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#Tech: Programmatic ads #Adtech are changing the media $GOOD.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 4:32 PM on Monday, September 24th, 2018
  • The US$550 billion ($758.6 billion) global advertising industry is undergoing a seismic transformation from what used to be a “spray and pray” approach
  • A brand advertiser selling BMWs or Rolexes would spray a lot of ads across the media spectrum and then pray that someone watching or looking at the ad might buy the car or luxury watch — to what is known as “programmatic advertising”, where the algorithm makes sure only the person who is looking to buy the BMW or Rolex gets to see the message

IF you are looking for the best-performing tech stock this year, don’t look at the usual suspects like ­Facebook, Amazon.com, ­Apple, Netflix and Google’s parent, Alphabet — the so-called FAANG names. Up over 211% this year, The Trade Desk sits at the crossroads of advertising and technology. In some ways, it is a competitor of Facebook, Google and Amazon. But more than that, this nemesis of old media — print newspapers, radio and TV — is helping transform the whole advertising landscape, including who sees ads, and where and when they see it.

The Trade Desk is a highly automated electronic marketplace where brand owners who want to place ads and publishers or website owners who are seeking ads make deals. Essentially, its algorithms help its agency clients purchase advertising programmatically, cutting out the human element. More­over, it does not operate the arbitrage model that many ad exchanges do, like buying ad inventory and selling it to clients for more. Instead, it simply charges its clients a fee based on total ad spend.

Two years ago, The Trade Desk launched its IPO at US$18 a share. It was, at the time, barely making money and investors seemed lukewarm about its prospects, betting that internet giants such as Google, Facebook or Snap would beat anything that the upstart could do. Fast forward to today, even as Facebook and Google have seen their own ad revenue growth start to flatline, The Trade Desk has beaten profit forecasts quarter after quarter for two years now. The stock is currently trading at US$147 a share, or up over eightfold since its IPO. The Trade Desk has actually tripled since early May, just before it reported spectacular first quarter results. Jefferies analyst Brent Thill expects it to report US$68 million ($97 million) in profits this year, up 35% over last year.

The big story since the Internet boom of 2000 has been the shrinking of old media, with ad-supported small-town newspapers, big-city magazines and terrestrial TV now a shadow of their former selves having lost advertising clients and revenues. The old model was based on eyeballs, reach and circulation, which helped media owners leverage on advertising. The new media model is subscription-based, and whatever little advertising garnered is just the cream on top. Brand owners now have all the data they want and are able to precisely target their ads to just the audience they want to reach rather than the pie in the sky promised by old media firms.

Seismic shift

The US$550 billion ($758.6 billion) global advertising industry is undergoing a seismic transformation from what used to be a “spray and pray” approach — where a brand advertiser selling BMWs or Rolexes would spray a lot of ads across the media spectrum and then pray that someone, somewhere watching or looking at the ad might buy the car or luxury watch — to what is known as “programmatic advertising”, where the algorithm makes sure only the person who is looking to buy the BMW or Rolex gets to see the message.

If I regularly search for BMW dealers in my city or recently googled a price comparison for Rolex, the algorithm would push relevant ads to me. If, however, I have been searching online mainly for a second-hand Toyota, the advertiser would be wasting time, money and effort trying to sell me a BMW even though I might be living in some fancy upscale neighbourhood. Programmatic advertising basically helps cuts through the chase, avoids wastage and connects sellers with real buyers at a fraction of the cost of “spray and pray” advertising.

Ads are more targeted, though we feel we are no longer inundated by them. There are fewer newspapers and magazines. Those that have survived are thinner. There are fewer ads on TV and radio, and subscription channels such as Netflix have no advertising, although Amazon is reportedly planning an ad-supported video service to complement its ad-free Amazon Prime streaming movies and videos.

Yet total global ad spending is still growing. Research firm PQ Media estimates that global ad and marketing spending will increase 4.6% in 2019 following 5.5% growth this year, the fastest since the 2008 financial crisis. Traditional ad spending is expected to rise just 0.8% compared with an expected increase of 10.7% in digital spending ad spending. Magna Global forecasts digital ad spending will grow to US$250 billion this year, or 45% of total global ad spend.

