Monday, December 31, 2012

Mistakes Online Video Marketers Usually Make

Common online video marketing mistakes:
  • Too promotional
  • Or not promotional enough
  • Too lengthy
  • Poor placement on your website
  • Not targeted at a clear audience
  • Boring
  • Burdened with an overload of information
  • Focusing too hard on trying to go viral
  • Only uploading to YouTube
  • A confusing concept
  • Videos that are just done poorly
The most painful “mistake” is trying too hard to go viral. Usually this involves a failed attempt to be funny, which ends up creating disdain for the advertiser.

We're sure there are more common online video marketing mistakes that haven’t been listed here. Recognizing our mistakes makes successful online videos so uncommonly enjoyable to watch.-MediaPost

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Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Does Video Impact Customer Support?

How to Videos vs Instructional Manuals.
Is YouTube Replacing the Printed Manual?

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Monday, December 17, 2012

77% of Brands Aren't Using Online Video Ads [study]

A new study from Kantar Media has found that 77 percent of brands are using national TV advertising exclusively.

Only 23 percent of the brands surveyed were using online video. About 12 percent of brands reported that they were using both online video and national TV advertising. While another 11 percent said they were using online video advertising only.

Kantar Media says that the restaurant and automotive industries were the most likely to use both advertising video platforms in the month of October.

43 percent of the restaurant industry was using both online and national TV video ads. Kantar Media also found that 30 percent of automotive firms were using the two-platform video advertising method.

The study reported that Internet communications and content companies were the most likely to use an online-only method for video advertising. Kantar says that 39 percent of Internet content and communications companies are using online video advertising exclusively.

Resort and travel companies were the second most likely industry to use an online-only video advertising strategy. According to the study, 28 percent of resort and travel companies were using an online-only method for video advertising.

The reports of companies moving to online video advertising exclusively come as consumers continue to view more online video. According to a recent study from comScore, 11 billion online video ads were seen in October.

ComScore reported last November that over 88 percent of online users watched at least one online video in October. According to the firm's report, 22 percent of online video seen during the month were ads.

Another report from Adap.TV found that national television advertising budgets were being reduced in an effort to bring more funding to the online ad space. According to Adap.TV's report 34 percent of advertisers surveyed were reducing broadcast advertising budgets to make room for online video ad spending.

Kantar Media came up with its statistics by surveying more than 4,100 brands' advertisements. The study was commissioned in the lead-up to the firm's release of its new Online Video Measurement service.-ClickZ

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Friday, December 14, 2012

5 Tips for Creating Branded Video Content



Branded video content should be part of every successful ad campaign, provided it is built and executed correctly. Advertisers need quality video assets that are pertinent to their targeted audiences, ensuring that the intended (and hopefully authentic) message is delivered the right way. 

These five principles are key to the execution of a flawless branded content experience:

1. Maintain coherence. While high quality, engaging material is a prerequisite for success, content that does not fit sensibly into a larger brand experience can confuse consumers and even turn them off altogether. It is imperative that brand messaging enhances (and does not distract) from the content experience.

2. Be authentic, and do not under-invest. Viewers can read right through content that is not authentic or has had corners cut to save a few dollarsThere is a huge difference between video shot in a studio by quality producers compared to amateurs with a video camera in their basements.  Beyond introducing an unnecessary liability to the health of the brand, a low-cost or disorganized approach to producing digital content is simply a waste of both energy and resources.

3. Do not replicate the TV experience. Reinvent it. Brand integration should be seamless and platform-relevant. If consumers found heavy-handed, one-way communication acceptable with TV ads, this was partially because the platform did not allow innovators to move further. An overly “salesy” or persuasive approach risks alienating Internet-savvy consumers who expect an interactive give-and-take with both their content and their media. Consumers will quickly lose interest in material if it feels too much like an ad, so developing engaging content must be the first priority, with earned media and social sharing serving as the ultimate drivers of any sound strategy.

4. Smart distribution is crucial. A high-quality video experience only works when brands drive engagement through a meaningful and diversified digital distribution strategy. Online content marketing is not a world where “if you post it, they will come.” Simply put, posting a video onto only one site does not provide anywhere near the return necessary to justify the investment. Content creators need to proactively seek out and find relevant audiences through nonexclusive syndication arrangements. 

5. Monitor responses. Do not appoint yourself the proud captain of a sinking ship if results are not as positive as you would like. Test, analyze the results, and then retest every video element of every campaign. Be prepared to tweak and experiment with the necessary components of the approach in order to improve it. Not least among the benefits of digital content over traditional ad strategies is the heightened degree of control and quickened responses it affords users to this end.
Data from comScore's Video Metrix indicates that a record 188 million Internet users watched 37.7 billion content videos in August of 2012. While pre- or mid-roll video advertising puts a message in front of those viewers, consumers are not being overly inspired. Closely aligning a brand message with video content that adheres to a brand’s vision and goals is a great way to get consumers to pay attention. Fortunately, producing this effective material is not as difficult or cost-prohibitive as it would have been in years past. When proactive brands develop thoughtful, appealing programming and amplify viewership through a sound distribution strategy, everyone (consumers, publishers and advertisers) in the ecosystem wins.-VideoInsider

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Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Online Video Marketing - What You Need to Know



Online video has become one of the hottest trends in content marketing.
But it’s not just that video is big right now – it’s that it’s getting bigger.
Online video usage rose 12% amongst B2B content marketers, according to a recent Content Marketing Institute (CMI) survey.

