Tag: ethereal-gifts

2008 Almanac Review

It’s that time of the year when I look back at my predictions for 2008 and see how well I got ‘it’ (you can read the original here):


Recession – let me start on a low note. There has been little doubt in my mind for some time that we are heading for a considerable slowdown, especially in the UK (I don’t want to get on my economic soap box, but Brown selling off our gold reserves will turn out to be a very bad move). It may not be an official recession, but a credit squeeze will result in falling house prices and consumer demand and the mass lay-offs in the City will have an equal impact). However, the good news is that means more redundant investment bankers will have time sitting at home to watch online video – and there may be considerable opportunities for them to invest in the internet TV sector, which will largely be immune from the economic setbacks. Ironically, I expect the squeeze to have more of an impact in the US, where less debt will mean less investment and a general nervousness amongst investors in riskier ventures. The European market will fare much better.

Hmm, I think I can take 9/10 for this one; only my sanguine outlook for Europe now seems off the mark.

Profitability – with the bad news out of the way, let’s be more positive. At long last, money will be made from online video; both the audience figures and the advertising demand is now of a level where sustainable businesses can be built. This is unlikely to be spectacular in the year ahead, but will point to the sector’s long term viability and potential.


2/10 I think, there were highpoints such as Hulu, but there are very few profitable services and the year ahead will remain tough.

Portal battles – there will be a concerted tussle for eyeballs as existing services try to reach critical mass; services such as Joost and Bablegum will suffer as the big boys push their portals and the UGC sites move into long form.

8/10 – traditional players have won out over upstarts and the likes of Google, NewsCorp and NBC have faired far better than companies such as Joost.

Dealmaking – will be the keyword for the year; already the market feels like .com 1999 as everyone tussles for their niche; there is great scope for some formalised systems to help the deal making (ie online open marketplace for video content and for video ads).

1/10 – this is nowhere in sight, although I personally plan to tackle this through Rights Tracker.

Google makes an impact – video ads and overlays will become an integrated part of Google’s offering in 2008, so will provide an immediate route for monetisation for many channel operators, content owners and producers. However, the Google ad model may also be in for a rough time as more and more advertisers


Hmm, not sure what happened to the original post but I’m up for 3/10 here since Google have singularly failed to monetize their service.

H.264 – driven by existing broadcasters, the quality and widespread compatibility of H.264 will gradually see more mainstream uses in the new year.

8/10 – this year has seen widespread adoption of H.264.

Long form v. short form – a realisation will dawn upon the market that these are two very different media and need to be handled and commercialised very differently.


10/10 – long form took over from short form in a serious way.

Corporate Channels – companies and organisations will start to establish their own channels and not having a corporate TV channel allied to an existing web presence will become increasingly rare.


4/10 – this remains a pipe dream and is likely to do so in the recession

WiMax Networks – already extensively in trials, the mobile companies will face very real competition as WiMax networks are rolled out in urban areas (and may provide better, cheaper bandwidth in many rural areas too).


With the development of white space networks and other similar technologies this probably deserves 4/10 for getting the technology somewhat wrong, and for being too early..

Laser projectors – this may be a somewhat premature prediction, but prototypes of mobile phones with laser projections are already appearing. This is a precursor to the day where the screen as we know it today may no longer exist and the utility of mobile devices takes a further step as you carry around a device that can hold all of your movies and TV (or can stream them) and can also project the videos onto any flat light surface, including your living room wall. However, the next step towards this will be the inclusion ofSTB technologies into flatscreens as the screen manufacturers make their play for the eyeballs in the living room.


This is all happening, albeit slowly – 6/10

The ‘All In One’ Box – to some degree we’ve already seen this appear, but expect your home set top box to do a lot more in future, covering telephony, TV, video on demand, photo and document storage and browsing and instant messaging; also expect to be able to link two or more of the above.


Again, this has become a reality in many places, but certainly not in the UK as yet – 5/10.

Overall, creditable, and probably better than any prediction city scribblers earning ten times more than I do foresaw.

Read more:
2008 Almanac Review

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And The News Is…

All of Yahoo’s services seem to be down (again) and this sent me onto the web in search of what is going on. Now, I would usually jump onto IM and ask friends around the web if they were experiencing the same problems, but, of course, Yahoo IM is down.

Online sites are suffering from news lag – they no longer provide news as fast as I’m ready to consume it and I’m getting more and more bored of the groundhog day effect of rolling news. The BBC this week repeated a story that I first heard on the radio at 6pm in the evening during their main lunchtime TV news the following day. And don’t tell me that they have a lack of resources.
Blogging and tweeting has moved the game on for news consumers and the format originated by CNN in the eighties feels more and more dated.
And I’ve finally figured out what Twitter is for..!

Read more here:
And The News Is…

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Kangaroo Bounced

The interim findings by the UK’s Competition Commission seems to indicate that the Kangaroo internet TV service proposed by the country’s three largest broadcasters will need to be severely paired down if it is to get off the ground. And rightly so.

It’s difficult to see how the service can be made less all-encompassing – perhaps by making the same content available to other portal operators.

More:
Kangaroo Bounced

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The Narrowcasting Dichotomy

Media is produced globally. Because of the cost of producing content, major brands and organisations are keen to reuse their creative messages around the world. This is why you see those cheesy overdubbed ads from Germany and those nauseating ads from the US on British TV. Once upon a time it should not have been acceptable in the UK, but it seems to becoming the norm.

Now, I remember working with creative guru TrevorBeattie when he was the creative head at TBWA and his argument was simple – ideas that travel. That is, a good idea should appeal to any consumer, of any wealth anywhere. You can take Ferrari as an example. If you’re a billionaire you covet a Ferrari and if you’re penniless and shoeless you also covet one. (Let’s not get into the moral argument for now..).

But this does not mean that you don’t have to adapt the idea to local markets and local languages. When Jif became Zif it lost major market share, when Marathon became Snickers, it fared even worse. But the idea of a bleach cleaner and peanut toffee chocolate product have global appeal.

Meantime, in mediabuyingland, media budgets are horrifyingly  local. If you advertise on a website in the UK and 10% of the viewers come from outside the UK (with an ad that’s dubbed from Swahili), then you huff and puff and demand 10% rebate on the media.

I’ve yet to hear anyone demand a rebate for producing idiotic localised content based on internationalised ideas.

So, here lies the crux. Advertisers use all kinds of science in their art, but they are stupid beyond belief. They think that impact overcomes message. This is the equivalent of an Englishman shouting at a foreigner so that they better understand his language.

We’re trying to apply Ford Model T philosophy to an affluent, Tiffany world.

Media is no different. If I have the money, why can’t I see what I want to see when I want to see it?  And why isn’t this hugely valuable to an advertiser?

The value of an audience of one is hugely underappreciated.

Continued here:
The Narrowcasting Dichotomy

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Ethereal Gifts

It’s going to be a difficult problem for Santa. In a world where content has become virtual, how do you gift video or music album ? More and more gifts are going to be made up of bits and bytes, but unless it comes in nice packaging, it really doesn’t seem like a gif at all.

Go here to see the original:
Ethereal Gifts

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