The likes of Google and Facebook are still growing their total ad revenues at a 25% annual clip. By next year, half of all digital ad spending could be programmatic, Magna Global notes in a recent report. Brand safety concerns and anxiety over recent data scandals are not having any discernible impact on digital advertising growth, the report says. Programmatic ad spend is forecast to grow to over 57% of digital display ad transactions by 2020, from just over 40% currently.

Rise of the ‘Math Men’

Advertising used to be dominated by crazy, creative types symbolised by the fictional Don Draper from the award-winning period American TV serial Mad Men, set in the late Sixties and Seventies, which ran for eight years until mid-2015. Back then, advertising agencies were conglomerates of sorts. They produced TV commercial jingles, display print ads and also picked the media where the ads were placed. With the rise of global media-buying agencies such as Media­Com, Mindshare and Zenith, the media men got into the driving seat after the creative part of the agencies split from the media buying part two decades ago. Now, increasingly it is the “Math Men”, coders or software engineers who empower the algorithms that make most of the major decisions in the ad agencies — like how much money needs to be allocated to what media and how a brand owner can precisely target the exact demographics they want to reach.

In his recent book, Frenemies, The Epic Disruption of the Ad Business (and Everything Else), veteran media watcher Ken Auletta notes that the rise of programmatic advertising is helping coders “transform what was an instinctual art into a science”.

To be sure, the advertising industry has long used technology and data to carefully target ads. But it was not until the arrival of Google and Facebook, which not only collected a ton of very personalised data but were able to slice and dice it to maximum effect, that the advertising industry moved from being a relationship business to one that is data driven. Nowadays, it does not matter what the circulation of your newspaper is, how many households your TV station reaches or how many clicks a clickbait website gets, the algorithm already has it all figured out who gets to see the ads. While there was once an information arbitrage that media owners could presumably milk to their advantage, now there is none.

So, what exactly is programmatic advertising? Think of it as the automation of online advertising to allow the buying and selling of ad inventory electronically. “Programmatic ad buying is not just efficient, it also enables more sophisticated and carefully targeted ad campaigns,” notes Mark Mahaney, internet analyst for RBC Capital in San Francisco. Once confined to mostly display ad inventory, programmatic advertising has grown to include mobile, audio and video inventory as well. Moreover, programmatic ads once the domain of developed markets like the US and Europe are now driving ad spending in Asia, including Japan, China, Korea, Southeast Asia and India.

Here is how most of the ads we see online are delivered these days: Let’s say you surf a news website. As the site’s content starts loading on your screen, the publisher, through the use of cookies it has placed inside your device, finds that it has a lot of information stored about you. The publisher then sends the information to the ad server asking it whether there is an ad campaign available targeting someone like you. If there is none, the server seeks to match the impression programmatically, requesting responses from selected traders, ad networks or supply-side ad platforms. If the impression is not cleared, the request is sent to an open ad exchange which, in turn, sends a bid request containing information about your browser and the website you are surfing as well as the ad type to multiple bidders including traders, ad networks and demand-side platforms.

Each bidder processes the bid request, overlays it with additional user data as well as marketers’ targeting and budget rules. Each bidder’s algorithm evaluates the request, selects the ad and sends it along with the optimal bid price to the ad exchange, which selects the winning bid. The ad exchange sends the winning ads’ URL and price to the publisher’s ad server, which tells your browser which ad to show. The whole process takes up to 200 milliseconds.

Programmatic campaigns are particularly popular among finance, technology and automotive brands. Google, ­Apple, Samsung Electronics, ­Proctor & Gamble, L’Oreal, Unilever, Amazon and auto insurer Geico were among the top programmatic advertisers last year, but banks such as JPMorgan, and telco giants like ­Verizon and General Motors are pouring more of their ad dollars into programmatic advertising.

Targeted advertising

Ad tech firms like The Trade Desk are helping to enhance targeted advertising as Google, Facebook and Amazon use their massive data sets to help advertisers focus on customers with more detail. Algorithms allow ad buyers to set consumer-targeting parameters like, say, women between 25 and 35 who buy at least two pairs of shoes every three months, matching brand advertisers’ demand to a publisher’s supply at instantaneous market-clearing prices.

I recently bought a leather office chair online. Since then, I have been in­undated with ads from online furniture retailers such as Wayfair, Birch Lane as well as Amazon before I watch Youtube videos, as well as ads from home decoration firms.