Five statistics to know about online video marketing:
1. Over 85% of the country’s Internet users viewed online video content in September 2012 alone.
2. About 46% of people say they’d be more likely to seek out information about a product or service after seeing it in an online video.
3. Video is now the sixth most popular content marketing tactic, as 70% of B2B marketers use some form of online video with their overall strategies.
4. YouTube averages 4 billion hits each day, and 61% of B2B marketers leverage YouTube to extend the reach of their messaging and brands.
5. On average, mobile viewers watch videos that are three times longer those on PCs and laptops, and the number of mobile viewers are expected to reach over 54 million by the end of 2012.
- Eloqua

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Monday, December 10, 2012

Online Video Ads Boost Brands [report]

While online video ad success is often measured by click-through rates, research from Vindico has argued that completion rates are actually a more important indicator of ad effectiveness. Results from a new study by TubeMogul support that position: according to the report, viewers exposed to a pre-roll video ad demonstrated higher brand awareness and message association than a control group that did not watch the ad – and the lift was significantly higher among viewers who completed the ad.
In terms of brand lift among the overall group exposed to an ad (compared to the control group that was not), the report finds a 3.6% lift in awareness, a marginal 0.1% increase in favorability, a 8.3% boost in message association, and a 2.4% gain in purchase intent or consideration.
Among those who completed the video ad, though, the lift in brand awareness almost doubled (from 3.5% to 6.9%), while the lift in message association more than doubled (from 8.3% to 20.5%).
TubeMogul’s report notes that “for the purposes of this research, “lift” is defined as the absolute difference (subtraction) between the percent of correct answers of exposed viewers (people who saw the ad) and a control group (people that did not see the ad). “Correct” answers are defined as the answer that the brand desires and indicates a positive perception of the brand by the survey taker.”

Pre-Roll Completion Rates Steady

So if completion rates are so important, where do they stand? In Q3, video ads on Tier 1 sites (from well-recognized publishers like news outlets, cable providers and sports broadcasters) saw an 84.9% completion rate, up from 81.8% in the first half of the year. While the average completion rate for ads on Tier 2 sites dropped (from 76.9% in H1 to 70.7% in Q3), it remained steady for ads on Tier 3 and 4 sites (at 82.2% in Q3).

Pre-Roll Inventory Grows; CPMs Drop Slightly

TubeMogul’s latest quarterly research report shows that the volume of pre-roll ads available for real-time bidding has increased steadily during the year, by 7.3% per month through September. That growth has been most rapid in the past 3 months, averaging 323.6 million impressions per day.
Probably as a result of that growth, cost-per-thousand (CPM) for pre-roll video ads has dropped, down from $8.83 in H1 to $8.18 in Q3.

Other Findings:

  • Video ads had the greatest lift in purchase intent for the electronics/computer vertical (10.9%), followed by online services (4.8%), entertainment (2.3%), and CPG (2.2%).
  • Before dipping in Q3, CPMs grew by 2.5% per month through the first half of the year.
About the Data: Data for the report comes from top brand campaigns run through TubeMogul’s media buying platform in the U.S. in the third quarter, spanning hundreds of millions of impressions across standard pre-roll video ads. Brand lift data comes from TubeMogul’s BrandSights survey technology, which launched in September and now counts over 75,000 survey respondents.
CPMs represent average clearing prices for pre-roll ads on thousands of sites available from the leading private and public exchanges, spanning billions of bids. As such, they reflect the raw cost (i.e. what goes directly to the publisher), before TubeMogul’s transparent cost is added, or fees from rich media, 3rd-party targeting, brand surveys or other partners.-MarketingCharts
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Sunday, December 2, 2012

YouTube Now Allows Links to External Websites


YouTube Partners who specify their YouTube channels as the official representation of their brand can now put annotations on their videos that link directly to their website(s) or landing page(s). Now your calls-to-action can direct viewers to your own website, where you can promote your products and/or services.

How to Set-up YouTube Annotations That Link To Your Website:
1. Associate your website with your YouTube Channel, under the Channel settings.
2. Go to the Annotations section in your YouTube Video Manager.
3. Click "Add Annotation" and then under the "Link" drop down menu, select "Associates Website."

4. Insert the URL you want viewers to visit in the link area, then save and publish.

To enhance video SEO, make sure you keep your viewers watching as long as possible. So your external links will need to be incorporated strategically. For more information click here.

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Friday, November 23, 2012

Mobile Online Video Consumption Up

5.4%. It’s a small figure, but, it’s one that looks like it will keep growing. The share of time spent watching online video on mobile phones and tablets continues to increase, passing 5% in August and hitting 5.4% in September, according to a November 2012 report from Ooyala. Much of the growth in Q3 could be attributed to tablets, which accounted for 3.2% of overall time spent watching online video in September, almost double April’s share (1.69%).

The 5.4% share of online video consumption attributed to mobiles and tablets represents a 64% jump from 3.29% in April. Tablets alone in September accounted for almost as much video consumption as mobiles and tablets collectively did in April.

Tablets Well-Suited For Long-Form Content

Further details from the Q3 report support tablets as a viable medium for long-form content consumption. That’s important for advertisers, because ads served in long-form content generally see higher completion rates than those served in short- or medium-form content. Tablet owners are an attractive audience – particularly for e-retailers – because they tend to have higher e-commerce conversion rates than smartphone owners, while maintaining similar average order values.
To put the tablet viewing experience in perspective, according to Ooyala, 71% of tablet video views were of long-form content such as movies and TV shows. That’s a significant rise from 46% in Q1. In fact, about 60% of all time spent watching video on tablets was for content more than a half-hour long.

Tablet Viewers Have High Completion Rates

In Q3, tablet viewers and those watching on connected TVs and gaming consoles (CTV & GC) again demonstrated the highest engagement rates. For example, the playthrough rate on tablets for videos longer than 10 minutes was 39.2%, compared to 35.3% for CTV & GC, 26.8% for desktops, and 22.3% for mobile phones. For shorter content (10 minutes or less), tablets took second place behind connected TVs and gaming consoles, but remained ahead of desktops and mobile phones.

