Archive

Archive for the ‘advertising’ Category

Economics of Newspapers

March 10th, 2010

Very interesting article written by Hal Varian, Google’s Chief Economist regarding the economics of newspapers. He mentions that online advertising represents only 5% of newspaper ad revenue due to people only spending a limited amount of time reading via the browser - 70 seconds per day. Traditional readers, those reading the print format, typically spend about 25 minutes per day drives the bulk of advertising dollars.

Hal Varian says newspapers need to “experiment, experiment, experiment” with the new platforms and online in order to try and stop the decline that has been going on since 1985.

You can read the full article on Google’s Public Policy Blog

advertising, google, newspaper

AudioDizer launches service with PhysOrg.com

January 5th, 2010

PhysOrg.com

PhysOrg.com™, a leading web-based science, research and technology news service which covers a full range of topics, is now offering AudioDizer text to speech podcasts for every article. The podcasts are available to download on PhysOrg.com (in the article menu bar) as well as on iTunes.

To learn more about the audio program please visit the “about the audio page” on PhysOrg.com.

To advertise within these articles please contact us at bizdev@audiodizer.com

About PhysOrg:

PhysOrg.com™ is a leading web-based science, research and technology news service which covers a full range of topics. These include physics, earth science, medicine, nanotechnology, electronics, space, biology, chemistry, computer sciences, engineering, mathematics and other sciences and technologies. Launched in 2004, PhysOrg’s readership has grown steadily to include 1.75 million scientists, researchers, and engineers every month. PhysOrg publishes approximately 100 quality articles every day, offering some of the most comprehensive coverage of sci-tech developments world-wide. Quancast 2009 includes PhysOrg in its list of the Global Top 2,000 Websites. PhysOrg community members enjoy access to many personalized features such as social networking, a personal home page set-up, RSS/XML feeds, article comments and ranking, the ability to save favorite articles, a daily newsletter, and other options.

AudioDizer, Podcasting, advertising, text-to-speech

HP White Papers + AudioDizer

April 30th, 2008
Comments Off

HP Logo

HP and MIT Technology Review have teamed up to use AudioDizer to create audio files for white papers. The white papers are sponsored by HP and discuss their new Blade System C-Class.

We think this is a great way to break down those long white papers and listen to it on your way into work.

Click here to listen to one of the HP white paper podcasts on MIT Technology Review.

abilify weight loss
Order Accutane Online
buy aciphex onfle
buy generic acomplia
generic actonel
buy actos online
side effects of aleve
allegra 180mg
alli weight loss drug
altace
order antibiotics no prescription
generic aricept
side effects of arimidex
buy ashwagandha
astelin azelastine
atacand
atarax 25 mg
augmentin no prescription
avandia dosage
order avapro
buy avodart
bactrim used for
benadryl allergy
benicar drug
diflucan biaxin
buspar withdrawal
cardizem cd side effects
celebrex drugs
cephalexin 500mg
cialis professional
buy cipro online
cla weightloss success
buy clarinex
claritin during pregnancy
clomid
clonidine withdrawal
online colchicine
buy coreg
buy coumadin
cozaar effects
buy creatine
crestor and hair loss
cymbalta pharmacy
depakote er 250 mg tab
diclofenac gel
differin gel
diflucan canada
diovan delivery
doxycycline 100 mg
effexor xr dosage
flagyl alcohol
generic flomax
buy glucophage in canada
cat hair loss
hangover cure
pure hoodia gordonii
lamictal and pregnancy
lamisil side effects
lasix eye surgery
side effects of levaquin
levitra
buy lexapro
Lipitor Adverse Reaction
cheap lisinopril
melatonin dosage
micardis and erectile dysfunction
mobic side affects
motrin blindness
neurontin antidepressant
Nexium Side Effect Forum
nizoral 2%
Nolvadex To Get Rid Of Gynecomastia
Omnicef length of treatment
Prescription 2b Paxil
penis extender device
cheap 37 5 phentermine
plan b pill
plavix substitute
Pravachol Sex
prednisone and benadryl
Premarin side effects other options
prevacid solutabs
prometrium increased chance of pregnancy
Propecia Propak
Depo Provera Pregnancy
side effects of prozac
Adult Reglan Side Effects
risperdal and pregnancy
rogaine hair products
seroquel overnight delivery
singulair side effects
order skelaxin
stop smoking hypnotherapy florida
side effects of strattera
stress relief games
cytomel and synthroid
topamax weight loss
toprol
Toradol for Pain
What Is the Medicine Tramadol
side effects of tricor
lamictal trileptal allergy
order ultracet
valtrex to treat urinary infection
Bad Side Effects of Viagra
voltaren opth soln
bad vytorin side effects
hoodia weight loss online
wellbutrin xr
how fast does yohimbe work
zantac 75
zantac and zetia
zithromax side effects
zoloft withdrawal
buy cheaper zovirax
Zyban And Alcohol
zyprexa zydis
Facts about Zyrtec
zyvox price

