Video
Ads: The Polls Are Still Open
OMMA
Magazine
by Steve
Smith, November 2007 issue
The venerable pre-roll
is hardly a lame duck, but other candidates are waiting in the wings
Pre-roll ads are a little
bit like the presidential primaries. Everyone loves to criticize them and all
the attendant hoopla, yet we still use them as the principal method for
selecting our leaders. The overwhelming majority of video ad money continues to
place re-purposed TV creative online, even as columnists and trade conference
panelists
routinely upbraid the industry's failure to embrace dedicated online creative
and more consumer-friendly formats.
This season, however, there is no shortage of new ad unit ideas on the Web.
From the video overlay to in-page streams, video-player skins to hot spots
within the stream, new platforms enter the video ad market faster than, well,
candidates.
But when we polled media
buyers about which formats they favored in the race toward a better digital
video ad, they seemed as undecided as early primary voters. Still, in our read
of the electorate, buyers are open to new ideas in pursuit of two enduring values
- greater interactivity with users and less annoying intrusiveness.
Brand "Tickers" Take Off
"Giving users a choice of whether to consume the media is a better way to
go and it's garnering better results," says Alvaro Muir, associate media
director, Moxie Interactive. Muir says he eschews the awkward intrusiveness of
pre-rolls for the hot new video overlay format. Available from VideoEgg,
ScanScout and now YouTube, the units let viewers click on a superimposed brand
"ticker" that pauses the video to telescope in the sponsor's rich
media or video message. It's purely elective, because users can resume the
video experience at any time. For clients like Nestle and Puma, Muir likes that
it is "a seamless approach that doesn't force ads on you. The click-through
rates and watch-to-completion rates are phenomenal."
Overlays clearly are the
hot frontrunner this season. ScanScout CEO Doug MacFarland says he served 30
million streams in August. He has up to 50 brand advertisers, 30 publishers,
and twice as many in line. Buyers seem to like that the format plays well with
user-generated video (85 percent of ScanScout's streams) because it doesn't
hamper users sampling multiple clips. As a complement to pre-roll campaigns and
a larger strategic plan for placing branded assets, Samantha Tenicki,
supervisor of Starcom's video activation team says this elective format
"provides advertisers a more interesting way to display longer form
content." For film trailers and any brand assets that are more entertaining,
the overlay offers more space than a pre-roll and allows pay-per-view pricing.
While hot, the overlay is
not the slam-dunk successor to pre-rolls by any means. "It solves one
problem - intrusiveness, but I don't know if we solved for interactivity
yet," says Eric Bader, senior vice president and director of digital
connections at MediaVest. Will users really interrupt their video experience to
watch ads, he wonders. "It seems anathema to the way we use video."
And the overlay unit itself is really just a trigger that is most effective
only when people click into it. "It doesn't have the full attention of the
audience," says Brian Monahan, senior vice president at Interpublic's
Emerging Media Lab. To some buyers, an unclicked overlay is just another banner
ad.
While Bader like overlays,
he also favors the in-page video formats that are embedded in standard content
because of the greater contextual relevance they allow over many in-stream
opportunities.
Strip away UGC and news
clips and there is not a lot of quality video inventory, say many buyers. They
are looking for more innovative ways to get into and around the overall video
ecosystem than placing 15- and 30-second ads around clips. "If you look
for opportunities strategically, not just one-offs, you can uniquely leverage
the content that is out there," says Sarah Baehr, vice president of media
at Avenue A/Razorfish. She is interested in creating sponsored custom channels
at portals or video entertainment sites that let her integrate brands, while
giving users the content experiences they like. "How do you involve video
into being more strategic, a unique method of delivering an experience?"
she asks.
Wrapped, Streamed and Everything In
Between
"More interactivity is what we would love to see," says Tenicki, who
is encouraged by the elaborate video players that TV networks like ABC.com are
using to stream primetime episodes. Giving people games to play or letting them
multitask with your brand while leaning back for longer-form video helps solve
the interactivity problem of pre-rolls but at the same time maintains
visibility throughout the viewing experience.
Persistence of message and
share of voice continue to concern planners, especially as pre-rolls shrink in
size and become more elective in other formats. Skinning the video player is coming into favor at sites like
Heavy.com. Doritos, AT&T, movie and game studios get 100 percent share of
voice by wrapping messages and interactivity around the end-to-end video
experience. "It provides a fully branded environment for the user ... a
more interesting experience," says Tenicki.
A surprisingly effective
way to get in users' faces is running video pre-rolls while online games are
loading at the very popular casual game portals. More than video, gaming is the
most popular entertainment type online, and players are fully engaged and
registered members who can be targeted. "The click-through rate is two to
three times in-stream video ads," says Mike Shehan, CEO of SpotXchange,
where the format is becoming an unexpected hit. "And the video ad gets
viewed almost 100 percent of the time," he adds.
The Emperor Needs New Clothes
Some form of in-stream pre-roll remains the easiest and most prevalent choice
among planners. And for the foreseeable future, the pre-roll will attract most
spending, but almost everyone agrees the format needs to evolve. SpotXchange
reports that in just the last six months, both publishers and buyers seem to
have moved from 30s to 15s as a reasonable exchange of pre-roll ad time for
short content viewing. Surrounding the in-stream ad with supporting banners and
rich medium is "klunky," Bader admits, but "we've been forced to
be creative with other interactivity in order to pay off the medium."
And there is nothing wrong
with the constraints of the pre-roll if we just take up its challenges more
seriously, many argue. "Here is a chance to create something you can think
about objectively: how much brand permission do you have," says Randy
Kilgore, chief revenue officer of in-stream ad server Tremor Media. "How
entertaining and humorous can you be?"
But the real problem of the
pre-roll may be brand alignment. Every format has its place, buyers seem to
argue, but none is effective unless the ads relate more directly to the user's
state of mind, context or task at hand. For clients like Discovery Channel and
Diet Coke, executive creative director of imc2 Alan Schulman is focusing on
10-second "contextual pre-rolls" that can match up with audience
demographics or content. "You can tell just as entertaining a story in 10s
as 15s and still be contextual," he argues.
Bader
foresees lighter, less expensive spots that are more numerous and targeted.
"Instead of creating one asset you showed a thousand times, we'd love to
have a thousand creatives that we show once."
Contributing
writer Steve Smith is a longtime new-media consultant and columnist, and
current editor of Digital Media Report for MinOnline.com and Mobile Media
Report for TelecomWeb.com Contact him at popeyesmith@comcast.net.
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