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NEW MEDIA PREDICTIONS FOR 2005 - BY JIM MESKAUSKAS |
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I always
hated feeling like an outsider; but from childhood on
through early adulthood I consistently found myself
there.
As a kid in grade school, I was reading Lloyd
Alexander's "The Chronicles of Prydain" books while
the other kids were practicing basketball.
In high school, I quit my starting position on the
football as right guard because I wanted to do
theater.
In college, while the kids were joining the Greek
system, listening to the Rolling Stones and Jesus
Jones, and drinking Meister Brau, I was living in a
house with a stolen statue of Ronald McDonald on the
roof, listening to Del Tha Funkee Homosapien and Big
Black, and drinking Sheaf Stout.
As I've gotten older, I care less about this sort of
thing; but, for fear of going into the holiday feeling
as though I've been left out, I'm going to join the
fray and cast my lots with predictions for the year
2005.
This past year was truly something else for the online
advertising business. Spending is up; in November the
IAB and PricewaterhouseCoopers reported that Internet
advertising totaled approximately $2.43 billion in the
third quarter of 2004, the eighth quarter in a row
that has seen increases, and the fourth to set a
record for spending.
Behavioral targeting, something that was only hinted
at just 18 months ago is now front-page news. Rich
media is so common that the distinctive prefix "rich"
is almost meaningless. And some of the Web's biggest
publishers saw their per-share earnings up, up, up. |
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At this time I d like to lay down MY predictions for 2005. |
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Behavioral targeting technology is married to
advertising networks. Whether it is an existing ad
network adopting the use of behavioral targeting
enablers like Tacoda Systems or Revenue Science, or
large publishers organizing around the behavioral
targeting principle much the way some did with
dayparting (the At-Work Brand network of CBS
MarketWatch, CNET Networks, NYTimes.com,
USATODAY.com, and Weather.com). It is probably not
the silver bullet some enthusiasts hope it is - in
some instances it is more akin to the Holy Grail -
but part of realizing behavioral targeting s full
potential is going to require applying the means by
which it is carried out across an entire media buy.
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Video will be the "new" rich media. What I mean by this is
that the same kind of enthusiasm that accompanied
the free-floating formats like Eyeblaster, CheckM8,
Unicast, and others will settle upon mainstream
marketers. The subject of video has already seen
plenty of daylight, and this year s Winter 2004
iMedia Creative Competition winner was a video spot
for American Airline from TM Advertising (created
exclusively for use on the Web). The growing
ubiquity of broadband coupled with increased
advertising presence of CPG advertisers will bring
video to the front of the room. Sadly, I also
predict that most of this trend will be borne on the
back of video repurposed from pre-existing
television spots.
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AOL will again be the most potent publisher on the Web
and the most successful at garnering ad dollars. I
do not say this to slight other publishers. I say
this because content is the once and future king of
advertising. It always has been and it always will
be, and the OPA confirmed it again last week in
their 2004 Online Media Industry Year-in-Review. By
virtue of being a part of Time Warner (yes, I know
we don t talk about that any more), AOL has access
to more content than any other online publisher on
Earth. It appears that they are now ready to start
leveraging it. By moving more content back outside
the walled garden where it was taken just a couple
of years ago and making it available to audiences,
they will have the most diverse sets of audiences
that will also be the easiest to find.
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The
other portals will develop their own content. AOL
has Time Warner. Yahoo! and MSN have... Yahoo! and
MSN. These two players are going to start developing
serious content on their own - or start buying it
from someone else on an exclusive basis. Yahoo! s
done a pretty good job over the years with
entertainment content, and Terry Semel s provenance
has lent itself well to this. Yahoo! Finance and
Sports have also been important in this respect. But
getting more original content and getting audiences
to spend more time with it is going to be the goal
in 05.
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Time spent with media online is going to FINALLY
be an important consideration when buying media.
I ve predicted this a number of times over the last
four or five years, but this time, it is really
going to happen. Because of this, having all that
content I was talking about is going to be
important.
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And my final prediction.... The AOL CD will be as
ubiquitous among media planners and buyers as the
software CD was in years past!
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| Happy
Christmahanakwanzaka, everyone! |
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