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MediaPost: Making Online Video Advertising Sellable
MediaPost, Onilne Video Insider, by Michael Shehan, Tuesday, Sep 4, 2007 2:15 PM ET
Madison Avenue has received many calls to action on innovating online video advertising. Heck, I have even gotten caught up in blaming ad execs for the slow adoption. But, I am starting to wonder, is the delay really on them? Or could some of the responsibility fall to
publishers
, ad networks and exchanges?
Marketers want to get in the online
video ad
game without a doubt. But a lack of standards and a knowledge gap are affecting the follow-through.
Advertisers
and ad
agencies
aren't getting the information they need to justify the value of online video ads.
What do
advertisers
need to know?
Ad units
.
With so many
ad units
, a lack of creative standards has caused a great deal of confusion.
Advertisers
need to understand and evaluate the options available. Examples include but are not limited to the following:
In-stream videos -- pre/mid/
post-roll
, usually accompanied by companion banners (e.g. - 300x250)
In-stream banners (a.k.a., tickers,
overlays
or bugs) -- banners that appear in the player at some point during video consumption.
Direct response banners -- when clicked, the user is delivered to another site. The
advertiser
is charged on a cost-per-click basis. Typically
targeting
is context.
Branded banners
Banner click spawns a new window -- the
advertiser
is charged on a CPM basis regardless of how the number of clicks.
User-Initiated video ads --a banner click pauses content and plays a commercial. The
advertiser
is charged on a CPM basis for banner impressions, regardless of the number of plays that result from banner clicks. Another click delivers users to the
advertiser
's Web site.
Interactive video ads -- Placed before or after a video stream, interactive display ads invite consumer engagement before moving on to video content. Interactive elements allow consumers to find out more information without leaving the site.
Video banner ads -- ot associated with video content, these video ads play automatically (generally muted) on a page or play when rolled over by a mouse.
Player skin -- sponsored ad graphics that surround a video screen.
Terms
.
Lack of creative standards encourages multiple business models as well.
Advertisers
need to know what they are paying for (example, CPM, CPC or CPA) and they need to understand the payment method -- is this going to be an
insertion
order with net
terms
, or is payment required up front? Is there a minimum buy, or can the
advertiser
pull the campaign at any time -- like sponsored search? Also consider, how can the costs be fixed and budgeted over a campaign?
Production requirements,
targeting
capabilities
.html">
capabilities
.
Will
advertisers
need to provide and/or produce new video assets? Do they need to consider specific files sizes or formats, video length, etc.? Depending on the depth of a solutions provider's target ability, how much information can they provide on the demographics they are looking to reach (example, region, city, state, zip, gender, daypart, etc.)? Can elements of the ad be customized dynamically based on the above targets?
Tracking.
One of the most confusing aspects of this medium is who actually hosts and serves the ad -- especially confusing with the various vendors and third-party ad servers available. This begs the question, how does the
advertiser
track the performance of the campaign?
Advertisers
should find out who serves the ad and how that company applies third-party ad tags to track the amount of a video that was viewed, how users interact with the commercial, and then apply tracking beyond the
video ad
itself so they can determine performance on the Web site.
Observe and Optimize.
This is an emerging media, so it's important that the
advertiser
's expectations are managed as such. Online video advertising has tremendous potential, but still, it takes time to figure it all out. Track and see what happens with the online
video ad
campaign. Review results on a consistent basis, tweak messaging and adjust your advertising program and the campaign.
Think back to the early days of search. It wasn't gang-busters in the beginning. But, diligent search marketers mined their data and learned how to develop and execute effective search marketing campaigns. That is what we can expect as online video advertising blooms. To help the process along, let's help the
advertisers
.
Michael Shehan is the CEO and President of SpotXchange, an online video marketplace. In 2001 he founded parent company Booyah Networks, which is comprised of a paid search network and an interactive marketing agency.
Link to article
By On September 4, 2007
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