Thursday, January 03, 2008

Pay Per Play Audio Advertising

Apparently, the latest buzz out there in audio is pay per play audio commercials. The gist of what I've read so far is that a small piece of code is put onto a blog or website and once the program is up and running (bidding is due to start next month in Feb '08) short audio ads will play automatically when a visitor comes to the page. Website owners will be paid every time the audio ad plays for one of their visitors.

Now being that I am all over audio as a great advertising medium, the idea intrigues me.

The problem is I really can't wrap my mind around how it will work.

Oh, I get the technical side to a certain extent. It's Java Code and it does it's thing when a visitor comes to the page and a script plays. I get that.

But the thing is I don't see how five second ads are going to work to move the listeners through the buying process - and if it doesn't motivate buyers, what exactly are potential advertisers paying for and hoping to achieve with this type of campaign?

People speak at a rate of about 3 words per second. That means the ads will be about 15 words on average. That is one colossal challenge! To create a complete compelling audio message that encourages action within 15 words?

It would take an amazing talent to be able to craft messages that short with any degree of effectiveness. There are few enough writers who learn the craft of creating a compelling thirty second commercial which is why listeners suffer through hackneyed, inefficient commercials! But at least with 30 seconds, brilliance and clarity are achievable. I don't know that we can really say that about 5 seconds.

Every writer I know will acknowledge that writing short is hard! Personally, I find it downright excruciating to write with a tight word count. I've done as few as 30 words professionally for a results driven piece. I don't know that I could do 15 with my sanity intact. (Not to say my sanity is exactly intact as it is, some days)

Maybe the ads have another purpose - some branding through repetition scheme? Which would have to make that a pretty complicated little code in order to ensure a listener heard the same ad enough times for it to even have a statistical chance of effectiveness.

The other thing that bothers me is the automatic nature of these ads. I don't know about you, but I hate audio that I'm not expecting on any website. Give me a play button and I'll listen if I'm interested. That is the essence of permission based advertising. I mean, even with the radio, I know if I'm going to listen I'm either going to pay a subscription fee (satellite radio) or I'm going to be hearing commercials. I know and accept that trade as part of the commerce of content. But to be subjected to an ad when I don't even know it's coming, that would irk me. Even if it is only five seconds. It wouldn't put me in a good disposition towards the site or the advertiser.

Anyway, those were my first thoughts when it came to pay per play.

Evidently there are also issues with the company (NetAudioAds) that is launching this platform. There are concerns that the advertisers they say they have lined up have denied being involved. There are concerns that many social media users have Java blockers up when they surf, so the ads won't even reach them, which puts the 100% conversion figure into immediate question.

Bah! While initially intrigued, I'm now thinking this whole thing will not be good for audio advertising at all.

The good thing is, that with all it's inherent flaws - it's not likely to be an issue for long.

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Sunday, November 11, 2007

Official Confirmation...

I have been very excited about the changes at XM105's website. The new rewards format for our Extreme Listeners is top-notch and I simply adore the survey feature and can't wait till we can start putting the online advertising features to the test.

Some have asked whether online radio gets much attention and whether it's going to be a worthwhile investment from a business perspective. Until now, I've only had my gut feelings and years of online business to go on. Now, I've found that there is indeed official confirmation of my instincts.

According to this article, a recent report put together by Media Audit revealed that 1 in 5 surfers visited their local radio websites. I thought it was interesting that more men were apt to hop online to visit a station website. Locally, I've noticed that more women tend to be the online types than men. This could be because, being an oil & logging town, many men are away for extended periods of time and don't tend to be in offices or home the way they are in urban centres.

In any case, another sign that radio is a great way to advertise...whether it's online or on the air. Don't you think?


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