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OPA: Content Sites Better Buys Than Ad Networks

By numantra on April 27, 2010 7:49 AM

MediaPostNews

ONLINE MEDIA DAILY

 

by Mark Walsh, 1 hour ago

 

Branded content sites outperformed ad networks or Web portals across key ad metrics including awareness, message association, brand favorability and driving purchase intent, according to new research from the Online Publishers Association.

The report is the fourth in a series of studies by the OPA finding member sites like USAToday.com and Discovery.com outpace Internet industry norms (based on Dynamic Logic's MarketNorms) as well as ad networks and portals in ad effectiveness and brand impact.

Within the key 18- to 34-year-old demographic, the study showed ad networks had a negative impact on purchase intent and failed improve brand favorability.

"Ad network performance has declined to a point where they provide no significant increase in purchase intent to advertisers, said OPA President Pam Horan. "As a result of this insignificance, the average brand campaign may not achieve greater brand lift by advertising on an ad network."

The most popular ad sizes -- medium rectangles, leaderboards and wide skyscrapers -- performed significantly better on branded content sites across most ad metrics. Video ads also showed better results on OPA sites, especially in purchase intent, ad awareness and message association.

Consumers are also more likely to be involved with interactive ads on content sites, with a higher impact on awareness, message association, brand favorability and purchase intent.

In terms of industry categories, CPG, entertainment and telecom ads on premium sites surpassed industry norms, especially in more metrics like brand favorability and purchase intent. By contrast, telecom and travel ads on portals, and technology ads run across ad networks, led to statistically negligible purchase intent.

A separate study by research firm Advertiser Perceptions recently found 52% of agencies and marketers plan to spend more on content sites this year this year, while only 35% were likely to increase budgets for ad networks. To help lure more ad dollars to branded content sites, the OPA last year introduced three oversized ad units, including the widespread push-down format.

However, spending on performance-based advertising -- more closely associated with ad networks -- continued to increase last year. The category accounted for 60% of online ad revenue in 2009, up from 57% the prior year. CPM-based buys decreased from 39% to 37% of buys and hybrid-pricing models fell from 4% to 3% of ad sales, according to the Interactive Advertising Bureau.

 

For more information visit www.mediapost.com

Consumers View News As A Commodity

By numantra on February 17, 2010 8:55 AM

MEDIAPOST NEWS

MEDIA DAILY NEWS

Nielsen: Consumers Will Spend Money Online On Certain Content, But News Has Become A 'Commodity'

by Gavin O'Malley, Yesterday, 4:56 PM

While most consumers prefer their online content free, many are willing to open their wallets and purses for particular offerings, according to new research from Nielsen.

What sorts of content are consumers willing to pay for online? Mostly movies, music, and games, according to a survey of some 27,000 consumers across 52 countries.

Meanwhile, content created online -- like blogs, podcasts, and video -- are the least likely to attract consumer dollars, Nielsen finds.

In between are an array of news formats -- newspapers, magazines, Internet-only news sources and radio news and talk shows -- created by professionals, relatively expensive to produce, and, in the case of newspapers and magazines, commonly sold offline.

"Yet much of their content has basically become a commodity, readily available elsewhere for free," notes Nielsen. As a result, nearly eight out of every 10 respondents -- 79% -- said they would no longer use a Web site that charges them, presuming they can find the same information at no cost.

Meanwhile, more than three of every four survey participants -- 78% -- felt that if they already subscribe to a newspaper, magazine, radio or television service they should be able to use its online content for free.

That said, 62% of consumers said that once they purchase content, it should be theirs to copy or share with whomever they want.

Overall, 71% of global consumers said online content of any kind has to be considerably better than what is currently free before they will pay for it.

With regard to consumers, Nielsen notes: "As a group, they are ambivalent about whether the quality of online content would suffer if companies could not charge for it." Nearly evenly split, 34% thought so, 30% did not, while the remaining 36% expressed no firm opinion.

Regardless, publishers continue to experiment with a range of payment models, from full-service subscriptions to individual transactions, or micropayments. The New York Times, for one, is planning to debut a "metered" pay model next year, which will require subscriptions for high levels of content consumption.

Among those surveyed by Nielsen, about half -- 52% -- favor the latter, although the researchers admit that micropayments "have proved cumbersome to implement in the past."

