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Conversion Associates @ Innovation Breakfast 5

March 19th, 2010 by Nick Goggans

President, Nick Goggans spoke to a tech and media audience today at the British Consulate-General Boston in Cambridge.  The discussion and presentation centered around Conversion Associates core philosophy driving the design behind the upcoming Publisher / Agency view of our Lytiks web analytics platform.

The basic thesis:
“Advertisers will pay more for performance based digital advertising models then for impression based models.  What’s holding this natural evolution back is the fact that web analytics are often misunderstood or too complex.”

More to follow, but as promised here is the deck that was given:
http://conversionassociates.com/pdf/InnovationBreakfast.pdf

To find out more from Twitter about the breakfast: #innob5

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WebInno Continues to Drive Innovation Frenzy

March 2nd, 2010 by Jeff O'Neill

What’s new? What’s hot? What’s free?

It’s these burning questions that keep the bodies coming to #WebInno and last night was no exception.

WebInno25 took over the Sonesta Hotel in Cambridge and played to a packed house – 4+ hours chock full of new technology poised for breakout.

Full disclosure: Conversion Associates was one of the presenting “Side Dishes” for last night’s event so if this post seems skewed, well, I’ll do my best to straddle the middle.

Who’s Hungry?

@Textaurant, a reservation and text scheduling platform for restaurants, is seemingly everywhere. They’re doing a great job getting the word out on this dynamite idea.

Think about this: You’re waiting in the crowded area around the maitre’d hoping your name is called soon since your legs are cramping.

How about waiting for that reservation while browsing your favorite store in a mall environment or, catching a drink at a nearby watering hole and getting texted when your table is ready? That’s a better scenario that #Textaurant is promising its early clients.

I’m already a fan.

Monetize Yourself

Well, at least that’s what @Shortbord is attempting to do.

Dave Nemeskal (@dnemeskal), Founder, explained that essentially, #Shortbord provides the architecture for individuals to present sponsorship opportunities for their social media self.

With companies clamoring to figure out social media value, #Shortbord’s unique value proposition makes it a company worth checking out.

Sage Advice

“One of the most unproductive things new founders do is talk to investors too early… I test all my ideas on the web.”

So says David Cancel, CEO of #Performable.

As is the norm, #WebInno provided a fantastic lineup of thinkers and entrepreneurial visionaries espousing the highs and lows of start-up life.

Cancel’s point was not lost on the group gathered – nor on the venture capitalists trolling the Side Dishes in the other room.

Tom Gerace, CEO of Gather, Inc., elucidated another great point: “We went digging for gold and struck oil.”

In other words, things didn’t go according to plan but their flexibility allowed them to change course and address an opportunity presented – the litmus test for all great start-ups.

Hope to see you all at the next event!

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The Future of Ad Agencies Roundup

February 26th, 2010 by Jeff O'Neill

“No longer can advertising agencies afford to rest on their creative laurels to pull dollars from CMOs.”

This according to Sean Corcoran (@SeanCor), analyst at Forrester Research, last night at #MITX’s “The Future of Ad Agencies.”

It came as no surprise that Forrester’s research indicates that agencies are struggling to find their place in the world of multi-channel digital marketing and to retain their role as a “one-stop-shop.”

According to Corcoran, a majority of CMOs – the agency’s typical client – are wary of single sourcing their marketing dollars.  Instead, they are searching for discreet solution providers – SEM/SEO specialists, communications, etc. – to provide bandwidth outside of their traditional agency relationship.

“Most CMOs don’t have confidence in their agency to provide services outside of their typical relationship,” Corcoran mentioned. And for good reason.

“Most agencies typically struggle with analytics and how to provide them to their clients,” he added.

Most interestingly, Cocoran stated that despite his urging toward his agency clients to adopt much more robust analytic infrastructures to address their clients’ demands for accountability and optimization, some are reluctant as they feel they cannot monetize that exercise. “Kind of a Catch-22 on their part,” he said.