AudioDizer, HP, MIT, Technology Review, advertising, sponsor, white paper

AudioDizer Launches with The Harvard Crimson

April 23rd, 2008

The Harvard Crimson Newspaper

AudioDizer and The Harvard Crimson school newspaper have teamed up to create podcasts for every single article published by The Crimson staff writers. This will allow anyone - including students, alumni, and faculty to download the audio and listen to it on their computer or iPod.

All podcasts are available on iTunes as well as on The Crimson website under the “article tools” menu. To listen to The Harvard Crimson Podcasts on your iPod, open your iTunes player and search for “AudioDizer” or “The Harvard Crimson” in the iTunes store. All podcasts are free and will automatically be downloaded by iTunes.

To learn more about sponsorship opportunities contact Harpreet (harpreet@audiodizer.com).

About The Harvard Crimson:

The Harvard Crimson, the nation’s oldest continuously published daily college newspaper, was founded in 1873 and incorporated in 1967. The newspaper traces its history to the first issue of “The Magenta,” published January 24, 1873, and changed its name to “The Crimson” to reflect the new color of the college on May 21, 1875. The Crimson has a rich tradition of journalistic integrity and counts among its ranks of editorship some of America’s greatest journalists. The faces of Pulitzer Prize-winning Crimson editors line the walls of The Crimson. Past editors include John F. Kennedy ‘40. The name of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Class of 1904, is proudly engraved upon The Crimson’s president’s chair. One hundred and thirty-five years after its founding, having grown from a fortnightly newspaper to a daily, The Harvard Crimson continues to flourish with a strong body of undergraduate staff volunteers.

AudioDizer, Harvard, Harvard Crimson, Podcasting, advertising

AudioDizer Goes Global: Launch Podcasts for Australian based iTnews.com.au

November 4th, 2007

AudioDizer is now producing podcasts for iTnews.com.au a Haymarket Media Company based in Australia. Currently, the service is live for the Telecommunications section and the remaining sections of the website will be next.

iTnews.com.au is using AudioDizer’s premium voices. The podcasts will be available for download, streaming, as well as can be subscribed to via iTunes or through any other podcast aggregator. All podcasts can be found on iTnews website.

To listen to a sample click here.

For more information on these podcasts or for advertising contact bizdev@audiodizer.com.

AudioDizer, Podcasting, advertising, iTnews.com.au, text-to-speech

Wall Street Journal Article on declining Advertising Revenue for Newspapers

September 4th, 2007

Newspapers Lose
More Print Ads,
But Gain Online
ASSOCIATED PRESS
September 4, 2007; Page B2

NEW YORK — Advertising revenue at U.S. newspapers fell 8.6% in the second quarter, as an accelerating decline in print ads more than outweighed gains in online advertising, an industry group reported.

Print-only advertising at newspapers slumped 10.2% to $10.5 billion in the second quarter, marking the fifth consecutive quarter of decline, according to figures compiled by the Newspaper Association of America.

Online advertising at newspapers continued to grow, rising 19.3% to $795.7 million, although that was a slower rate than the 22.3% gain recorded in the first quarter, and the 35% gain in the fourth quarter of last year.

Newspapers still make up the largest category of overall advertising expenditures in the U.S., but advertisers are steadily shifting money out of print advertising to the Internet as people increasingly go online for information and entertainment.

Read the full article at The Wall Street Journal.

Wall Street Journal, advertising, revenue

WSJ.com: Video Advertising Experiments

August 14th, 2007

This article describes how Google/YouTube and advertisers are experimenting with various advertising formats and types in video.

Are Skins, Bugs or Tickers
The Holy Grail of Web Advertising?

By KEVIN J. DELANEY and EMILY STEEL
August 13, 2007; Page B1

Video Web sites have spent the past year searching for the Holy Grail of online advertising: ads that don’t annoy consumers and still fetch high prices from advertisers. Now some believe they’re beginning to figure out what works and are starting to cash in.

Sites ranging from Google Inc. to Break.com1 have been experimenting intensively with replacements for the preroll, the video ads that users are forced to watch before viewing a clip. Advertisers liked prerolls because they could use commercials already produced for TV in the spots, and Web publishers loved the high prices they commanded. But users grew annoyed by the intrusion, and Google’s YouTube and other video-sharing newcomers rose to popularity partly by ditching the format.

