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Feeds work because I choose the ones I read, and they're relevant to me. As soon as some platform starts sticking irrelevant junk in my feed, I'm packing up and leaving.
This isn't to say Obama or that dry cleaner can't find their way into my feeds -- they'll just have to do it in a more creative way. They have to create content that's useful and interesting to me.
"Letting marketers in" is an interuptive outbound tactic just like tv advertising. Marketers need to focus more on inbound tactics that help them get found.
From there I could add his feed if he has one, but more likely the plumber just wants a click to call
Fred
I only want to see his ad when I'm looking for a plumber -- and even then, I'd rather see a post on his blog about an interestong job he's done or something he's done to help folks in the geographic community he shares with me.
I am interested in something more akin to right media, an open exchange where everyone can play ball
I agree. I first started begging for ad revenue on feeds back in 2004.
Back then, we discussed the need for cookies in RSS and feeds to enable what you're talking about.
This is also about the end of the pageview and the need to measure new things.
I haven't played with Chrome yet (being a Mac user) but I sense we'll start to break down the notion of both the browser and the page. We will have feeds and searches. The feeds will often be ones we create when we follow someone or some topic. Those are spectacular opportunities for targeted and valued advertising.
Go for the attention, that idea that was bounced around a few years ago.
A measurement summit sound like a solid idea, because to be able to base an advertising model on a measurement of conversation and community, we (the content creators and the advertisers) better have a pretty iron-clad way to measure the value of these items before we start charging for them
Looking forward to see how things evolve going forward and how I can contribute.
Thanks for sharing.
I love this
The PubSub model works because the user intends to subscribe. Stuffing "hyper targeted" (geo, context, behavioral, etc) marketing into feeds I have intentionally subscribed to does nothing to capture my intent. I assure you that I was not intending to get ads from a plumber in my area simply because I have an outside.in feed.
This risks a back-lash ala FB's Beacon. Is there an opt-out? Can I filter the ad items?
Advertising people like to think that their job is hard and that they're talented for making it "work", but they ain't seen nuthin' yet...
BTW : Just thinking of an ad-based version of Alltop, where I can choose to insert best adstreams in my lifestream.
I like the facebook approach, because the ad looks look like an endorsement. If one of my trusted contacts uses one product, then I may want to discover the product, and feel inclined to buy it.
I know this quite well, since I started a French site called Les influenceurs http://www.influenceurs.net/ a few years ago, that inspired Word of Blog here. Basically it's a spreadfirefox thing where anyone can post badges, and people can copy/paste on their sites.
Filtering is done by the network, and there is a "voyeur" kind of appeal to it, because you know what your contacts are actually promoting or using.
It's a powerful feature IMHO.
time as a friend is really slim. More likely, you'll get spammed with
irrelevant ads (business ads shown to friends in school, women's clothing
ads shown to male friends, etc). It's far more effective to target people
based on their own behavior than on the behavior of their friends.
Furthermore, it's misleading to present an ad as an "endorsement" when the
friend hasn't expressly promoted the product / service to their friends,
which discourages people from sharing their interest data all together.
What's happening now on Facebook is people are opting out of the beacon
entirely because they don't want to spam friends with these deceptive
"endorsements". If Facebook flipped the model, people would be more willing
to share their activity streams and that data could be used to develop rich,
behavioral profiles for advertisers to target ads against.
Web has gone social, advertisement schemes need to leverage that, not come back to that old "spyware/engine/technological" stuff.
Since the whole point of a feed is that the user assembles its content by selecting friends/people to follow, maybe all feed-based marketing ought to be similarly opt-in.
If it's not opt in, maybe the service should build in a feedback loop -- so that the user can flag ad messages as "give me more like this" or "make this go away and never show me anything like it again."
Otherwise the ads become noise, the feeds become polluted, and users will migrate to some new service that doesn't feed them noise.