Yet despite agency deficiencies, Corcoran was quick to note that despite CMOs’ unwillingness to provide the entire marketing pie just to one agency, they were just as reluctant to take strategic and creative elements from their primary agency and trust this deliverable to a more specialized provider – such as an interactive agency or a PR firm with diversified offerings.

Follow the Dollar

Despite all the talk of the digital realm taking over the ad world, Corcoran presented some startling numbers when it came to advertising spend.

Magazines still hold the lion’s share of ad revenues over all other channels with gross spend of roughly $29b USD – an off-putting revelation given the state of the current plight of publishers such as Reed Business Information and Conde Naste.

Television clocked in at around $26b USD.

What really got heads turning was the prediction that web ad revenues would exceed $50b USD in four short years. “By 2014, we could be seeing the web clearly dominate,” Corcoran added.

Meeting of the Minds

Following a presentation by Forrester’s Corcoran, a panel of advertising luminaries took the stage to wax candid regarding the current state of their industry, new technologies, client challenges, and their top priorities.

The following sat:

While the panel provided insight into the minds of the agency leader, one particular anecdote stood out.

Larry Weber, an internationally renowned communications genius recalled a recent brand experience that perfectly encapsulated the marriage between creative and technology.

He recounted that one recent Friday evening he received an email from Amazon indicating that the online retailer had invited him to view some online footage of his favorite author, John Updike, doing a reading of one of his novels at Harvard.

“So since I don’t have a life, I made a drink and sat down at my computer,” he said with no particular jest.

Ninety minutes later and after numerous video views, and not to mention $150 in book purchases, Larry was finally done. More important, according to Larry, was the data Amazon had now generated about his surfing and purchasing interests.

He added, “Agencies are now responsible for creating experiences for consumers, like Amazon did for me.”

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Direct Marketers Get a Metrics Lesson from Kronos

February 26th, 2010 by Jeff O'Neill

“Analytics are everything in the web world…”

So said Steve Tisa, Director of Web Strategy and Marketing Operations at Kronos, to members of the New England Direct Marketing Association during his presentation yesterday.

And while creative types might tend to disagree, Tisa made a strong case for adapting new technologies to catalyze marketing accountability and optimization.

Options

“Google Analytics does about 85% of the stuff I need to get done,” Tisa explained to the group. “Unfortunately, the 15% it can’t do is a bit of a problem.”

Citing GA’s inability to provide meaningful engagements and it’s lack of scalability, Tisa is looking for other options without having to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on highest end analytics systems.

Starting with a free system, though, was a good idea for people finally going down the path of analytics for the first time, he mentioned.

Why Do It?

According to Brian S. Chertok, Director Marketing Programs for Kronos, A/B and multivariate are simply not possible without understanding what numbers are driving success.

“Establishing a baseline for success is absolutely crucial,” he explained. “Otherwise, you’re simply throwing things online and hoping for good results.”


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Phil Sawyer in MediaPost: For Digital Publishers: Ditch the Survey and Embrace the Scientific Beauty of Web Analytics

January 28th, 2010 by Sean Hyland

Conversion Associates’ own Phil Sawyer has been published this morning in the digital edition of MediaPost.  The article bemoans the continued reliance by many advertisers on “last century’s research methods,” specifically surveys.  While Sawyer acknowledges, “Survey research, done right, is still a valuable tool for print and broadcast advertisers,” he insists that web analytics harnesses the “great advantage of the Internet” (its measurability), and is something digital advertisers must fully embrace if they are to be successful in the future.

Phillip Sawyer is an Advertising Effectiveness Consultant at Conversion Associates. Previously he was a senior vice president and Director of the Starch Advertising Research division of GfK Custom Research North America, the international advertising, marketing, and public opinion research firm. He was also the editor of Starch Tested Copy, a newsletter on advertising effectiveness, published by GfK.

Click here to read the entire article.

