the other way around. JOIN THE CROWD AdMob, which doesn’t do deals directly with carriers, dubs itself the largest mobile advertising marketplace and recently opened an office in New York City to better serve agencies there. AdMob sells mobile ads on behalf of more than 3,000 publishers, including branded sites such as AccuWeather, CBS and ESPN, says Jason Spero, vice president of marketing at AdMob. The company is going up against Yahoo! and Google, but that doesn’t seem to matter. AdMob has served more than 15 billion ads in the last two years, including more than 2 billion in the month of December alone. The company says it has seen dramatic growth, both in the number of campaigns as well as size of budgets available for mobile marketing.
A significantly greater number of big brands are participating in mobile advertising far sooner than they did in the first two years of Internet advertising, says Brian Cowley, president and CEO of Ad Infuse, which is working with carriers and content publishers in the United States and Europe. “I believe very strongly the mobile advertising segment is growing a lot faster than Internet advertising did,” he says. What’s becoming clear is there is no one-size-fits-all approach. “We’ve always believed and the market is showing the carriers are going to want to work with multiple mobile advertising companies.” BETTER THAN TV? “We are to TV what snacks are to meals,” says CEO Ujjal Kohli. The company already works with carriers in Europe and is expected to launch in the United States early this year.
The TV poses several big problems for advertisers, he says. It’s difficult to target specific demographics. It’s not possible to control how often a given commercial is seen by somebody – if they see it once, they’re likely to forget it and if they see it more than three times, it gets irritating. The youth segment that brands covet so much don’t watch TV when they’re on the phone or PC. There’s too much clutter on TV, and Tivo and other devices give people more opportunities to skip commercials. Rhythm addresses those problem because its can do “very, very precise” targeting, he says. Brands can target by age and gender. Frequency is more precise – “we can make sure no one sees it more than three times.” Young people are on their phones a lot. Video snacking, unlike television, is spread throughout the day, not just airing during primetime. And there’s not much clutter – a 35-year-old guy watching a sports highlight is more likely to remember a commercial on his phone, which doesn’t have Tivo. So far, the video ads are mostly repurposed TV ads adjusted for the phone because the scale is not large enough to make a lot of phone-specific ads, but more of those are expected to come this year.
Also working on more creative ways to insert ads in mobile videos is mywaves, whose business model is based on advertising. Susan Cashen, mywaves’ vice president of marketing, recently was in New York to meet with brands and content owners. “We are talking to people with brilliant creative ideas,” about video, in particular, to connect to the consumers, she says. Most of the mywaves video content is professionally created as opposed to user-generated video. Its users are predominantly 18- to 25-year-old males, but its base is broadening to include more young women, she says. SEARCH & MORE Responding to the growth, the company recently hired interactive advertising veteran Paran Johar as its chief marketing officer. He’s in charge of opening JumpTap’s New York City office to work closely with the advertising community. Johar’s background includes MRM Worldwide, McCann’s digital division. “It’s rare that you have an opportunity to shape an industry. I think mobile advertising, mobile search is taking off and JumpTap is certainly at the leading edge of that,” Johar says. Last year was a year of experimentation, whereas 2008 will be the year of initial scaling, says JumpTap President and CEO Dan Olschwang. “It’s very clear there is a strong momentum going for the white-label approach and more carriers understand this is the way to go if they want to sustain a strong position in the value chain,” he says. This year, it’s not a matter of whether mobile advertising should be used but how best to use it, says Eric Eller, senior vice president of products and marketing at Millennial Media. Fox Interactive Media’s MySpace, for one, is working with Millennial to sell and serve mobile-based ads. Consumers choose whether or not they want to engage with ads, and consumer interest appears to be increasing. Like almost anything, “if you have a great idea and a good creative concept, then you’re going to get the numbers you’re looking for,” says Jeff Arbour, vice president of mobile integration at The Hyperfactory. Ad Infuse’s Cowley compares the mobile ad space to the first or second inning of a 9-inning game. “The game has started,” he says. But it might be a while before we see who wins. |
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