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Wednesday, April 27, 2011

The secret source of better brand engagement - iMediaConnection.com

The problem with the broadcast model in online video
The problem with the broadcast model in online video is that, unlike other media, choice is available to consumers in online video. As we saw with the Egyptians, Romans, and American Idol, the broadcast model works in specific contexts, namely where choice isn't an option. But in online video, specifically social video, consumers can choose the ads they watch. Chief strategy and innovation officer of VivaKi, Rishad Tobaccowala, calls this availability of choice and the empowerment of consumers "the people's network."

Social video advertising: The place for consumer choice
Audiences can choose to watch branded content across sites like YouTube, Metacafe, DailyMotion, Yahoo, MySpace, and hundreds of others. They can visit these sites across a number of devices, from their computer, to their smartphone, tablet, and set-top box. When audiences choose to watch content related to brands, they can copy, mix, mash, and repost these ads across the web. They can share them with their friends and family, and blast them across Facebook and Twitter. They can embed ads into their blogs and personal websites. They can comment and rate the ads as well. For the first time, a type of advertising has conversation and sharing built in.

This social activity -- sharing with friends and family, embedding on personal blogs and social media, etc. -- creates earned media, or endorsed brand reach.

The combination of video ads and social activity has come to be known as social video advertising. Social video advertising is one of the fastest growing advertising segments today, if not the fastest: It grew more than 900 percent more than search and display advertising in 2010, and more than 2,000 percent more than television for Super Bowl 2011.

This rapid growth has created intense competition among social video advertisers. The Ad Age Viral Video Chart, powered by Visible Measures, features the most-viewed -- user-initiated (i.e., chosen) -- ads of the week. Since the chart's premier in March 2009, the threshold to make 10th place has increased more than 400 percent. Thresholds for the Variety Top 10 Online Film Trailers Choice, also powered by Visible Measures, have increased more than 110 percent since its inception.

The revolution of choice is now
Ironically, the emergence and rapid growth of social video advertising gives advertisers a choice. Do they continue with the broadcast model and continue pouring money into pre-roll and other forced formats? Or, do they shift gears and try to capture audience choice in social video advertising?

Response from the industry seems to indicate that a shift is already underway. Just last month, TED announced the winners of its Ads Worth Spreading contest, a contest "seeking to reverse the trend of online ads being aggressively forced on users." In December, YouTube announced an ad format called TrueView Video Ads, which "gives viewers choice and control over which advertiser's message they want to see and when." Last year, VivaKi launched The Pool, which has sponsored an ad format that gives audiences the choice of which ad they want to watch before video content. And cost-per-view pricing has been submitted to the IAB for consideration as a standard option for pricing video advertising.

You can also do your own research: Google "how to make a viral video" to see how pervasive the idea of virality is today. What these seemingly endless articles and blog posts are talking about is how to capture audience choice for video. Or check out the Viral Ad Chart each week just to see how ubiquitous and innovative viral campaigns are becoming. In the end, "viral" is simply a manifestation of consumer choice.

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