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Maven Moves the Broadband Video Ad Market Forward
Maven Networks got a lot of ink today with 2 announcements, first the launch of a new broadband ad platform and the second, the launch of a new industry collaboration dubbed the "Internet TV Advertising Forum." These have been in the works for a while and Maven gave me a heads up on both over the summer.
The Ad Forum is noteworthy, as it appears to be a genuine "good guy" effort to move the whole industry forward in optimizing the ad model. Ten companies signed on for launch, including heavies like Scripps, Fox News, Oglivy, TV Guide, Microsoft, DoubleClick and 24/7.
I caught up by phone with Kristen Fergason, Maven's VP of Marketing to learn more. First, the Forum is completely open to everyone. Though initially underwritten by Maven, over time it will probably take on more of a "dues-paying" model. And to show that "open" really does mean open, I asked what happens if competitors like Brightcove for example, wanted in? Her reply: "we'd happily accept them".
The forum is mean to bring together agencies, content providers and vendors to build consensus about how to move past the market's current reliance on pre-rolls. Kristen said industry players have been "chomping at the bit" to get involved and Maven received 40 applications today alone. Importantly, the Forum is meant to augment IAB initiatives, not compete with them. The Forum will run focus groups and collect research based on ideas generated by Forum members to see what works and what doesn't. Results will be available to everyone.
Maven believes that a "rising tide lifts all ships", but because its ad platform is ready now, it will benefit disproportionately. That's where today's other announcement comes in. The demo I saw shows how new ad units (videos, overlays, banners, etc.) can be dynamically inserted, not just at the beginning of the video, but throughout. The result is that a lot of new inventory is available. The below graphic shows "cue points" for manual insertion, but an algorithm can also be used to insert based on what the system knows about things like clip length, average user session time, click-thru, etc. Note I didn't see this feature in action, so I can't say for sure how well it actually works.
There's also pretty neat telescoping transaction capability as shown below, which allows the content provider or advertiser to collect specific user information. The video resumes when the user is done.
The ad platform looks like a solid entry and when taken together with other myriad ad initiatives in the market, everything suggests that we may actually see life beyond pre-rolls. Hallelujah.Categories: Advertising, Technology
Topics: 24/7, Brightcove, DoubleClick, Fox News, Maven, Microsoft, Oglivy, Scripps, TV Guide
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Critical Mention Launches Syndicaster Beta
In a boost to broadcasters' efforts to move on air video online, Critical Mention today launched a private beta of Syndicaster (press release here). CEO Sean Morgan and VP Marketing Sharon Tolpin gave me a sneak peak a week ago, but kept me under embargo until today's announcement.One huge advantage of Syndicaster is that it's completely free to broadcasters. Sean estimates that broadcasters currently spend north of $40 million/year installing and maintaining hardware and software which allows them to pull on air assets onto the web. Then there's all the staffing cost to run it all. This the model that Syndicaster is attacking.CM is offering Syndicaster free for 2 main reasons, first because they want to incent broadcasters to use it widely, in turn helping CM's Clip Syndicate unit build a gigantic library of clips to syndicate around the web (as Sean says "to lubricate the digital broadcast syndication market"), and second, because they can. How? Because Critical Mention already takes video feeds from 240+ broadcasters covering 85%+ of the U.S. population, digitizing them for its CriticalTV search and monitoring system. I'm assuming that beyond development, there's little incremental cost in running Syndicaster.
Sound a little confusing? To simplify, there's a web of product offerings, all powered from the same underlying infrastructure. Actually, it's a very cool example of the scale opportunities in digital media. Once you've collected the data (in this case video, which is also transcribed into text), there are multiple products, markets and customers to serve. And it also shows that traditional hardware/software solutions continue to be at risk in the Internet age.
Syndicaster's now being offered to 450 initial broadcasters. Soon, others can sign up too. Sean and Sharon also gave me a sneak peek into some other upcoming stuff. All very interesting. Keep an eye out for more soon.
Categories: Broadcasters, Technology
Topics: Clip Syndicate, Critical Mention, Syndicaster
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Joost Names Volpi CEO, Things are About to Get More Interesting
Categories: Aggregators, People, Technology
Topics: Cisco, Joost, Mike Volpi
Posts for 'Technology'
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