Other Findings:

  • Live video viewing for content such as sports and special events more than doubled on connected TVs and gaming consoles in Q3, likely due in part to the Olympics.
  • Desktop viewers watched live video in Q3 for an average of 39.5 minutes. That compares to 42.4 minutes for connected TV and gaming console viewers, 19.3 minutes for tablet viewers, and 11.5 minutes for mobile viewers.
The data sample used in Ooyala’s report covers the third quarter of 2012, July 1 through September 30. All data was taken from an anonymous cross-section of Ooyala’s global customer and partner database—an array of broadcasters, studios, cable operators, print publications, online media companies and consumer brands. These firms broadcast video to over 130 different countries from more than 6,000 unique domains. Nearly 200 million unique viewers watch an Ooyala-powered video every month. The data sample is not intended to represent the entire internet, or all online video viewers.-MarketingCharts

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Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Online Video Ad Views Up in October

Americans viewed nearly 11 billion video ads in October, as data from comScore Video Metrics reveals. That is a sharp spike after 3 flat months (9.6 billion in July, 9.5 billion in August and 9.4 billion in September). Video ads reached 52% of the US population in October, up 1% point. But they reached those viewers an average of 68 times in October, up significantly from an average of 60 times in September.
Overall, 183 million US internet users watched more than 37 billion online content videos in October. While the number of the number of video ad views spiked, the number of videos viewed fell by 2 billion. That mirrors research from FreeWheel, which has consistently found online video ad views to be growing faster than online video views.

According to a Forbes Insights report [download page] produced in partnership with ShareThrough, the top of objective of online video advertisers is awareness (68%), followed by branding (55%) and customer retention and loyalty (43%). Customer acquisition (26%) is less of a goal.

BrightRoll Overtakes Google as Top Ad Property

Further details from comScore indicate that for the second month running, each of the top 5 ad properties delivered more than 1 billion video ads. BrightRoll Video Network overtook Google for first place with more than 1.8 billion ads (up 38%) with Google delivering 1.7 billion (down from 1.8 billion in September). Hulu was third with 1.5 billion, followed by Liverail.com (1.2 billion) and Adap.tv (1.1 billion).

Hulu once again delivered the highest frequency of video ads to its viewers, at an average of 59 (up from 51), compared to Google sites’ average of 19 ads per viewer (down from 20).


NDN Moves Up the Video Content Property Rankings

Google Sites maintained the #1 spot among online video content properties in October, driven chiefly by video viewing on YouTube.com. Google took in 153.2 million unique viewers, up about 2% over September. Yahoo sites were second at 55.3 million, while NDN jumped into the third spot with 53.2 million, an impressive 31.5% hike. VEVO (53.1 million) and AOL (53.1 million) rounded out the top 5.

Vevo Top YouTube Partner, Again

The video music channel VEVO held its first-place ranking among YouTube partners, with 52.2 million viewers (up about 7%). Machinima climbed two slots into the #2 position with 35.1 million viewers, followed by Maker Studios (28.9 million), Warner Music (26.3 million) and Fullscreen (25.1 million).

Once again, Machinima demonstrated the highest engagement at 49 minutes per viewer—significantly down from 70 minutes in September. Vevo was second with 39 minutes per viewer, up a minute from September. VEVO streamed the highest number of videos (603 million), followed by Machinima (521 million).

Other Findings:

  • The duration of the average online content video was 6.1 minutes (down from 6.4), while the average online video ad was steady at 0.4 minutes.
  • Video ads accounted for 22.6% of all videos viewed (up from 19.3%) and 1.6% of all minutes spent (up from 1.3%).
  • Online video reached 86% of the US internet audience in October, up from 85% in September, but down from 87.7% in August.
About the Data: The Forbes Insights/Sharethrough survey tapped 136 marketing executives. 46 respondents came from companies with revenues between $500 million and $1 billion, and the rest from companies with revenues of $1 billion-plus. 59 survey respondents had titles of director and up. Roughly half described their business outlook in positive terms, and about 2 in 3 said that their media budgets were at least $1 million. The vast majority (99%) are located in the United States.-MarketingCharts

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Thursday, November 15, 2012

Turning Video into Value

While CPG marketers have not embraced digital marketing strategies as quickly as other marketers, the growth of online video has definitely drawn them into the game. In the last few years, video content has become essential for any consumer marketing campaign, and the results are hard to ignore. comScore reports that 100 million Americans watch online video daily, up 43 percent since 2010. Pew Research reports that 71 percent of online adults watch videos on a video-sharing site, such as YouTube.  CatapultRPM's annual Digital Shopper Marketing (DSM) study reports that “watching a video” is the top digital activity that shoppers engaged in at home prior to shopping.

When it comes to advertising dollars, video advertising platform YuMe found that CPG brands have led the pack, spending more on advertising than any other group. In 2012, YuMe again found CPG brands leading in online video ad spending, accounting for nearly 25 percent of all dollars spent.  In the last quarter, CPG video viewership rose sharply from Q2, according to research from 33Across and CPG consumers watched 44 percent more content. That's a lot of eyeballs, and it has been shown to pay off with increased CPG sales.

For CPG firms working with Web video, direct advertising is only part of the mix. Instructional and educational videos foster brand loyalty and help inform viewers about how to use products.

Conversational videos offer product information for consumers. Videos also help support cause marketing campaigns, like the recent Cesar Dog Food videos for therapy dogs.

How can CPG firms use video to better connect with shoppers, and how should it be handled?  Here are three easy ways to jump in.