Last week, ads from companies selling wallpaper suddenly started to appear each time I logged in to the New York Times website. Combining data sets with correlated behaviours and trackable purchase outcomes is what makes Google, Facebook and Amazon so important in the advertising world, and an increasing disintermediation threat to the ad industry because data analy­tics was once a key competitive advantage of media buying agencies.

If you want to understand how the global advertising industry is being transformed, look no further than WPP, the world’s largest advertising holding  firm, which earlier this year fired its long-time CEO Sir Martin Sorrell. Its stock has plunged 39% from its peak 18 months ago because investors believe ad agencies are no longer powerful middle men as they once were. Large clients are increasingly in-sourcing some of the work they used to farm out to advertising groups because they now have a lot of data themselves and are loathe to have an outside firm collect their data, slice and dice it and tell them what they need to do.

Investors are betting that with their falling margins and diminishing intermediary role, ad giants such as WPP deserve to be de-rated. Last week, WPP named Mark Read to replace Sorrell, who at 73 has gone on to set up his own tech-focused ad group, and remake the firm into a leaner, meaner outfit that can thrive in a world where advertising is increasingly programmatic.

Source: http://www.theedgemarkets.com/article/tech-programmatic-ads-are-changing-media

Programmatic Advertising Market: #Adtech Key Trends with Market size, Industry Share, Market players and Forecast to 2026 $GOOD.ca $TTD $RUBI $AT.ca $TRMR $FUEL

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:36 AM on Monday, September 17th, 2018
  • According to a new market research report published by Credence Research “Programmatic Advertising Market is set to expand with promising CAGR throughout the forecast period to cross US$ 90 Bn by 2026.
  • Overall programmatic advertising market is set to continue promising growth through the forecasted period, majorly due to significantly growing automation in online advertisement sector.

Credence Research lately added a new report titled “Programmatic Advertising Market – Industry Size, Global Trends, Growth, Opportunities, Market Share and Market Forecast – 2018 to 2026” to its repository. This latest research study investigates the Programmatic Advertising market through different segments primarily based on type, application and end-use, market participants, areas and presents country-level evaluation over the forecast period from 2018 to 2026.

Market Insights:

The overall programmatic advertising market is set to continue promising growth through the forecasted period, majorly due to significantly growing automation in online advertisement sector. More than half of European display advertisements are now traded programmatically. Programmatic advertising gives an organization easier access to advertising based on target audience data as well as reduces labor cost in overall trading process. In wake of functional benefits offered by programmatic algorithm to bring down customer acquisition costs, advertising agencies have concentrated their efforts on this automated advertising technology.

Source: http://www.tampabayreview.com/news/programmatic-advertising-market-key-trends-market-size-industry-share-market-players-forecast-2026/20988/

CLIENT FEATURE: Good Life Networks Inc.$GOOD.ca Increases Second Quarter Revenue YoY by 123% to $3.4M $TTD $RUBI $AT.ca $TRMR $FUEL

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:07 AM on Friday, September 14th, 2018

GOOD:TSX-V

  • Second-quarter revenue increased 123% to $3,435,835 from the same quarter last year
  • Reported net income of $252,712, compared to a net loss of $353,632 in the same quarter last year
  • “Our year over year revenue growth for the second quarter was exceptional and further supports our projected revenue and earnings objectives for the full fiscal year,” said Jesse Dylan, GLN President and CEO

Hub On AGORACOM

Good Life Networks Inc. is an advertising client of AGORA Internet Relations Corp.

INTERVIEW: Good Life Networks $GOOD.ca Discusses Q2 Revenues of $3.4M; 123% Increase YoY

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 3:42 PM on Friday, August 17th, 2018

#ProgrammaticAd Buying Grows Steadily; #Amazon Top Spender $GOOD.ca $TTD $RUBI $AT.ca $TRMR $FUEL

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 2:46 PM on Tuesday, August 7th, 2018
  • A recent study conducted by MediaRadar examined the state of programmatic ad buying in Q1 2018.
  • Found that three-quarters of all brands tracked placed programmatic ads during the timeframe, keeping the format on a steady growth path even with concerns about brand safety and transparency

BY Steven Wong

Additionally, MediaRadar found that, of the top 50 programmatic spenders, 94 percent were brands that were in the top 50 in 2017; these include Walmart, Microsoft and Verizon. Native programmatic ad buying is helping to drive growth, and spending on native ads placed programmatically increased by 10 percent year-over-year. Programmatic solves native’s two biggest issues, scale and an intensive sales process.