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Phil Sawyer in AdAge: Why Most Digital Ads Still Fail to Work

January 27th, 2010 by Sean Hyland

Phil Sawyer, resident Advertising Effectiveness Consultant here at Conversion Associates, was published today in Advertising Age. In the article, Sawyer details the flaws that still persist in digital ads despite the wealth of research done in the field. Among his seven mistakes that, research tells us, afflict so many digital ads today include:

1. They are too complex.

2. They use Flash for the sake of Flash — not for a clear purpose.

3. They are difficult, if not impossible, to read.

4. They are bereft of benefit statements.

“The problems are due to creative efforts that do not suit the medium and the refusal to employ research tools that can identify creative problems and how to fix them.”

Click here to read the entire article.

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How is Content for Free Defined?

January 5th, 2010 by Nick Goggans

Throughout the year there has been much talk surrounding media, specifically newspapers (but also television, see Time Warner v News Corp), about how they won’t be giving “free” content anymore, or that the “free” access is killing them. But what are they talking about, and how are they defining “free”?

I suppose the convention is that “free” means that the reader/viewer of content does not pay a price up front to experience the content. The issue here is that the logic doesn’t follow that this means that a) the producer loses a sale of a price of admission, or b) that the producer loses money. In fact, where there is a large concentration of readers/viewers the “free” model is at its best – see US network television over the last 50 years. But as we know, this audience size is getting steadily smaller, and funneling ever so slowly into tighter niches (e.g. the Golf Channel).

Again, I think you saw the music industry struggle with this. Because I download a Metallica song for free, did not mean I was going to buy the album for $15, and in those pre-iTunes Napster days, it may have meant that I was actually just trying to sample some songs from my dorm before buying it on Amazon (I mean really, does a 30 second sample do anything?). And of course there is the argument that the increased exposure gained by offering the recordings free has proven in some cases to generate more money in other areas – like touring (a great example is the band Radiohead, which released an album at name your price).

Indeed the publishing industry is not the music business. But, I do believe that when we consider what “free” is we need to be careful. Free for whom? If a publisher puts ads next to content, that isn’t free content because the publisher is harvesting my eyes for revenue, so you’re welcome. So, Rupert, the Wall Street Journal, because it is free in some areas, gains more readers, which means your impressions are higher, and you could charge more for advertising to the larger audience. So the question then becomes, if I charge and reduce the visitors and impressions, can I increase revenue of the lost impression value through subscription revenue? Probably not, yet, I think what becomes interesting is that by creating this Wall Street Journal paid subscriber class, you can basically create a club. This club has a higher value than those that would view free content, why?

It comes down to what the real value of online publications should be – repeat visitors and average engagement in the medium of that class. Total viewers is still interesting, but as an advertiser I want to reach a specific demographic consistently, I’m going to want highly engaged classes that have a higher likelihood of seeing my ad more. Further, proving this to an advertiser online is very easy, the Wall Street Journal using web analytics can effectively be over the shoulder of different classes of readers (based on subscription/non-subscriber, male/female, etc.)

Because of this notion of identifying deeper engagement through demographic and “readership class”, what follows may be obvious. The key shift needs to become that a publisher or a producer no longer needs a large audience to generate value to an advertiser. In fact, often a concentrated and specific audience is more valuable as the advertiser’s message is not only directed with precision and accuracy, but also in these cases of specific match of advertisement and content, ads begin to lose that “interrupt” vibe, and can, dare we say it – begin to be truly informative.

It’s no longer about finding the mass of eyes, it’s about finding critical mass of the right eyes – and having the tools to do it. The publishers and agencies that understand and execute this first will win the century. When simple performance based / lead generation models can proliferate (as you see in the pay-per-click of AdWords, or the pay-per-lead model of a site like Trip Advisor) you start to see an incredible amount of opportunity for the entire publishing industry.

