Tuesday, February 27

All about Video

posted by Robin Good on Masternewmedia (abstracts only):

Online Video will affect news consumption, will change television
viewing patterns and habits, and will give ways to new forms of
entertainment and training.

The number of changes and transformations that video is just about to
bring to the online world are too many and too significant not to be
paid attention to.

So, not only I am fully confirming my belief that 2006 will be the
year that video will establish itself on the Internet well beyond its
present pioneering status, but I want to bring to the table a number
of specific innovations that will see happening and that will
definitely affect the way we use and consume video-based contents.

Those who will best understand and appreciate the key implications of
the many deep changes that video is about to enable are those that,
free of prejudice and past media views, will start to experiment,
research and ride some of these formidable forces that are powering
video media to be the most irresistible force in Web communication to
rise up to wide popularity in the coming months.

- P2P Television.
- Micro-TV.
- New monetization opportunities for video-makers.
- Video content sold to and among content publishers.
- Video mashups.
- Citizen-TV.
- The value of video archives.
- Video search.
- Flash video.
- Home as a media hub.
- Video integration in many applications and services.
- Screencasting.
- Interactive Real-Time Video.
- Web Conferencing and Collaboration.

Monday, February 26

Google in content deal with media companies

The New York Times

Google built an empire delivering advertisements across the Internet,
and now it plans to distribute content from media companies just as
aggressively.

Google is working with Dow Jones & Company, Conde Nast, Sony BMG Music
Entertainment and other large content companies to syndicate their
video content on other Web sites. The videos appear inside Google ad
boxes on sites that are relevant to the content of the videos, and
advertisements run during or after the content. Google shares the ad
revenue with the video provider and with the sites that show the
videos.

There are already video ad networks that make similar deals, and NBC
Universal is attempting something along those lines. But the Google
experiment could be more widespread because the company already has a
vast reach on the Internet.

"Once upon a time, if you had some video content that you wanted to
distribute, you could do it on three television stations in the days
of the networks, then 100 in the days of cable," said Kim Malone,
director of online sales and operations for Google AdSense. "Now,
thanks to this program, you can do it on literally millions of
channels on the Internet."

On the financial news site StreetInsider.com, for example, videos from
The Wall Street Journal, a Dow Jones property, are running within ads
on the site. In one, Emily Friedlander, a Wall Street Journal
reporter, narrates a video feature on the TKTS booth in Times Square;
Sam Schechner of The Journal speaks about marriage in TV shows; and
Jonathan Welsh visits a motorcycle show.

After the three videos, a commercial from Pantene Pro-V, a hair
conditioner, appears. In that case, Google shares the ad revenue with
StreetInsider.com and Dow Jones.

The videos and the accompanying ads can also be found on articles on
YoungMoney.com, AdVersus.com and SeatGuru.com, among other sites. A
ski resort show created by LX.TV, a broadband network, is being shown
with ads on skiing blogs.

The ads are part of Google's larger initiative to gain traction with
consumer goods companies that spend billions on brand advertising.
Founded as a text-based search company, Google's early advertisers
were smaller companies and advertisers that bought ads to generate
direct sales rather than to build brand recognition.

Large brand advertisers still spend the bulk of their money on
television advertising, but Google sees potential for them to spend
more online through the use of video ads.

But Google's broad plan to bundle media content with ads depends on
participation from media companies. On the one hand, Google's network
will bring more visibility of their content across the Internet, where
attention is fragmented online among thousands of sites. On the other
hand, media companies like to be a destination in their own right, so
that they can sell ads on their sites.

"We want people to come directly to our site, but that's part of why
we're doing this," said Sarah Chubb, president of CondeNet, the
digital arm of Conde Nast. "To see if we can find people that we
haven't found in other ways."

Media companies also want to keep control over their relationships
with advertisers. Google sells ads in its network for Conde Nast
videos, but in a similar content-ad test with MTV Networks last fall,
MTV sold the ads (sharing the revenue with Google).

Adam Cahan, executive vice president of strategy and business
development for MTV Networks, said that his networks want to make sure
that when their content is distributed on the Web, it links to their
sites.

"In the same way that Harry Potter book sales grow from a Harry Potter
movie, you would not give the movie away to support the book sales,"
Mr. Cahan said. "There is a balance between promotion and consumption
that is up to the original content producer to manage."

Thursday, February 15

Study: Print Beats Broadcast to Online Video Advertising

Broadcasting & Cable, 2/12/2007

Local online video advertising is shaping into a battle between traditional print and television news providers, according to a new report from Borrell Associates.

Worth about $161 million in 2006, the local online video advertising marketplace is expected to grow to $371 million, or 5% of local online advertising, this year and to balloon past $5 billion in next five years.

In 2006 the market for locally targeted online video ads quietly solidified into a legitimate market with the three largest markets ( Chicago , New York and Los Angeles ) worth more than $5 million each. The next 37 largest markets also each saw more than $1 million in revenue from online video, according to Borrell.

The growing advertising category has benefited publishers and broadcasters moving online, but initially has been embraced much more quickly by print. In 2006 newspapers sold approximately $81 million in local online video commercials in comparison to $32 million sold by TV broadcasters.

Broadcasters are expected to bounce back this year, however. Thanks to an increasing number of video streams available on TV Websites, 80% of broadcasters surveyed by Borrell expect to sell streaming video ads this year, up from 72% who did last year.

The online video advertising market is expected to increasingly revolve around the strength of Websites' video content, an area which many larger newspapers have been working hard to cultivate.

The report comes on the heels of report from the Television Bureau of Advertising that online TV revenues were up 41% in 2006.