“The growth of native programmatic ads is two-fold,” MediaRadar CEO and co-founder Todd Krizelman told AList. “Native is up as a whole as more brands are finding the benefits of placing these ads, and the technology programmatic companies have to place native has also gotten better.”

Newcomers to the top 50 programmatic spenders include Progressive Insurance and Gap. Meanwhile, the top 10 companies comprised about 37 percent of the total spend for the group. Amazon ranked at the top at the top of the list, accounting for 10 percent of the total ad spend, which is 1.5x more than the second-place spender Microsoft.

The top 10 programmatic advertisers according to the MediaRadar study are:

  1. Amazon
  2. Microsoft
  3. Wayfair
  4. TaxAct
  5. Charles Schwab
  6. Weight Watchers
  7. Sprint
  8. Coors Light
  9. Geico
  10. Dell

Krizelman stated in the report that, “Despite concerns over transparency, advertisers continue to invest in programmatic. It is the preferred method for transacting media for many advertisers and it doesn’t appear to be changing.”

According to forecasts from eMarketer, $46 billion will be spent on programmatic advertising by the end of this year, with 82.5 percent of digital display ads in the US purchased through automated channels.

Source: https://www.alistdaily.com/technology/programmatic-ad-spending-grows-steadily/

#ProgrammaticAdvertising to drive digital out of home market to exceed more than $5bn by 2022 $GOOD.ca $TTD $RUBI $AT.ca $TRMR $FUEL

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 11:02 AM on Thursday, August 2nd, 2018
  • The global digital out of home (OOH) market is expected to exceed more than $5bn by 2022 at an annual rate of 10% as a result of boost in programmatic advertising.
  • According to MarketWatch, the report by Market Research Engine states that the major driving factors of global digital OOH market are increased spending on programmatic advertising, increasing focus on business intelligence and rising market competitiveness and technological Innovations in display technologies.

Taruka Srivastav-28 July 2018 08:14am

Programmatic advertising empowers digital OOH market to exceed more than US$ 5bn by 2022 / Unsplash
The global digital out of home (OOH) market is expected to exceed more than $5bn by 2022 at an annual rate of 10% as a result of boost in programmatic advertising.

According to MarketWatch, the report by Market Research Engine states that the major driving factors of global digital OOH market are increased spending on programmatic advertising, increasing focus on business intelligence and rising market competitiveness and technological Innovations in display technologies.

Meanwhile, the increasing trend of online/broadcast advertisement is the restraining factor. The opportunities for global digital OOH include the rising demand for internet of things (IoT) and emergence of the cloud platform and increasing usage of virtual and augmented reality in digital OOH advertising.

Developing equipment suitable for all weather conditions and lack of standards for interoperability between devices remain the challenging factors of global digital OOH market.

Source: https://www.thedrum.com/news/2018/07/28/programmatic-advertising-drive-digital-ooh-market-exceed-more-5bn-2022

‘BuzzFeed News’ Embraces #ProgrammaticAdvertising $GOOD.ca $TTD $RUBI $AT.ca $TRMR $FUEL

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 2:03 PM on Tuesday, July 24th, 2018

  • American digital publisher BuzzFeed has launched ‘BuzzFeed News’, a news site that moves away from the native ads that still drive a large amount of BuzzFeed’s revenue
  • BuzzFeed is serious about expanding its content offering and has taken steps to give its more critical journalism its own identity.

Last week saw the launch of ‘BuzzFeed News’ – a site where readers will now find all of the news coverage in one place, rather than in amongst quizzes and listicles.

While adopting a new domain and a new brand, news stories will still run on the main BuzzFeed site, and BuzzFeed News will include links to other BuzzFeed content.

In light of the change, BuzzFeed News is on a mission to steer away from direct-sold advertising – the only ads you’ll see on the new site are a few display units, which are monetised through open exchanges.

There won’t be any sponsored news content on the website but BuzzFeed will take full advantage of programmatic advertising, with plans to sell homepage takeovers.