That's the standard I think we need to measure feed advertising by
So far, for example, Feedburner/RSS ads haven't done that, so that's a hopeful sign...
or, put another way, the only time google does *not* feed us noise is in the ad insertions directly based on a search query (for obvious reasons, no?)
but, i have no objection to noise - thru my many years selling advertising and targeting and profiling and media and such, i constantly reminded buyers that targeting often becomes the crutch of the lazy non-creative marketer -- a useful tool of course but a severely limiting one, by definition ruling out educating prospects about new things and things they maybe didn't know interested them. which, IMHO, is maybe the most powerful form of marketing (because it involves the thrill of novelty and true discovery)
so while ads in feeds is a perfectly OK (and inevitable) idea such advertising needs to have permissions and opt-ins and -outs just like any other medium -- and also just like any other medium, ads in feeds will be mostly noise and only occasionally signal and even more rarely, transactional
the internet is nice, but i will ditch that too if the kind of advertising pollution you are suggesting clogs the pipes, my mind, and my life .... it is not worth it to be a marketing target ... life is too rich and way too valuable to waste it consuming ads for mostly useless and unwanted stuff ...
and, you know, capitalism is really starting to suck ... New bailout planned
Government program could take hundreds of billions of dollars worth of bad debt off Wall Street's books, http://money.cnn.com/2008/09/18/news/economy/rt... ....
that includes advertising ... find a different way
the natural flow from mind to mind is how a village knows everything, even about the next village down the road, and the one after that ...
advertising is just trying to manipulate the natural flow of awareness, and is always selfish. without exception. ... it is theft of attention.
We're far from a "perfect market" for needs and solutions...but I think this investment thesis is an incredibly smart step in the right direction!
(...if you're an idealistic enough to think that commercial information can provide useful serendipity ;-)
(And btw this comes from a guy whose dad, a television producer/director, REFUSED to let me and my brother listen to commercials growing up; they were always on mute. I still mute all commercials to this day...it lets me catch up on my FEEDS ;-)
I would much prefer to blog that I want a plumber and have them reply - than to have my feeds plastered with ads for services and objects I don't want.
A interesting take is to send yourself an email with what you are looking for then see the 'relevant' google ads appear in gmail. It works surprisingly well
more like what mr. wilson is looking for
i think apps like twitter are successful precisely because they don't try and push anything at you that you don't want.
I think you've hit the nail right on the head. Personal Relevance is the key--be it in the form of a search, a dining review or new music recommendation. The simple fact is that we, as consumers, are most receptive to a product/services offering when it corresponds to an immediate need. The Yellow Pages, even despite of all it's 21st century short comings, has proven this time and time again. And, in some respects, continues to do so on a geo based level. When it comes to the web, we all know how well Google has done with search. (even despite all of their relevancy issues :) )
From a Marketers perspective, there is no doubt in my mind that the same relevance factor holds true. (Not once during any part of my Creative Communications life have i come across a brand who did NOT have a specific target they were trying to reach.) It's no coincidence that the Super Bowl consistently rakes in truck loads of ad revenue year after year. Nor is it a coincidence that the majority of those dollars come from the same players.
In the plumbers scenario and a feed on outside.in, i disagree* with Fred's logic. And in some respects, the same holds true for yours. Personally, i would find zero value seeing a plumbers listing appear sandwiched between my news "facebook feed" style (same way as i see no value with facebooks sponsors). And At the same time, i wouldn't want to jump on over to Joe Plumbers , personally biased Wordpress website either. From my perspective i personally would rather tap into my local social circles and either ask for a recommendation or search for past consumer experiences from those circles or from other users whom i share similar expectations, socioeconomic status or whatever i felt important. To me, this type of information is much more valuable than the others. And for Joe Plumber, this gives him an opportunity to create brand evangelists.
No matter how you look at it, it's a win-win scenario for all!
Seeing feedback like yours Rick not only helps to validate my current project but also serve as further inspiration in filling this void. If you're curious, you can find more info on it at http://blog.alexklaff.com or http://www.urbanupdates.tumblr.com
(* as an aside, the plumber example is a tough one. Certainly feed type promotions could very well work with other products/services. Same holds true for checking out their page and viewing past work).