Either way, only 43% of respondents said an easy payment method would make them more likely to buy content online.

On the other hand, 47% of respondents said they would be willing to accept more advertising to subsidize free content.

For more information visit www.mediapost.com

Disconnects Hamper Loyalty Program Effectiveness

By numantra on January 25, 2010 8:52 AM

MEDIAPOST NEWS

MARKETING DAILY

Disconnects Hamper Loyalty Program Effectiveness

by Karlene Lukovitz, 4 hours ago

Loyalty programs represent a large and growing portion of marketing budgets. But according to a new report from the CMO Council, relatively few companies are fully delivering the elements that are most important in acquiring and keeping participants engaged.

The council surveyed 700 consumers, as well as 600 marketers. About 75% of consumers reported enrollment in supermarket loyalty programs, 71% in airline frequent flier clubs, and 60% in credit card incentive programs, with smaller percentages reporting enrollment in other types of programs.

Consumers clearly confirmed that relevant, valued rewards -- meaning rewards that match their individual preferences and are easily redeemable -- along with relevant, personalized communications, are the most important factors in driving loyalty program participation and satisfaction.

The good news: 78% indicated being "very or pretty" satisfied with their program experiences. However, 70% said they want more discounts/savings, 44% want better deals/offers and 39% want free products/premiums for patronizing program operators. Moreover, 56% said they want more compelling personal benefits and services, as well as more relevant offers/individualized deals.

The program turnoffs most cited by consumers were too much spam and "junk mail" (43%), difficulties in redeeming points/miles (38%) and too many conditions/restrictions (38%). Insufficient value in rewards/membership, and insufficient personalization of communications and service, were also high on the complaints list.

Marketers aren't unaware of consumer priorities. Nearly 40% said that they view discounts/savings as the key member benefits, 34% said that they view free products/premiums as essential incentives, and 33% indicated that their companies are offering points for merchandise redemption as added motivators. Asked to cite common consumer complaints about loyalty programs, marketers' answers paralleled those of consumers.

Nearly 64% of marketers view loyalty programs as essential or very valuable to the marketing mix, and 80% are committed to maintaining or increasing program funding. Yet, 46% acknowledged that acquiring and maintaining motivated participants is their biggest loyalty program challenge, and only 15% view their programs as highly effective at leveraging member loyalty/brand preference.

Feeling thwarted by obstacles to delivering sufficiently personalized loyalty rewards and communications is a root problem, the research indicates. Aside from acquisition/retention, marketers' most-cited loyalty program obstacles/issues include measuring marketing value and effectiveness (42%); collecting, integrating and maintaining customer data (41%); deriving valuable insight and intelligence (38%); delivering more personalized offers and inducements (35%); and creating more customized communications (33%).

Nearly 73% of marketers' companies collect basic demographics and 68% track members' locations, but roughly one-third or fewer track factors such as members' product/personal preferences, satisfaction levels and brand loyalty.

Tellingly, there is a "chasm" between where companies are focusing communications/marketing investments and how members actually learn about loyalty programs, stresses CMO Council VP, programs and operations, Liz Miller.

Nearly 60% of marketers rely on Web sites, 58% on email, 47% on word-of-mouth, 46% on point-of-sale information, 41% on direct mail and 38% on sales/service reps. Cost-effective email is the channel preferred by 84% of marketers, followed by print mailings/statements (52%), corporate Web sites, dedicated club sites (32%), SMS text messaging (24%) and social networks (16%).

Meanwhile, 65% of consumers said they acquire program information via point-of-sale messaging at retail, versus 10% via online advertising and 3% via social media networks or blogs.

The real issue is not that companies aren't collecting customer data -- it's that marketers "feel paralyzed by lack of access to integrated, real-time, usable data" due to internal functional and/or IT infrastructure silos, says Sandra Zoratti, SVP marketing for Ricoh/IBM joint venture InfoPrint Solutions Company, which sponsored the research.

There is no question that companies must develop the capabilities to effectively deliver customized rewards and relevant, multichannel communications based on member transactions and contacts, says Zoratti. But instead of remaining paralyzed by internal customer data challenges, marketers can improve their programs by focusing on the rudiments.

"If you don't have enough individual member preference information, do a survey -- then concentrate on doing what's necessary to deliver the rewards and relevant, compelling communications that your members want most," she advises.

For more information see www.mediapost.com

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