A BETTER SOLUTION?

See some examples of the video ads:

• Bug2 (Break.com)
• Skin 3 (Heavy’s Husky network)That left a big question mark hanging over the online-video industry, which saw huge growth in consumer usage but couldn’t point with certainty to ad formats that would pump up long-term revenue. Now, with early results from their experiments with other formats, some video sites say they’re more confident they have an answer, and some advertisers say they’re seeing good results.

The sites and advertisers are now citing success with such things as graphics that slide over the bottom of the video-viewing screen that allow them to market to users without interrupting the clip. A user can usually click on the graphic — sometimes known as overlays, bugs or tickers — to pause the video and see more information from the advertiser. Other marketers are seeing results with ad graphics that surround the video player screen, often known as player skins, especially when used in concert with video ads dropped into clips like TV commercials. And the preroll itself has been reinvented, now limited to as little as five seconds and sometimes including timers that count down the length of the commercial in order to grab consumers’ attention without turning them off.

“Two-thousand-eight is going to be the year when we’ll see video advertising grow because a lot of the experimentation will have happened this year,” says Gokul Rajaram, a Google director of product management. “People are going to start acting on the data.” Research firm eMarketer Inc. projects that U.S. spending on Internet video advertising will rise to $4.3 billion in 2011 from $410 million last year. And Google Video announced Friday that it would stop charging fees for any of its videos, planning to rely solely on ad revenue.

No one claims to have totally cracked the video-advertising code, and many sites and advertisers remain in the throes of experimentation, with mixed or disappointing results to date. Some say the industry hasn’t yet figured out how to make video ads as interactive and effective as they can be. Most big advertisers are still uncomfortable having their ads appear alongside the unfiltered videos created by amateurs on user-generated sites like YouTube. And there’s a consensus that video sites need to reach common standards for formats and how to measure ads’ effectiveness before marketers can adopt them without the endless hassles of customization.

A skin, one of a few new Web advertising formats, wraps a movie ad around a video.
Still, the early results are encouraging. Ogilvy Interactive, the digital arm of WPP Group’s Ogilvy & Mather, has found that ads connected with online videos perform about three times as well as online sponsorship ads and banner ads when it comes to a consumer’s brand recall. The branded skins on video players are one format that has worked well for Ogilvy clients including Foster’s Lager and International Business Machines Corp.

“It’s not intrusive, and it allows you to sponsor and create an association with good content,” says Maria Mandel, executive director of digital innovations at Ogilvy Interactive.

The best results have come when the agency has used skins in combination with placing 30-second spots within the clips. Ogilvy is readying an ad effort for IBM that includes a specially designed video player that has IBM skins and plays technology or business content along with IBM ads. The agency is working on placing the player on magazine and newspaper publishing sites. Brand recall and consumers’ intention to buy a product, another key measurement, are high with such ads, says Ms. Mandel. For those reasons, Ms. Mandel says many of her clients are shifting money out of traditional media into online-video ads.

Video site Heavy.com4 says skins are the ad format consumers have most consistently responded to, clicking on them for more information between 1% and 2% of the time they’re displayed. (Industry-wide, the rate is generally just a fraction of a percent with many other kinds of ads.) Heavy’s video site, which NetRatings Inc. says had 720,000 users in June, this month is starting an online-video ad network called Husky where it will sell ad skins to appear alongside videos on other publishers’ sites, such as Newgrounds.com5, which offers content such as games and cartoons.

“We have a very good format,” says Simon Assaad, Heavy Inc.’s co-chief executive. He says a single skin usually generates less ad revenue per viewer than a preroll ad, but a site can show multiple skins during each video of several minutes. As a result, the total ad revenue per video clip — in the rough range of $30 per 1,000 times it’s viewed — can be equivalent.

Meanwhile, Break.com has offered TV-commercial-like ads within videos, but another format it introduced a few months ago, which it calls a “bug,” has been generating more excitement among advertisers. Break.com had 3.8 million U.S. visitors in June, according to NetRatings.

Time Warner Inc.’s New Line Home Entertainment used bugs last month to promote the DVD release of “The Number 23″ on Break.com. Using the ad format, a graphic on the film slid onto the bottom of a video as it played; the graphic offered viewers who clicked on it more information. About 2.5% of everyone who saw the ad clicked through to learn more about the DVD release. “That’s certainly much higher than standard advertising click-through rates on the Web,” says Ian Schafer, chief executive of interactive ad agency Deep Focus Inc., which worked on the campaign for New Line.