Embedded videos
A number of software vendors, including Ooyala, thePlatform, Brightcove, and VMIX Media offer cross-device Web video solutions complete with analytics and monetization options. The ability to track unique and repeat site visitors, videos watched, time spent watching, and click-throughs to other site pages or products is invaluable to CPG firms to correlate increased revenue with online media campaigns. Hosting video on your own site also enables more robust tracking metrics for viewership, click-throughs to separate product pages, and ads served. The Pampers “A Parent Is Born” webisodes that ran on YouTube, the Pampers Village Website and on Direct TV on Demand show the value of a TV-Web crossover. For Halloween, Mars incorporated online video into its shopper marketing efforts with Walmart, using the new Jingit mobile payment and engagement platform for participants to earn cash for watching ads online.  And Pepsi Pulse uses streaming video as a dashboard for pop culture.

Video sharing
As stand-alone sites, YouTube, Vimeo, Metacafe, Blip, and Crackle make it easier to share content across mobile devices without altering or scaling mobile Web sites to fit video content. With the right tags and paid promotional slots on various landing pages on these sites, content on these platforms becomes discoverable in a way that embedding directly into a CPG Web property cannot be.

Advertising can also link viewers of other videos to your content or channel page. P&G, for example, links to its YouTube channel from its home page.

Content can also be embedded elsewhere, which means CPG sites can link to the videos and encourage embedding and sharing on forums, blogs, and other Web sites. They can even embed these videos on their own sites, like this Kimberly Clark Kotex YouTube video.

Let the crowds join in
When companies create videos for download and remixing by fans and consumers, the possibilities for viral video exposure grow exponentially. When Cadbury's 2009 Eyebrows video came out, a number of spoofs popped up. Sometimes, firms even learn from consumer-produced videos -- this Tide commercial based on a funny fan video is an example. Tracking analytics on third-party sites can require additional legwork and tends to offer a less comprehensive overview of viewership.

While YouTube offers analytics, for example, its data is far less comprehensive than reports from Brightcove.

As online video watching plays a growing role in the shopping experience and the technology to support and measure the results of video campaigns improves, the possibilities for CPG brands to successfully integrate online video into their market.-MediaPost

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Tablet Video Viewing Way Up

Tablet video continues to climb in length of viewing -- with the live viewing component a strong factor.

In the third quarter, average live tablet viewing per play was 19 minutes, with video on demand averaging around 3 minutes, according to video streaming/analytics company Ooyala.

Tablet owners spent 71% of their total tablet video viewing time watching videos 10 minutes or longer. By way of comparison, desktop long-form viewing was at 60%; with mobile at 48%; and connected TVs and gaming consoles at 94%.

Some 30% of total tablet viewing time was spent watching content over an hour long, with overall share of tablet video viewing growing 90% during the past six months. Since the start of 2012, tablet owners have been watching 54% more long-form content.


But it's not just new device tablets which are seeing big video results. Other devices -- some old, some new -- are witnessing climbing video usage, especially live video usage.

Connected TVs and gaming consoles have seen the amount of time users spent watching live video more than double in the third quarter, and desktop viewers watching live video, tune in for an average of 40 minutes.

Ooyala’s says viewer engagement with live content like sports and special events was much stronger than video-on-demand viewing times on the same devices. Ooyala’s Global Video Index report measures the anonymized viewing habits of nearly 200 million viewers in more than 130 countries every month.-MediaPost

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Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Rising Digital Video Ad Budgets Rely Less On Traditional Media Cuts

97% of more than 700 surveyed professionals from across the digital media industry report that their digital video ad spending is up this year, for an average increase of 27%, and respondents expect spending on digital video to be up another 20% in 2013, according to Digiday and Adap.tv in a November 2012 report. Interestingly, though, anticipated cuts in traditional media to fund this budget growth have not materialized as much as expected. Instead, digital video is increasingly getting its own budget line.

Across the agencies, brands, publishers, ad networks, and demand side platforms (DSPs) surveyed, the researchers found that while 34% had estimated last year that broadcast TV budgets would be cannibalized to fund digital video, only 27% say that this happened. Similarly, cable budgets were used less than anticipated (13% vs. 23%), as were print (30% vs. 36%) and outdoor (5% to 7%) budgets.

Instead, display budgets were tapped more than expected (37% vs. 33%). Also, 22% said that spending on digital video was incremental, whereas only 10% had expected that to be the case.

TV, Video Increasingly Seen Going Hand-In-Hand

More than half of respondents believe that online video should be more aligned with TV than display ads, a growth of 10% from 6 months earlier, which explains why digital video budgets more commonly came from display than from broadcast TV or cable.

In fact, more than 2 in 3 respondents to the latest survey say that video is a direct complement to TV, an opinion that is up 8% points over the April survey. Among agency respondents, 58% say they plan TV and online video ads together, and 20% expect to do so within the next 12 months. By comparison, just 6 months earlier, 48% were planning TV and online video together and 25% said they would in the following year. This suggests that those who were then expecting to plan the 2 together followed through on that commitment.

Still, there are barriers to the coordinated planning process, as more than half of agency and trading desk respondents believe that TV and digital video planning remain too siloed at their organizations.
Asked where they buy video, advertisers show a rapid take-up of DSPs, rising to 36% usage from just 11% in 2011. Use of exchanges has also markedly grown, up from 11% to 32%. But ad networks lead the pack at 81% (up from 61% in 2011). On the decline as sources of video ad buys: Direct buys (52% vs. 78%) and TV upfronts (19% vs. 44%). Trading desks are new to the survey, and 19% of advertisers currently use them.

