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previous research would indicate — about 52 times greater.
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We All Like Rewards, But Do They Work in Marketing?
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Forget Demographics. TV Advertisers Must Focus On The ‘Persuadables’
AdExchanger |
“On TV And Video” is a column exploring opportunities and challenges in advanced TV and video. Today’s column is written by Joan FitzGerald, founder at Data ImpacX. Major media companies are taking new steps to include sales response performance metrics in their commitments to advertisers. But, TV ad sellers: beware. Most research on sales response… Continue reading »
The post Forget Demographics. TV Advertisers Must Focus On The ‘Persuadables’ appeared first on AdExchanger.
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From Fewer Ads to Its First Livestream, NBC Shakes Up Its Winter Olympics Opening Ceremony
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The Rundown: Vice is a headwind for digital media hopefuls
In this week’s Rundown: Distributed media still isn’t pulling in big bucks for publishers, and why Vice Media’s revenue woes could be a setback for digital media hopefuls.
Promises, promises
Trade group Digital Content Next is out with its second Distributed Content Revenue Benchmark Report, examining revenue publishers are receiving from the third-party platforms they distribute their content to. It’ll come as no surprise that the amount is small — it works out to $1 million per publisher per year — but given the promises platforms have made to publishers this past year about improving monetization, it’s surprising how little that revenue has grown. The report also reinforces the different classes publishers find themselves in — most of the revenue shared with publishers is generated from video, which favors TV/cable companies, while legacy text publishers are left to feed on the scraps. But if you factor in the high cost of producing video, those numbers still aren’t particularly impressive. Where it all points is that publishers can’t ignore the platforms — audiences are there — but they can’t count on them for money. — Lucia Moses
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The post The Rundown: Vice is a headwind for digital media hopefuls appeared first on Digiday.
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