BuzzFeed avoided programmatic until last year when the company introduced banner ads to its website, which were sold using third-party technology on a global basis in the effort to monetise its operated platforms more efficiently.

Most of its programmatic inventory is sold through exchanges, and BuzzFeed CEO Jonah Peretti said only about one-third of BuzzFeed’s revenue will come from non-advertising sources in 2018.

“We launched BuzzFeedNews.com to give the brand a distinct, elevated look and feel to match its world-class reporting,” said a BuzzFeed spokesman; “While the site only includes programmatic ads at launch, we’re excited to explore new partnerships as we continue to pursue numerous opportunities to unlock the enormous value of BuzzFeed News, including its robust slate of projects for TV, streaming video on demand and film.”

Source: https://performancein.com/news/2018/07/24/buzzfeed-news-embraces-programmatic-advertising/

TechBytes with Nishant Khatri, VP Product Management, PubMatic – #ProgrammaticAdvertising is continuing to become the dominant force in digital #GOOD.ca $TTD $RUBI $AT.ca $TRMR $FUEL

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 11:00 AM on Wednesday, July 18th, 2018
  • In a programmatic ecosystem, the rise of header-bidding and fraud control measures is unprecedented and attracts more eyeballs than any other ad tech solution
  • Programmatic Advertising is continuing to become the dominant force in digital

In a programmatic ecosystem, the rise of header-bidding and fraud control measures is unprecedented and attracts more eyeballs than any other ad tech solution. Owning your programmatic solutions offers incredible benefits. Last month, leading SSP for digital advertising, PubMatic, unveiled the PubMatic Cloud for Publishers and tech companies. This would enable PubMatic’s customers to achieve full transparency and achieve greater control over their programmatic monetization. Nishant Khatri, VP, Product Management, PubMatic discusses the company’s short and long-term product roadmap and few key takeaways from the recently published PubMatic Quarterly Mobile Index (QMI) Q1 2018.

Tell us about your role at PubMatic and the team and technology you handle.

I have been with PubMatic since 2015 and currently serve as VP of Product Management. I oversee the teams that focus on developing solutions for header bidding and wrappers, ad serving, quality (both ad and inventory quality), as well as mobile advertising.

What is the state of automation for Digital Advertising? What does your product roadmap for 2018-2020 look like?

Programmatic advertising is continuing to become the dominant force in digital advertising, with eMarketer estimating that four in five US digital display dollars will be spent on automated channels in 2017. Much of this growth is the result of brand ad budgets flowing to digital. The market shift has also resulted in the digital ad tech ecosystem moving towards a focus on transparency, quality, and publisher control. Additionally, we are seeing a move towards automation to further address these industry-wide concerns. In order to scale effectively, digital advertising will see a continued move towards automating critical processes to maintain compliance, improve analytics and more.

At PubMatic, we are continuing to address the changing market needs with products that help publishers and advertisers prepare for the automated and programmatic future. Our roadmap includes growth in existing technology, such as header bidding for more channels; investment in partnerships with MRC-accredited vendors to ensure ad and inventory quality; development of automated tools to improve our clients’ ease of use; and of course, innovating solutions for the future needs of digital advertising.

What are the key takeaways for advertisers from your recently published PubMatic Quarterly Mobile Index (QMI) Q1 2018?

Our most recent QMI shows that in-app and video monetization are the most important areas of opportunity for publishers and advertisers in the next 12-18 months, given that consumer interest and engagement is highest for those categories.

For in-app, our data showed quick growth in-app advertising last quarter. In reviewing PubMatic’s inventory, the US saw the largest growth with an increase of 90% YOY in Q1. The verticals that saw the most growth, up to triple-growth rates, were technology, news, and entertainment and leisure.

PubMatic expects video monetization to become more mobile-driven. Mobile video ad spend in Spain, Australia and the US, for instance, rose by double-digit rates in Q1 2018. However, given the growing number of mobile video viewers in markets like India, for example, we expect to see significant mobile video ad spend growth in more nascent markets soon.

How could marketing teams better utilize these findings to improve their customer conversions from mobile advertising?

The Q1 2018 QMI highlights the relevance mobile devices hold for marketers. In fact, mobile app impressions monetized through the PubMatic platform rose 84% YOY worldwide in Q1 2018, tripling the 28% YOY growth in mobile web volume.

