Fipp reporting:
Paid Content reports
that executives from a new generation of tech media companies, from
Twitter to Tumblr, gathered to discuss how to make money in an age of
social, mobile media.
The Advertising Week event, titled Masters of Monetisation 2.0, featured some useful insights into the business of ads and engagement.
Takeaways included:
1. In-stream, native advertising works best
What
do LinkedIn, Twitter, Buzzfeed and Tumblr all have in common? These
companies all embed sponsors in their content stream rather than laying
ads on top it. This provides a less disruptive user experience and
better engagement for advertisers. In-stream ads also scale well to
smaller screens which, for many publishers, can be a marketing black
hole. “If you can get into the feed where people are looking and not
piss them off, that works,” said BuzzFeed’s CRO, Andy Wiedlin.
2. Mobile natives are best positioned to offer mobile ads
This
may seem intuitive but consider a company like Foursquare, which uses
location tools to help people find friends and places. As CRO Steven
Rosenblatt pointed out, a lack of “desktop baggage” means Foursquare is
not tempted to try and shoehorn older ad models into the mobile
environment. A company doesn’t have to be born mobile, however, to
succeed on smaller screens. Jonathan Lister, VP of Sales at LinkedIn,
explained how the company had designed its mobile site for the “coffee
and the couch” habits of its tablet readers. But the most striking
example of a company adapting to mobile is Twitter: VP Joel Lunenfield
disclosed that the company, whose embedded ads work well on a small
screen, now makes more money from mobile than from the desktop.
3. Social communities aren’t created equal
Social
media lets advertisers reach a “community” but that’s just the
beginning of the story. Advertisers must also decide the relative value
of a given company’s network of users.
http://www.fipp.com/news/How-to-turn-social-media-into-cash
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