Posts Tagged ‘Pointroll’

Another day, another new ad format. TickerBoy joins the YuMe family!

Tuesday, February 26th, 2008

Today we announced another YuMe first! We are excited to be the first video ad network to support TickerBoy ads powered by PointRoll. TickerBoy, coming on the heels of our announcement last week that we support Google’s InVideo overlay ads, joins the family of ad products supported by ACE (Adaptive Campaign Engine). TickerBoy is a basic GIF, JPG or Flash banner featured within or adjacent to the video player. When clicked, the video content pauses, and a dynamic rich media experience launches. Check it out.

 

- Molly Glover Gallatin

 

And Today’s Format is…

Wednesday, November 21st, 2007

Another day, another overlay ad format. Overlay ad formats seem to be coming out of the woodwork from names such as Videoegg, Google, Adap.tv, Brightcove and now Pointroll. The latest incarnation – Tickerboy – an AOL and Pointroll joint effort, appears 10 seconds into the video roll and dissolves 15 seconds after inactivity, leaving a branded text link. And it offers full interactivity.

Get the Flash Player to see this player.

Fully Interactive!

Phew! The world was presumably suffering from a mere fraction of an interactive ad until now.

But it’s really no one’s fault. There is no IAB or other standard for an interactive overlay or search text link format. So, in the meantime, everyone and their brother are touting a different or unique format. It seems to me, though, that inserting a daily overlay ad format of the week to an already confusing system probably doesn’t help matters.

The bottom line is that all overlay formats have a few basic parameters that still need testing or changing to optimize the user experience and increase the ROI.

With user feedback, the industry can take into consideration several elements of the ad, including: the overlay’s start time and repetition rate, when and how it enters and leaves the screen, the percentage of the video it blocks and its clickability.

But the ad platforms, systems and networks have to allow external control of these parameters if they hope to accelerate the adoption of some standards. That way, advertisers can experiment to see what works and, presumably, make things better.

It seems to me that maybe – just maybe — 10 seconds, followed by 15 seconds may not work for everyone. But that’s just me.

Jayant Kadambi

Eisner: Hollywood Writers Strike Too Soon

Monday, November 12th, 2007

Could the writer’s strike in Hollywood be misguided and premature? In a Q&A with adage.com this week, former Disney chief Michael Eisner slammed the writers for walking off the job to pursue non-existent revenue. The state of online video is still feeling its way through some growing pains as business models start to shift from teenage hi-jinks on YouTube to professional, network quality broadcasts on a growing number of branded Web sites, including abc.com and NBC’s Hulu venture.

But what really struck a chord with us at YuMe were Eisner’s comments on the pricing structure – or lack of – for that entertainment. To drive down the pricing, the audience needs to grow. And to grow the audience, you need a distribution platform. Hmmm…sounds a lot like what we do here at YuMe.

“There are no gatekeepers,” Eisner said. “You don’t have to be on iTunes, you don’t have to be on Comcast. You don’t have to be on ABC. You don’t have to get approval of anybody. And eventually, advertisers are going to see the benefit of content that’s produced in a superior way, with better emotional hinges, and those people will have a good business.”

That makes sense to us. And as the builders of that platform, we’re ready to help advertisers and content publishers to take online distribution to that next level.

Jayant Kadambi