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The Logical Limitation of Google Analytics

December 15th, 2009 by Nick Goggans

Two distinct modes of scientific thought: “one roughly adapted to that of perception and the imagination : the other at a remove from it”. – Claude Levi-Strauss, The Savage Mind

“Any classification is superior to chaos, and even a classification at the level of sensible properties is a step towards rational ordering”

In a recent New York Times book review of Ken Auletta’s new book, titled Googled, Columbia Law Professor Tim Wu is quoted as saying, “If Google were a person it would have all the flaws and all of the virtues of a classic Silicon Valley geek.” In other words, and perhaps to define “a classic Silicon Valley geek” (I will not use my own definitions), that this, in Auletta’s construct, is a composition of the following attitudes: brilliant, with a tendency towards being socially inept, naive and arrogant. Indeed Ken (may I add rich?).

From my perspective, as one who analyzes web data and frequently uses Google Analytics to do so, I think that this personality set – or line of thinking – has pervaded the Google Analytics product and has potential detrimental side effects to the flourishing of greater understanding of the practical use of web analytics for business or individuals. Now, before I explain this, let me state that I also believe for advanced users the tool is innovating at a strong pace (yet seems to have lost some of the classic “google-ness” – I mean it’s not as simple as it thinks it is). In classic “don’t be evil” positioning, it’s free! and it’s going to help you whether you are an individual or a enterprise. It’s fantastic, it’s easy, and you know you need it right?

Let’s stop there for a second. Why is there a need for web analytics? To answer this question, let’s take a step back and review some basic anthropology (painless), and turn to Claude Levi-Strauss, and his classic, The Savage Mind.

The Anthropological Case for Web Analytics

In a general sense we find that humans don’t do well with chaos. The first need is to create order, and language is one area where this can be studied across cultures. Early anthropologists, for example, tended to believe that the “savage/primitive” cultures reserved language for flora and fauna that possessed a form of utility, such as food, medicine, or ritual. Further study, and differing understandings of earlier data, Levi-Strauss maintains that in fact there are many examples of societies where non-functional flora and fauna are named. What this expresses is a fundamental need to classify, such that the simple need for classification itself (and the performance assigning names) is utility: the creation of order to simplify experience perhaps. Levi-Strauss explains it this way: “…animals and plants are not known as a result of their usefulness; they are deemed to be useful or interesting because they are first of all known.”

Thus, existing in the 21st century, we find ourselves extending into another environment beyond our former village/jungle/desert/city to a digital world where the equivalent “flora”, “fauna”, and “geography” – and connections and associations between – are not easily defined. This makes us unsettled, just as it would if I dropped you off in a foreign landscape where you didn’t understand the language. In a way, our extension into the digital world creates an existential wild west: where am I, and how do I relate and impress this digital environment (whether ‘I’ is a company or individual). So we turn to tools that may help to order this chaos, and find our place.

Thus, we turn to web analytics not really with a practical drive (i.e. in satisfying practical needs like “I need more sales” or “I want to be more popular”), but through an intellectual drive (“where do I exist?” within the rest of the digital world and “how I am connected to it?”).

This is where we get to the solution and the problem with Google Analytics. Google Analytics does a fantastic job at solving the intellectual problem, I know my general results, how people find me, etc. However, it seems to be failing at scaling the next level for many practitioners, that of satisfying needs.

Now, of course Google Analytics is capable of reporting practical needs through setting up goals and monitoring their performance, but this is not how most people are using it. It is this question that led to this entry, which is “Why don’t more people use the goal setting capabilities in Google Analytics?” Is it a design issue? A marketing issue? (Yes, many people do establish goals, some even use these to make decisions, but most users do not from my observation and discussions with other analytics professionals).

So what is the issue? I think it has little to do with the design or marketing – though I initially thought it was a UI issue as the goal setting could be easier and integrated within the reporting pages, but that’s another discussion.

