Ten Reasons to Be Optimistic About Online in 2009
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While these are trying economic times and many people fear for their
jobs and livelihoods, all the doom and gloom coverage in the media
exacerbates the problem. In fact, the negative coverage overshadows the
positive news stories that might help alleviate our concerns.
Not everything is bad, particularly in our online industry. In fact,
as a 10-year online veteran, I'm pretty darn excited about the year
ahead. As a general rule, we marketers like to refer to challenges as
"opportunities," and I don't see the economic times any differently.
Plenty of opportunities abound, so let me give you my list and
hopefully foster a little bit more optimism out there.
- Online advertising is still trending upwards.
Though analysts are rushing to downgrade earlier forecasts, the updated
estimates still show online advertising in a growth mode. Personally,
I'm seeing interest that never existed before in online advertising
from clients and prospects. While these advertisers may be bailing on
other mediums, they're transferring dollars online -- which is
perfectly fine by me!
- Lower prices. Since publishers aren't seeing ad revenue like they thought they would, they've lowered CPMs (define). Those of us buying online media will be in a better negotiating position.
- Twitter and social media. When people in my parent's
generation have gotten excited about Facebook and Twitter, you know
that social media has hit the mainstream. Though social media
advertising has been slower to catch on, just the mere fact that social
media now attracts so many eyeballs means that marketing innovations in
the space will continue. Next year, Twitter promises to reveal its
monetization plans, which it apparently believes to be big enough to
have led to its turning down an acquisition offer by Facebook. For
selfish reasons, I'd like to see some kind of killer advertising
solution, but with Twitter addicts abounding, I can't help but wonder
if Twitter will go the route of usage plans a la cell phone text
messaging.
- Online video consumption. Growing as an alternative to TiVo,
consumers can turn to their PCs to watch their favorite television
broadcasts along with unique content. This gives advertisers new
opportunities to reach their audience and in a more captured way than
on television.
- Search. With tighter dollars, advertisers want better ROI (define)
and search marketing is still the clear winner in this category.
Experienced, proven search engine marketers who not only provide
service but also the much needed strategic thinking and analysis behind
it, will succeed.
- Niche advertising. The Web provides the perfect storm for
niche advertising: reach users with very specific subject matter when
they're highly engaged with that subject matter -- and do so in a way
that fairly easy and highly flexible to produce. Time and again, niche
Web site advertising has proven it can out-perform general online
advertising. The trickiest thing for the media planner is to find that
these sites even exist.
- Mobile. Every year the pundits predict it will be the "year
for mobile." I don't know if 2009 will be "it" either, but certainly
newer, more interactive phones like the iPhone, Blackberry Storm, and
the promise of Google's Android have kept consumers spending and
application developers busy developing. Ads already appear on these
devices and, unlike SMS ads, don't cost the user anything additional.
Get ready for more to come.
- Collaboration. When times get tough, people pull together to
get through it. In industry speak, this is known as collaboration,
something I'm a huge proponent of. Whether that's working more closely
with clients to generate ideas, or bringing together synergistic
strategic partners to create a more complete solution, I hope to see
more collaboration in 2009.
- Weeding out the riffraff. When times are good, every
Johnny-come-lately wants a piece of the pie. Shops get set up overnight
and suddenly everybody seems to be an expert. Problem is, that when the
champagne stops flowing and the scrutiny begins, those that are all
talk and no delivery won't last long in the market. I, for one, won't
be sorry to see such charlatans fail.
- The Obama factor. We're about to inaugurate the most
technologically-savvy president of all time, and hopefully what his
team learned as it leveraged the Internet to his gain will carry
forward into Barack Obama's policies. The potency of the Internet has
been solidified, despite whatever's going on in the economy.
I'll close with this thought: The only thing that's predictable is
unpredictability. Five months ago did we ever think our gas prices
would be as low as they are now? The longer we all want to dwell on the
negative instead of helping to create the positive, the longer that
will be our fate. Chin up, people! It's time to rock and roll!
Published by: Hollis Thomases
Published 30th December, 2008
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