Other Findings:

  • The percentage of publishers using sales teams to sell video advertising has dropped from 85% to 51%.
  • Correspondingly, use of ad networks has grown by 18% points to 65%, making it the leading sales mechanism for publishers.
  • 68% of brand respondents said they currently use (41%) or plan to use (27%) 3rd-party tools to guarantee audiences. That figure rises to 86% combined among agencies.
  • 65% of brands, 59% of agencies, and 83% of trading desks are using 1st-party data, and 71% find it effective.
About the Data: The survey was conducted in October 2012. 51% are agencies, 19% publishers, 11% brands, 11% ad networks, 6% DSPs, and 2% trading desks.-MarketingCharts

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Friday, November 9, 2012

7 of 10 B2B Marketers Use Online Video

Online video marketing is spreading from consumer-facing companies to business-to-business firms, with seven of ten B2B marketers now using online video as a marketing tactic. That’s up35% from last year, and the increase comes as overall money spent on content marketing in the B2B arena rises, according to a just-released study conducted by Content Marketing Institute and MarketingProfs, and sponsored by Brightcove. Videos had one of the biggest year-over-year jumps in tactics used by marketers.

Bear in mind that all of these companies have a vested interest in B2B content marketing and offer services in this arena. Nevertheless, the findings can be useful for those in the online video business, whether tech providers, production companies or other marketers. Videos were ranked 6th in effectiveness as a B2B marketing tactic, behind social media, newsletters, blogs, case studies and articles on one’s Web site, but well ahead of many other B2B tactics from podcasts to mobile apps to Webinars, according to the study of more than 1400 B2B marketing professionals. About 58% of marketers say video is an effective marketing tool.

The study also found that B2B marketers are spending one-third of their marketing budgets on content marketing, up 26% from last year. Also, about 54% plan to boost their content marketing spend into next year. Much of this attention will go to social media to distribute content, but video will play a role in those efforts.

The study is also noteworthy given that LinkedIn opened its site to video advertising last week and the vast majority of those spots will likely be of the B2B variety. Video tech providers have high hopes for LinkedIn.-MediaPost

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Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Video Boosts Mobile Ad Engagement 30%

As mobile advertising continues its rapid trajectory, more marketers are likely to weave video and rich media into their mobile spots.

That’s because data continues to prove the effectiveness of video in boosting interaction rates and engagement with mobile ads. Mobile video ad technology company Rhythm New Media released new findings this week showing that ads using its mini video player increase engagement rates by 30% or more compared to full page ads that don’t use video, according to its third quarter report.

EMarketer has said rich media and video are expected to grow quickly in mobile marketing, though off a small base. Rich media ad spend should rise 78% to $883 million in 2013, and mobile video should double to $300 million in 2013. As a whole, mobile is only 1% of all US ad spending, eMarketer noted, but rich media ads are driving the mobile ad business.

More evidence of the effectiveness of mobile video ads comes from technology platform Say Media and research firm comScore. They found that video in mobile ads increased the time spent with an ad by between 28% to 32%.  Opera Software, which has a mobile browser, has said that about two-thirds of users who click on a mobile video ad will actually complete that interaction and spend about 52 seconds with ad.-MediaPost

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Sunday, November 4, 2012

Brands Get Users Sharing with Social Video

YouTube Anchors Most Social Video



The power of social video represents an evolution in digital advertising, according to a new eMarketer report, “Social Video: The Next Wave in Digital Advertising.” Marketers are starting to move past the interruptive model of the 15- or 30-second pre-roll ad and toward a broader strategy that includes longer opt-in videos with built-in sharing capabilities. This branded content is designed to be consumed and shared on the social web, driving earned media and raising the potential for viral success.



In some cases, social sharing has resulted in ad campaigns vastly exceeding their original audience targets. A Visible Measures report showed that user-initiated, English-language social video ad views served on its network reached 1.33 billion in Q1 2012, a 77.6% increase over the previous quarter’s total of 747 million.

David Segura, CEO of social video company Giant Media, said, “The difference between this and the previous online video model, which revolved around pre-roll, is you move from looking at the media to focusing on consumer behavior … So every form of advertising becomes an advertorial that accomplishes the brand’s goal but at the same time has a realistic chance of exciting the consumer to share content.”

Most social video campaigns use YouTube, Facebook and other sharing destinations as anchor points, and provide sharing buttons for users to disseminate clips through other means, including Twitter, Google+, Pinterest, email contact lists and embed codes.

Because of its dominance in the video space, YouTube remains the leading venue for social video campaigns. The site attracted more than 150 million unique viewers in the US in August 2012, according to comScore. By comparison, Facebook, the second-most-popular US social video destination, had nearly 48 million unique video viewers that month.



Wherever marketers decide to start their campaigns, the majority of sharing activity takes place on Facebook—a natural consequence of the site’s huge user base. Nearly three-quarters of Sharethrough’s native ad shares occurred through Facebook in mid-2012, according to company data. Other venues, including Twitter, email and URL shares, accounted for less than 10% each.



One of the added benefits for marketers that seed branded content through social channels is a rich set of metrics that often exceeds what they might get from site publishers for a traditional campaign. These include video views, a breakdown of venues where the clip ran, clicks to websites, visits to Facebook, store locator usage, coupon download information and softer metrics like consumer sentiment on social channels.-eMarketer

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Friday, November 2, 2012

Measuring Mobile Video Beyond Click-Throughs


Brands such as Tide, McDonald’s and Snickers are steadily incorporating mobile video into their overall initiatives to drive awareness and sales. However, marketers need to be digging deeper into the analytics around their campaigns to gauge success.

Given the immersive qualities of video on a small screen, it is not surprising that mobile video click-through and completion rates are high for the medium. Simply knowing that a consumer watched a video is not indicative of what a consumer did after the clip ended, though.

For campaigns with the goal of driving an action, ROI can be measured by looking at top level-engagement metrics like click-throughs but it's also recommend that  clients look beyond the click and go deeper into granular data like time spent and actions performed on the destination site before exiting the ad experience.