The reason I believe that the use of goal setting features is the exception not the rule of application of Google Analytics came through the combination of Levi-Strauss and reading the book review on Auletta’s book. It is that the Google culture has created a product that allows for productivity of a certain kind of analytic mind, at the exclusion of the other the kind of mind that is more intuitive than methodical, which as we see historically accounts for probably an equal amount of major scientific discoveries as the scientific method approach, which is a modern construct (see examples of intuitive discovery process neolithic innovations to something like finding the right filament for the light bulb (carbon over cotton), which was a true study in not so much scientific method but savvy application of an understanding of what elements in the natural world to try out).

The DNA of Google Analytics Too Structured to Produce True Problem Solving At Scale

Google Analytics, by design, because its DNA is so highly scientific (being a system built by engineers for data analysts), does not easily allow (especially if it becomes industry standard) for what Levi-Strauss calls the “science of the concrete”, (and I call “messing around with tools and things you know to solve problems you’re presented”) described here: “discoveries…authorized from the starting point of a speculative organization and exploration of the sensible world in sensible terms. This science of the concrete was necessarily restricted by its essence to results other than those destined to be achieved by the exact natural sciences but it was no less scientific and its results no less genuine.”

Google Analytics is largely created to presuppose and establish a universal order and lexicon to the study of digitally created causes and effects within websites (and digital advertising). I do not believe that this application of universals can take hold before users are able to apply very basic custom analytics solutions according to their “local/personal” needs, which will have their own lexicon and will at first seen as disorder, but it is in truth the way that this data will be looked at – and is inherently a more evolutionary approach to the application of web analytics to create actions and knowledge, rather than the “intelligent design” approach that we get thrown into with Google Analytics (and trying to establish our own systems into other businesses”benchmarks”.)

Google Analytics is a full digital taxonomy applied to users who may not have a need to classify digital events to the same level of detail that the system allows by default. Users, presented to this deep system of metrics and filters then become paralyzed to use the data to solve “practical data issues”, thus resorting back to simply using the system to look at basic data on web visitors or total pageviews – not leveraging the great segmentation reports available.

As Levi-Strauss explains with language, that a wider sort of classification, does not mean a higher understanding or a more enlightened mind. For example, if I have a word for “tree” but not “oak, birch, magnolia, etc” that doesn’t mean per se that I am less off from both an intellectual or practical sense. Taking this to web analytics, I think the basic problem is too many people trying to sort out ‘what’s an oak;”, ‘what’s a birch?’, rather than ‘what’s a tree’? Or to carry the analogy into the system, instead of “I want to track .pdfs, or facebook entries, etc.” to step back, “what’s a goal?” and then define it.

Thus, in an effort to advance web analytics as a discipline (and yes even a scientific discipline), there is a need to discover more tools and applications that allow a localized/individual (meaning, answering: “What do I need to know?”) not a universal, an intuitive rather than scientific approach to acquiring, presenting, and analyzing web analytics in the short term. It is this step that we must return to, in my mind, to begin to build out to a potentially universal method and lexicon to web analytics. Another way of saying this: get your house in order before worrying about what your competitor is doing. They are probably producing data at this point that is not apples to apples to you (i.e. each company may have wildly different definitions of what a “conversion” is).

There is a need for companies and individuals to understand their digital impression. Further, more questions need to be asked upon the data being collected in websites, social networks, cell phones, etc. What we need is to start asking more questions to measure with what we have – not to assume that the great Google Analytics system becomes our default order for all digital data, which, if it were to occur would bring them even more leverage than exists with search.

Lastly, I want to leave with the notion that the best thinking and the greatest innovations occur at that marriage of intuition and the scientific approach – as seen in the examples below. For our digital age, we are at the beginning and it will be interesting.

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Present.ly Improves Internal Collaboration

December 11th, 2009 by Nick Goggans

A few months ago I was thinking about how to use Twitter for my internal corporate communications. I wanted to use it in two ways, 1) to get the “stream of corporate consciousness” by giving an outlet for employees by encouraging them to post new ideas, and 2) to gather different departments into a subject and create a live open sound board.