The analogy with search-engine does not stop here: relevancy (be it contexual, social, etc.) is still a problem for non-sponsored news, and it is too early to include ads without that magic formula. It would be wrong to think that finding additional news to insert could help: what would be great feed addition is actions.
The best that I've heard so far (and perfectly feasible type of active interaction) is to recognise music-related status: many IM clients allow updates from iTunes, and some Facebook or Twitter users describe they mood trough musical references. Identifying those tunes, and offering a ‘Listen to this on iTunes’ link, one can easily track a recommendation-to-buying behaviour. Notice that we are not adding a feed item, but an action to an existing, legitimate item.
The same could apply easily to books — and the split of the reference money between the initial reader, the tech-solution and the feed-manager is to be discussed, but Amazon already has a great ref program. ‘Book a table’ or ‘Tell the waiter I'm coming’ could improve messages about cafés or restaurants; ‘Find an expert on LinkedIn/YellowPages’ could complement message about a question, a job opportunity or a more general problem like our hosts ‘Swimming my way out of the flat; water pipe just broke in my room.’
All those would demand an increased semantic understanding of the messages, something that can be done at any step of the micro-bloging process: it can be activated by the emitter, or the receivers' client. Do note that the recommendation are not the same, or trivial to sort out: if you are listening to a tune, you probably don't need to buy it again — unless it is on the radio; if you are not the one with the leaky pipe, you don't care for a plumber — but you might want to offer you help by using your own social-network management tool to suggest or find the best professional available to a friend busy mopping.
Also, as seen with Beacon, the most successful types of marketing will likely be the types that a user has control over. And these days, content is king. It's no longer enough to just throw ads out in front of the user - after years of being interrupted, we start tuning out. If marketers intend on serving ads for those same clients/companies, they better have some relevant content appended to them.
I really don't mind ads in my feeds, as long as I have control. I can hide the ads, I can change their positioning, and I can remove/add categories. If I am given some control, I may even interact with them.
That's coming from a number of fronts and has to happen
However Fred - there is a LOT of work to be done in the API's. I was pulling my hair out at some of them. Where i got to can be seen at http://weblivz.com
Why would someone like Facebook allow my compnay to make money off their feeds instead of them monetizing it themselves? Unless it's a killer progam and they want to partner, they'll just tell us to buzz off.
In a high level health project i worked on we were provided with several million records as a set of feeds - but the core data was on the main site. We got what we wanted - they got the hit. Everyone wins.
I can't sell you stock, but Lookery's got a location + search referrer targeting API you can use @ $0.25 per thousand profile accesses or $0.01 per profile per month on an all-you-can-eat basis. We've been matching search referrer URLs to cookies across our ad network since October last year. Now that we're at 1 billion Facebook/Myspace/other impressions a week on the ad network, the number of referrers is adding up nicely. We can often tell you the age and/or gender of the searcher, though NEVER, EVER do we have Personally Identifying Information like name, email address, etc.
can you get ads into feeds?
We don't think that anyone but the owners of the authentication mechanisms will be able to operate social advertising in the "leveraging of social graphs" sense -- and then only by combining inventory very flexibly across all parts of their own real estate. "Integrated brand campaigns" as successfully and scalably sold by Imeem and Dogster are the best example.
Social ads in feeds will not stand alone. Standalone ads in feeds will need to be targeted in other ways.
in the open for everyone to see and join in Scott
So you don't see facebook, twitter, friendfeed, outside.in, etc opening up
their feed services to third parties like lookery who can fill them
occasionally with relevent marketing messages?
From a Social Feed perspective (which may not the the correct perspective for these companies), Twitter, FF, O.in, et al, are not the Gorilla -- FB is.
Relatedly,
(1) Lookery is seeing more and more display ads selected by Keyword Retargeting,
(2) Analytics that use keyword behavior to measure the effectiveness of brand/display advertising are emergent ("Porkbellies, Wenda, porkbellies.").
The increasing marginal returns of search advertising are now doing more than taking market share from display advertising -- they are en route to becoming display advertising's operating principle.