With social becoming such an important part of a brand's key performance indicators on campaigns, it's recommended that brands look beyond the "Like" and actually develop an action plan with CRM tools that can help them activate these mobile consumers who have raised their hands and clicked through to the brand's Facebook page to “Like” the brand.

Mobile measurement

Mobile video tends to be cut shorter than other video formats to best capture mobile users’ short attention spans, meaning that consumers have less time to take an action.

To dig deeper into how consumers react to these short pieces of video content, AdColony recently commissioned a study with Nielsen Co. and Ignited that looked at how consumers responded to an ad for Universal Pictures’ film “Contraband” when mobile components were thrown in with a television spot.

The combination of TV, tablet and smartphone mediums resulted in a 72 percent increase in purchase intent in consumers interested in buying tickets for the film.

The study also found a jump in brand recognition. Fifty-five percent of the consumers who only watched the TV ad remembered the ad afterwards. When the was ad shown across TV, smartphone and tablet platforms, 93 percent of consumers remembered seeing the ad, which is a 69 percent increase from the sample group of TV-only consumers.


A mobile video ad from Scion

Mobile video advertising is effective for both brand building and driving an action. It brings together the best of both worlds — an HD TV viewing experience coupled with the interactivity and actionability of online.

Leveraging mobile video for brand building is a great option because of mobile's reach and ubiquity among consumers. At the same time, mobile video is well suited for driving calls-to-action for interaction and engagement.

Multiple touch points

According to Ujjal Kohli, CEO of Rhythm NewMedia, Mountain View, CA, there are five main measurement metrics around mobile video.

Completion, engagement, context, brand lift and attribution metrics are all important.

Completion and engagement metrics include click-through rate but also pull in other factors including completion rate, frequency distribution and time spent inside an ad unit.

Context metrics answer the question, “How premium is the context around which the ad is running?” Context is key to developing relevant mobile advertising for consumers and can be particularly important for high-class brand advertisers.

Brand lift metrics measure factors such as brand recall and preference.

The last type of metric — attribution — measures purchase rates that can be tied directly to an ad. Depending on the brand, this could arguably be the most important metric for retailers and brands that want to tie a mobile video directly to sales.

Therefore, it is key to keep calls-to-action prominent and clear on the ad units.


Victoria's Secret recently used mobile video to drive in-store traffic and online sales

According to research from Rhythm, mobile has a leg up over online as far as completion rates go. The company claims that its mobile video ad unit average an 89 percent completion rate compared to a 68 percent completion rate from online units.

Additionally, tablets are playing a major role in how consumers swap out their TV sets to watch digital video, which has implications for how brands allocate their marketing budgets.

Per Rhythm’s newest report from the second quarter of 2012, 58 percent of tablet users watched videos and shows more than once a week on their devices. Eight percent of consumers said that they watched video once a week on their devices, and 22 percent of users watched videos less than once a month on their devices.

While traditional TV advertising is limited to pure branding, interactive mobile video ads can deliver branding, consumer engagement and sales.

Tracking users

According to Michael Burke, cofounder and president of adtivity by appssavvy, New York, brands need to track a user’s every move inside a mobile video ad to get a grip on how campaigns are performing.

“We are breaking up video views by the second to see how many people view it in its entirety, to how many dropped off every second along the way,” Mr. Burke said.

“In looking at these metrics, advertisers can understand which audiences are watching the longest as well as what people are doing when they are most likely to complete the video,” he said.

Additionally, timing is critical to find a way to incorporate a mobile ad in a way that is not intrusive. Therefore, placing a video around contextual content can help marketers drive ROI on their campaigns.

“With mobile it is key that video is not interrupting the experience, but rather complementing it,” Mr. Burke said.

“The call-to-action, such as add to Passbook or calendar, find a movie time or register for an event are all possibilities if they are presented at the time that someone is in the mindset to complete such an activity,” he said. -Lauren Johnson, Mobile Marketer

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Wednesday, October 31, 2012

39 Billion Online Videos Watched-September 2012


According to the latest data from comScore, U.S. Internet users watched 39 billion online content videos in September. That’s up a bit from the 37.7 billion video views the company reported in August, though the total number of unique viewers dipped to around 181.5 million from 188 million in the previous month. In total, comScore reports, 85 percent of U.S. Internet users viewed online video last month (down from 87.3 percent in August) and the average length of these videos was about 6.4 minutes (down from 6.7 minutes in the previous month).

As usual, Google played host to the most popular video sites, including YouTube. Last month, Google’s video sites had just over 150 million unique visitors who watched a total of over 13.1 billion videos. The average user watched 419 minutes of video on the site. Obviously, none of the other video services can compete with this. Yahoo came in second last month, just like in August, with 57.4 million unique viewers. While Microsoft came in at No. 3 last month, though, the company’s video properties took a bit of a tumble in September and fell to No. 9. Instead, our parent company AOL came in at No. 3 with a total of 53.8 million viewers. Other online video outfits that gained users last month were VEVO, Grab Media, NDN and Amazon, though the number of total videos played on these sites was down, as well.

Facebook, which only recently became a major force in the online video market, saw a dip in total user numbers and total videos played on the site, as well as a rather substantial decrease in average engagement from 16.1 minutes per user in August to 13.6 in September.



As for online video ads: U.S. Internet users watched 9.4 billion video ads last month, the majority of which were served by Google (1.76 billion), BrightRoll (1.35 billion) and Hulu (1.17 billion).