Deep Focus is working with other clients and Web sites on similar ads, and Break.com says it’s close to selling out its bug inventory. “This has been the most effective ad unit attracting advertisers and users,” says Keith Richman, the CEO of NextPoint Inc., the parent of Break Media. “Users who frequently complain when they don’t like things haven’t complained at all.”

VideoEgg Inc., a San Francisco-based company that runs an online-video network and develops interactive-video ad technology, started experimenting with ads that went beyond the preroll format last fall. These include video spots that roll at the end of clips, tickers that resemble the headlines that stream underneath TV news programs, picture-in-picture ads and animated bugs. Right now, the picture-in-picture ads are performing the best, with click-through rates averaging 4% to 5%, says Troy Young, VideoEgg chief marketing officer.

Discovery Communications, which advertises with VideoEgg, says its online-video advertising results exceeded the company’s expectations compared with other forms of online ad placements. Discovery recently ran a campaign with VideoEgg for its TLC network’s “LA Ink” show, including ticker and video-in-video ads. A spokeswoman said the ads “performed incredibly well, garnering a click-through rate four times higher than the standard.”

Internet heavyweight Google has been experimenting with various video-ad formats on YouTube and partner sites for months, including overlays and TV-commercial-like ads of different lengths and placement. Mr. Rajaram says the best format will vary by site and content. But he says the overlay ads, which insert text or graphics like a ticker tape at the bottom of the video, are one format that is a candidate for the industry to create standards around.

Mr. Rajaram says Google is experimenting with using contextual-targeting — making the subject of the ad match the content it appears alongside — for video-related ads, though he declined to specify how that worked at Google. But some start-ups have developed technology that analyzes the audio track of clips for key words that help select ads that might be more relevant to the user, such as by showing a car ad when someone in the clip is speaking the name of a specific auto maker.

Allstate is one of the advertisers who tested different ad formats and placement on the Google Video site over the past year. One test involved running 15-second commercials in the middle of music videos, but no users clicked on the ads or dialed the 1-800 telephone number they listed. The insurance giant says music videos weren’t the right place for such ad content and vows to keep experimenting.

“We didn’t see overwhelming success,” says Lisa Cochrane, Allstate’s vice president of integrated marketing, who says the company is looking to test shorter length ads of seven or eight seconds.

Wall Street Journal, advertising, google, video, youtube

Microsoft Advertising on AudioDizer MIT Technology Review Podcasts

August 1st, 2007

Part of Microsoft’s ad campaign with MIT’s Technology Review includes an advertising message on AudioDizer’s podcast files. Microsoft is advertising their new VoIP service and is sponsoring the InfoTech channel on Technology Review. Also, what is unique about the advertising message is that it was created using text-to-speech technology - so it was very easy to produce and cost effective.

Learn more about the advertising by contacting bizdev@audiodizer.com. To listen to the advertising message go to Technology Review’s website and listen to any story in InfoTech.

AudioDizer, MIT, Microsoft, Technology Review, advertising, text-to-speech

Wall Street Journal: Traditional Media Expected to see Decline in Ad Revenue

June 13th, 2007

Ad Notes
Traditional Media Expected
To See Decline in Ad Revenue
June 13, 2007; Page B3

Radio and newspapers are expected to see declines in ad revenue this year, while network, cable TV and most magazines will see growth.

With marketers expected to continue shifting ad dollars out of traditional media and into digital alternatives, certain categories of old media will be badly hit this year, according to TNS Media Intelligence, which tracks ad spending in different media. Ad spending on newspapers is expected to fall 2.9%, on top of a 2.4% decline in 2006, while radio and business-to-business magazines are also expected to fall.

Television is a mixed picture. Spending on spot TV — ads bought on local TV stations as opposed to national networks — is expected to fall 5.5%. But network TV spending is projected to be up 1.3%, while spending on cable is seen as rising 5.9%.

Still, the fastest growth continues to be in digital. Spending on Internet display advertising is expected to account for the biggest gain in the market, growing 16% this year.

TNS doesn’t track spending on several other major forms of digital advertising, including search and “rich media” such as video, which are getting increased attention from advertisers.

AudioDizer, Wall Street Journal, advertising, newspaper, revenue

PHP Warning: session_start() [function.session-start]: open(C:\DOCUME~1\brett\LOCALS~1\Temp\php\session\sess_f08ihjsl5au65jfpf705f04293, O_RDWR) failed: Permission denied (13) in C:\Inetpub\wwwroot\AudioDizer\blog\wp-content\plugins\si-captcha-for-wordpress\si-captcha.php on line 31