Archive for the 'Online Ad Revenues' Category

Published by admin on 29 Mar 2010

Is the Newspaper Industry Dying?

Here is an interesting article by Ben Parr from Mashable that discusses the Newspaper Industry’s decline in advertising revenue in the last 10 years.  Although their advertising revenue has declined each year their online advertising revenue is increasing.

We’ve known for a long time that the newspaper industry as we know it is dying. The shift from print to online has been a painful process — but just how painful has it been?

On Wednesday, the Newspaper Association of America released its estimates for advertising revenue across the newspaper industry. The numbers for 2009 were nothing short of disastrous, once again bringing up a very tough question: Can newspapers find a way to survive? Read More

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Published by admin on 11 May 2009

SMBs and Local Internet Advertising

People are turning to the search engines more and more to search for “local” service providers, ranging from cosmetic dentists to cosmetic skin care, electricians to home remodelers.

Most of us deal with companies and businesses within a few miles of where we live, especially with the current state of the economy. It’s cheaper to shop local.

Just building a website is not enough anymore to succeed online. It is now crucial for any business hoping to expand their reach to have a high Internet presence that is aimed at targeting their local customers.

Effective Local Online Advertising  involves a professionally built website, a Local Search Engine Marketing Campaign, and someone that can manage both of these efforts. Below is an interesting article on internet Ad Spending from SMBs by Melinda Gipson from Burrell Associates. 

“In the last three years, Internet spending by SMBs has nearly tripled from 4 percent of sales to 11 percent. So says the latest Borrell Associates report “Main Street Goes Interactive.” But, while the collective heft of such businesses, numbering more than 14.6 million in the U.S., has tantalized numerous locally-targeted Internet marketing services who are deluging them with offers, Borrell warns, “the SMBs in any market are less like a two-ton gorilla and more like 1,000 four-pound monkeys – difficult to chase down and impossible to corral.”

The good news: such offers have this market’s attention. The bad news, they’re much less receptive to buying banner advertising (now 54 percent of their Internet spend, but declining in share), and more amenable to search engine advertising, online directory listings and streaming video. Rather than spend more on what publishers might define as advertising, they’re upping their budgets on site design, search engine optimization and customer databases.
By the numbers, in 2008 SMBs:

•    Were responsible for $6.9 billion in locally-generated, locally targeted Internet advertising – more than half the U.S. total;
•    Smaller merchants spent less than $300/ea on Web site support, but this expenditure will triple again in just a few years, Borrell predicts.

“SMBs are collectively poised to plow billions of dollars into their own Web sites,” but they appear to be extremely results oriented and have grown leery of Internet products that are “oversold and under-perform.”

The report is chock-full of insights on what kinds of SMBs are spending more online than their peers, by category of business (hint: general merchandise stores, auto marketing and Real Estate Services together account for 70 percent of all local online ad spending.) Pure-plays like Yahoo and Google control almost half of all local interactive ad spending by SMBs, irrespective of their size. Newspaper-owned interactive units follow in rank with a 28 percent share. In 2004, newspapers’ share was 50 percent and portals hovered around 20 percent, so these marketers’ roles are nearly reversed, even as the competition for attention heats up.

As Borrell puts it, “All in all, our interactive Main Street may look quiet, but when it comes to local interactive ad spending, it’s where the action is.”

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Published by admin on 11 Dec 2008

Online ad revenues grow despite economy

The following article was posted on the Nasdaq website.  I found it very interesting.  It gives insight on the Interactive Ad industry and the challenges all types of advertising is facing due to the current state of the economy.  Although internet ads are in a better position because you are able to track performance.

“The internet advertising industry has managed to buck the slumping economy with this week’s announcement that revenues climbed to $6 billion in the third quarter of 2008.

The $5.9 billion in revenues represent an 11 percent gain over the third quarter of 2007, although the current figures are only two percent higher than they were in the second quarter of this year.

“Interactive advertising continues to be the most measurable and cost-effective way to reach consumers, and we see more and more marketers seeking to harness its power,” said Interactive Advertising Bureau President Randall Rothenburg. Still, Rothenburg also acknowledged that growth in advertising revenues had “stabilized” due to the current economic climate.

Total online advertising revenues have nearly tripled since 2000 and exponentially since such tracking began in 1996, when online advertising revenue for the entire year was reported as $267million.

David Silverman of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP also cited the economy as an ongoing challenge for any type of advertising, but suggested that internet ads are “better poised to withstand the storm” because of its “ability to combine performance-based advertising along with broad-based branding.”"

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