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Friday, October 26, 2012

Online Video Improves Consumer Confidence, Converts Sales

Video Turns Online Shoppers Into Buyers

Strategies include incorporating user-generated and product page videos

The apparel and accessories category is one of the fastest-growing segments in the retail ecommerce industry, according to a new eMarketer report, “Online Apparel Shopping: How Video Boosts Shopper Confidence and Drives Sales.” eMarketer estimates online category sales will grow 20% in 2012, outpacing the 15.4% growth rate for retail ecommerce in general, with total online apparel and accessories sales reaching $41 billion.



In this growing retail category, video has emerged as a promising platform for apparel marketers looking to build online shopper confidence. Online video adds an element of “touch and feel,” helping mitigate shoppers’ fears that once their purchase is delivered, it may not be what they had in mind.

March 2012 data (not apparel-specific) from retail consultancy the e-tailing group and online video technology company Invodo found that more than half of internet users surveyed believed that online product videos helped increase confidence in their purchase.



Product page and website video content is just one form of video marketing today’s apparel retailers are implementing. Other forms include content marketing and more branding-focused initiatives (like TV commercials, only optimized for the web). User-generated apparel videos are also gaining traction, and may even be promising research tools for apparel shoppers. The e-tailing group and Invodo study looked at product videos—rather than editorial-driven, content-marketing videos—as well as user-generated videos, which happen to be the type of video most consumed by online apparel shoppers.

According to a May 2012 Google and Compete apparel study, shoppers turned to consumer-generated video content even more than marketer-produced video. The study indicated that 36% of US online shoppers watched a “customer testimonial/review” video while shopping for apparel within the last six months. In addition, 29% of US online shoppers watched email marketing video content, and 26% watched consumer-generated (non-testimonial) videos.



For retailers, the real question is whether a consumer actually follows through after watching a video and makes a purchase. According to the Google and Compete survey, online shoppers who used video during the research/shopping process were more likely to spend more and buy more items than those who didn’t. The study showed that 25% of online apparel shoppers who used video for research purchased apparel more than six times in the six months prior to polling, compared to only 16% of other online apparel shoppers. Moreover, the survey found that 28% of video researchers spent more than $500 on apparel in the previous six months, compared to a slight 2% of shoppers who did not watch video.-eMarketer


The full report, “Online Apparel Shopping: How Video Boosts Shopper Confidence and Drives Sales,” also answers these key questions:
  • What role does online video play in the online apparel shopper’s path to purchase?
  • How are apparel marketers using online video to drive more purchases online?
  • What are the biggest challenges in the online video space for apparel marketers?

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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

CPG Consumers Up Online Video Viewing

Online CPG audience increased video viewership 44% in Q3 2012
Viewership of online videos in the CPG category was up sharply in Q3 2012 compared to the previous quarter, according to research from social and interest graph operator 33Across.
Based on the internet usage and social interaction habits of over a billion unique visitors worldwide to sites in the company’s interest graph, 33Across discovered that CPG category consumers watched 44% more online video in Q3, making them 1.5 times more likely to watch online video than the average web user. This presents a clear opportunity for CPG marketers, whose branding efforts are better served by online video than many other digital formats, to reach out to potential customers in a channel they are already using.

Though online video viewing overall is on the rise, viewership was not up within all categories. Video viewing among the retail audience dipped by 22% in the same period. Entertainment consumers, meanwhile, boosted video consumption slightly.



In-stream video buying platform VideoHub reported in Q2 that US online pre-roll CPG video ads had a 73.03% completion rate, slightly above the average for all industries, but a below-average 0.51% clickthrough rate. Though online shopping for CPG products is on the rise, it is still a relatively small market and CPG video ads tend to be more branding- than direct-response-oriented.



VideoHub also reported that viewers who engaged with CPG ads watched the ads for an average of nearly 46 seconds, compared with just under 21 seconds among those who watched but did not engage with the ads.-emarketer

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Monday, October 15, 2012

Top 1000 YouTube Channels [infographic]

Created by: OpenSlateStudios.com

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Wednesday, October 10, 2012

ComScore Introduces Validated Campaign Essentials for Video

ComScore has introduced validated Campaign Essentials (vCE) for Video, which measures Gross Rating Points (GRPs), demographics and behavioral profiles of audiences reached by video campaigns, as well as the extent to which video ads were actually viewable by consumers.
This new video validation technology also delivers insight on whether the video ad was actually seen by a real viewer, bringing these metrics into closer alignment with TV based on a similar “opportunity to see” standard.

This means vCE Video provides both traditional audience measurement of video ad campaigns, as well as validated measurement based on the ad’s viewability. Traditional campaign measurement includes Reach, Frequency, Gross Rating Points (GRPs), and Target Rating Points (TRPs) based on impressions. Validated video reporting metrics include validated Reach and Frequency, validated Gross Ratings Points (vGRPs) and validated Target Rating Points (vTRPs).

Other key features of comScore’s vCE Video include:
  • Reporting that’s compatible with TV campaign measurement, such as overnight reporting of audience demographics, and integrated with comScore’s new multi-platform audience data that includes TV.
  • De-duplication of audiences across media platforms, leveraging the comScore Census Network.
  • Demographics, which include not only age and gender, but also household income, household size, race, and ethnicity in the U.S.
  • Measurement of more than 70 different behavioral segments on a global basis, allowing advertisers to understand the impact of viewed impressions on segments of people with similar behaviors, such as auto, food, or travel enthusiasts.
  • The ability to combine metrics with other digital campaigns involving display and rich media to provide an unduplicated view of audiences across multiple ad formats.
  • Global and cross-geographical campaign reporting capabilities.
More than 120 advertisers and agencies and 80 publishers in 28 countries have conducted digital campaign measurement with comScore’s vCE, which received MRC accreditation in August for campaign verification. VCE Video is available on a global basis, and has the support of a broad range of leading partners, including Adap.tv, Adconion Media Group, The AOL On Network, Comcast Media 360, Innovid, LiveRail, PointRoll, Undertone, Viacom, VINDICO, and ZEDO.-SearchEngineWatch

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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Top Category Spenders on Online Video Ads

The CPG category was the leading online video ad spender on the YuMe network in Q2 2012, according to data released in September 2012 by YuMe. The vertical accounted for almost 1 in 4 dollars spent on video ads, with the health and pharma category not far behind, at 19%. Beyond these top 2 spenders, there was a significant drop-off to the next tier: retail (11%); consumer electronics (9%); telecom (8%); and financial services (8%).