Now, I’ve used basecamp in the past, but something was missing there – we used it for a few weeks but it just didn’t stick, and many of my team were already on Twitter and were becoming accustomed to this type of communication or dialogue.

What I wanted to do was to have a general corporate feed, and then various groups or lists by department, even on project. As a manager this would be a great way to encourage more open discourse and also, leave an important internal record regard process and efficiency. I, not an engineer, and armed with remedial web coding prowess, was only able to hack a corporate feed together, but couldn’t – easily – get the internal system to be separated from our public Twitter initiative.

I was very concerned about doing something wrong or having something break pushing our internal communications public. Secondly, I was additionally concerned that the alignments I created were going to make it difficult for my teams to be on Twitter & working internally. So, after a few tests and excitement from the staff, we tried the hack, but for many of the reasons above it didn’t quite work and we resolved to return to using the basecamp company Wall.

And on Monday, at Web Inno 24 (twitter: @webinno #webinno24) I sawpresent.ly, and spoke briefly with its enthusiastic CEO Yoshi Maisami (twitter: @yoshi123)and damn if he didn’t make the exact program I’d been thinking up, but has made it about 1000 times beyond even my most Huxley-ian dreams. I have just begun to work with this system for a week and will be rolling it into our corporate culture in steps beginning next week.

I think this is an especially strong program where groups of people – especially those that may be in different departments (e.g. IT & design) – can discuss a project and get questions out faster. Also, it’s advantage for project management keeps a record so executives can quickly scan through projects and teams to get a very quick real time sense on what’s going on. There is something in the flow of it all that allows the utility of these short posts to be very strong here – very different than what I’m accustomed to with usual project management software, which tends to be more quantitative in reporting progress.

What I like with present.ly is the potential of putting the facts in context and getting, as best you can in written word, the tone of of the team (are the frustrated, joking with each other, etc)? As a manger I think this is a great way to spur communication and internal esprit d’corps.

I will not get into further details into all the specific features of the program (you can view here from their website), but important features I found that add to the twitter basics is the ability to attach files to posts and the url shrinking built into the updating bar, basic things that present a nice empowerment of the kind of “what are you doing” interface we’re accustomed. Present.ly is also ready to integrate into a variety of mobile apps, which is great, especially for salespeople and execs, who are constantly on the move and may need to give quick reports back to the home office while dodging traffic on Park Avenue, or running to catch that plane, or perhaps most importantly from the golf course (ed. note – I do not condone using a cell phone on golf course, in fact if you need to use it on the course, don’t tee off).

Finally, as an entrepreneur and one that takes a strong interest in innovation, specifically in user interface design it simply is one of the best programs that I’ve been working with in the last couple of months. Further, I really think the basic revenue plan has a lot of legs (and one I had thought Twitter would begin – and maybe they will) – which is that the program is free to use as a SaaS, but for those companies (or neurotics) who need higher security and want to keep communication behind the firewall, fees will apply.

I mean folks, take 5 of your colleagues spend 20 minutes to set it up and you’ll be surprised. Get it here:http://presentlyapp.com/

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Analysis: Rupert Murdoch & Eric Schmidt

December 9th, 2009 by Nick Goggans

Analysis: Rupert & Eric, Things May Be Closer than They Appear
The first bit of December has shown some interesting gestures and proclamations on the future of newspapers laid out by Rupert Murdoch and Eric Schmidt, hosted by Mr. Murdoch in his WSJ. Is it true that we are preparing for a “high noon” scenario pitting digital v. print for a battle to the end? Will Rupert tell Google to take WSJ links down, nope – that’s hard to do when Google provides so many impressions to you (and last I checked the model is on CPM) – but this is where things begin to get interesting. Where is the marriage here? They need each other, but will need to learn to manage their companies’ collective power and ego to make it work – it’s like Cary Grant and Katharine Hepburn in A Philadelphia Story.