CPG’s position at the top of online video ad spending is nothing new. In 2011, the category accounted for 24% of all online video ad dollars spent on the YuMe network for the year, far ahead of health and pharma (16%), while in Q1 2012, it was also the top spender (25%), edging out health and pharma (23%).

Marketers Targeted 25-54-Year-Olds, Women

Data from the YuMe report indicates that marketers had a fairly clear age bracket target in mind for their online video ads in Q2. 22% of total request for proposal (RFP) volume for the quarter was for the 25-54 group, up from 16% in Q1. By comparison, the 18-49 group accounted for 12% of the RFP volume, only slightly changed from Q1 (11%).

Marketers also showed a preference for targeting women. Females aged 25-54 made up 16% of total RFP volume. And while spending on non-gender specific campaigns accounted for 74% of RFP volume in Q2, spending on females was far larger than on males (19% vs. 7%).

Breaking down the top female demographics requested by marketers, the study finds 25-54-year-olds were the most requested group (44% share of female-targeted RFPs), followed by the 18-49 (26%), 25-49 (11%) and 35-54 (11%) groups.

It was a different story for men, though. The top male demographic requested was the 18-49 bracket (39%), with the 18-34 group in second, at 20%. The 18-34 bracket only made up 4% of requests on the female end.


Men Had Higher Average Completion Rate

Despite women being more targeted than men, it was actually men who showed the higher propensity to watch a pre-roll video ad in Q2. The average pre-roll completion rate (regardless of ad length) for men was 71%, compared to women’s 67%. This is a reversal from Q1, when women had an average completion rate of 68%, compared to men’s 62%.

The overall completion rate for pre-rolls in Q2 was 69%, only slightly up from 68% in Q1. In Q2, pre-rolls accounted for 76% of ads served, down markedly from 84% in Q1. That difference was made up by YuMe Ads, which swelled from 9% of ads served to 13%, and mobile impressions, which grew from 4% to 7%. The remaining 3% of ads served were shared among banner (1%) and connected TV (2%) – both unchanged from Q1.

Completion Rates and Ad Length Negatively Correlated

Somewhat unsurprisingly, the study shows that the longer the video ad, the less likely a viewer would complete it. The average video completion rate for 15-second ads was 76%. That dropped to 65% for 30-second ads, and 40% for ads longer than 30 seconds. Still, each of those figures was an improvement from ad completion rates in Q1.

Overall, 55% of ads served in Q2 were 30 seconds in length, with the next-highest share belonging to 15-second ads (42%). Ads longer than 30 seconds made up only 3% of the mix, though that was up from 0.7% the previous quarter.

By age, the average video completion rate was highest among persons aged 35-64 (73%), ahead of persons aged 35-54 (72%), suggesting that those aged 55-64 have a higher completion rate than their younger counterparts.-Marketing Charts

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Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Primetime TV Hours Best for Digital Video Ad Completion (Report)


Slightly greater ad reach achieved during the weekend

Compared to TV advertisers, digital video advertisers have a much smaller window of opportunity for captivating viewers. For one, consumers still average a far greater number of minutes watching TV than digital video. March 2012 data from Nielsen found US media users averaged 4 hours and 47 minutes watching TV that month vs. roughly 10 minutes of online and mobile video, respectively.

Within this shortened timeframe, advertising opportunities account for a sliver of all time spent watching digital video&mash;just 1.5% of total time spent watching online video, according to comScore.

Share of Time Spent Watching Online Video Content vs. Ads by US Online Video Viewers, March 2012 (% of total)

Fortunately for digital video marketers, a VideoHub study offered insight into the times of day and days of week advertisers could find the most success reaching and resonating with video viewers.

According to the findings from the video operating system for brand marketers, publishers and agencies, the hours of 11am to 6pm each saw a slightly greater share of US digital video streams across the VideoHub network. This was unsurprising considering that during these typical work hours, mobile and desktop devices are the primary viewing screens for most consumers.

Share of US Digital Video Streaming, by Daypart, Q4 2011 & Q1 2012 (% of total)

Though advertisers may have a greater chance of reaching digital video viewers during work hours, users were less likely to view video ads to completion during this timeframe, nor were they apt to do so during the early morning hours. VideoHub saw the greatest indices for video ad completions online and on mobile devices from 9pm to 1am, pointing to greater video ad viewing during the late evening hours, when viewers may likely be streaming longer-form content such as primetime TV shows.

US Digital Video Ad Completions, by Daypart, Q1 2012 (index*)

Just as time of day affects digital video ad completion rate, day of week affects audience reach. For those digital video marketers hoping to maximize audience reach, Friday through Sunday could prove the best days to do so. Though both online and mobile video ads followed relatively similar daily reach patterns, mobile video ads saw a slightly greater percentage of total audience reach on the weekend, with Saturday (15.5%) slightly edging out Sunday (15.3%). Even still, the overall reach for both mobile and online video ads was relatively distributed across all seven days, painting a picture of consistency by digital video viewers.

Unique Reach of US Online and Mobile Video Ads, by Day of Week, Q1 2012 (% of total)

VideoHub noted these reach percentages shifted slightly toward the beginning of the week during March 2012, attributed to TV’s relaunch of season premiers during that month.-eMarketer

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