Google needs: more inventory of quality content to place higher quality ads against. The worst slap to Google wouldn’t be prohibiting WSJ links from its search, but prohibiting its AdWords Content clients from being able to purchase display ad space in the Wall Street Journal (and its brethren).

Further, I believe that Google’s own data is pointing to what Conversion Associates sees as well: That for most advertisers, the post-click performance that comes from sites with high quality content (which does not mean, but can be a high impression website), tends to be higher than those places where the content is a feed. This is why Eric Schmidt is saying, what we have been discussing with many of our publishers that the focus of innovation (to be digital is to carry the burden of having to innovate as a business process) must be placed not on “traffic” numbers – so important in the CPM business model – rather, on discovering new performance metrics that surround visitor engagement.

News Corp needs: to discover a method to increase the price of their digital ad inventory. This process must begin with getting out of their own way, as at present Mr. Murdoch seems to retreat on the idea that the present inventory isn’t worth more today than the price News is chargeing, for example the following statement from Mr. Murdoch: “A business model that relies primarily on online advertising cannot sustain newspapers over the long term. The reason is simple arithmetic. Though online advertising is increasing, that increase is only a fraction of what is being lost with print advertising.”

Dear Rupert, please apply what you know – When the arithmetic doesn’t work in your favor, buy the teacher and change the question. So what he says is true: the prices of CPM continue to go down as more Ad Networks proliferate and struggle to produce quality ads against the quality content. Rupert, your ad serving is not worthy. Raise the price of the ads, especially to the Ad Networks – like Google – to advertise on your site. But we know Eric wouldn’t like that would he?

The second thing, identify what Mr. Schmidt clearly recognizes, and oddly Mr. Murdoch seems to be skittish about – quality of the engagement that the WSJ and other strong publications produce – and that advertisers should and will be willing to pay more than what they do currently to get this quality. The present hurdle today we believe to this whole conversation is the process of proving this lesson, this reality, to the advertisers.

We also believe that the publisher needs to become more involved as a business to innovate methods where they control and present these results rather than relying on 3rd party ad networks, like Google. Granted, we also believe that there is a model to pay for the quality content. However, based on the results we see for our clients coming out of publishers with quality content, the gold is in the hills of simply charging more for the existing advertisements.

The solution is to innovate and improve relevant ads and innovating on improving relevant ads to readers over time and for the publisher to control more of their own inventory, and finally improve thier ability to communicate results to the end client.

Oh, do you see that that last sentence of advice to publishers is exactly the Google playbook. To restate, Google over the last 6 years:

* 1. publish relevant pages for visitors,
* 2. obsess about the user’s concept of what is “relevant”,
* 3. attach this to a measurable digital event, or proclamation of user action (i.e. a click),
* 4. develop a system to allow this event to be the center of a revenue model, rather than on the number of visitors,
* 5. create a platform to show advertisers their results (AdWords reporting, later Google Analytics),
* 6. in the process of ad creation force best practices (you can’t use superlatives in adwords, and automatic split testing available),
* 7. advertisers see the value, users experience relevance,
* 8. go Scrooge McDuck (at least this step should be familiar to Mr. Murdoch).

At the end of the day, it is important to see what both men agree on: We are at the dawn of a very exciting time in journalism. The sooner the business side of the house can catch up with better models of selling advertising the quicker publishing can thrive. At the end of the day, it’s still about making pages and producing great quality to your readers, but also, expressing to advertisers that your happy readers make happy customers for them. It can be done.

Relevant Links Here:

WSJ (may need to be a subscriber)

Eric Schmidt’s 12/1 Op-ed: http://bit.ly/6AGqB4

Rupert Murdoch’s 12/8 Op-ed: http://bit.ly/717IeN

Analysis from Silicon Valley Watcher, Tom Foremski (fmr of Financial Times): http://bit.ly/4MBVGM

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