Marketing teams should continue to focus on the mobile experience, particularly personalization, connectivity and protection of battery life when using the app. With the projected continued growth for mobile app use, a positive user experience will be vital to increased customer conversions.

Tell us about PubMatic Cloud?

PubMatic Cloud is a newly released customizable platform-as-a-service (PaaS) that provides publishers the benefits of a proprietary solution, out of the box. This platform was developed in response to the industry-wide trend we are seeing of publishers bringing programmatic technology in-house. In fact, AdWeek estimates 86% of brands plan to take some of their programmatic spend in-house in the coming months.

While this could result in more publisher control and auction transparency, it presents new risks of inefficient rev share models and taxing internal resources to maintain the technology. PubMatic Cloud offers publishers an alternative, quickly providing a fully-supported and DSP-integrated programmatic solution. It allows publishers full transparency, complete control of user experience and a more efficient infrastructure to improve monetization.

To what extent can digital advertising analytics further boost ad-driven sales?

Analytics is the backbone for marketing technology, especially when it comes to programmatic advertising. We believe analytics empower advertisers to make smarter decisions with real-time intelligence, visibility into campaign performance, and easy-to-use reporting that can improve return-on-ad spend (ROAS). PubMatic also makes detailed information available on the success of advertising tactics across ad formats, channels and screens. These real-time insights allow advertisers to optimize transactions and improve monetization.

How do you work with Data Science and AI/ML to improve your adtech platform?

We use data science and machine learning to develop complex algorithms to solve difficult non-linear problems. The focus is on real-time bidding related problems including recommendations for the best floor value for publishers, bid throttling, predicting traffic, and estimating unique users.

We use data science and machine learning techniques to look at large amounts of data to solve these problems. PubMatic collects the appropriate data, transforms it, researches algorithms, develops and studies prototypes and models, and then we produce solutions. There is always a trade-off to make between the research we do in developing algorithms and the production of the solutions. Finding this balance, and future-enabling our platform with these processes, allows us to provide quality experiences for our partners.

Thanks for chatting with us, Nishant.

Stay tuned for more insights on marketing technologies. To participate in our Tech Bytes program, email us at [email protected]

Source: https://martechseries.com/mts-insights/tech-bytes/techbytes-with-nishant-khatri-vp-product-management-at-pubmatic/

Good Life Networks Inc. $GOOD.ca announces integration agreement with the global digital advertising arm of Fortune 500 U.S. based Telecommunications company $TTD $RUBI $AT.ca $TRMR $FUEL

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:14 AM on Thursday, July 12th, 2018

Glnlogo black 11

  • Announced commercial partnership currently under NDA with the digital advertising arm of a triple play (Television, Mobile, Internet) Fortune 500 U.S. based Telecommunications company

VANCOUVER, July 12, 2018  – Good Life Networks Inc. (“GLN“, or the “Company“) (TSXV: GOOD) (FSE: 4G5), a Vancouver-based programmatic advertising technology company is pleased to announce a commercial partnership currently under NDA with the digital advertising arm of a triple play (Television, Mobile, Internet) Fortune 500 U.S. based Telecommunications company.

“Creating multiple revenue streams by leveraging our patent pending technology and experience are the primary focus of our growth strategy. Integrations are an important component of that strategy. Our video advertising platform delivers great returns for supply side vendors like our new telco relationship,” stated GLN CEO Jesse Dylan, “and this gives GLN access to a substantial number of multiple new advertisers, brands and revenue opportunities.”

The GLN Story
GLN harnesses the power of artificial intelligence to improve marketing return on investments for advertisers using its patent pending video advertising technology. By 2020, MAGNA, the research arm of media buying firm IPG Mediabrands, expects digital ads to make up 50 percent of all ad spending, expected to reach $237 billion this year. GLN recently closed a $9.2 million subscription financing prior to closing its qualifying transaction and trades on the TSX Venture Exchange under the stock symbol “GOOD” and The Frankfurt Stock Exchange under the stock symbol 4G5.

Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

Forward Looking Statements:
Forward-looking statements relate to future events or future performance and reflect the expectations or beliefs regarding future events of management of GLN. This information and these statements, referred to herein as “forward‐looking statements”, are not historical facts, are made as of the date of this news release and include without limitation, statements regarding discussions of future plans, estimates and forecasts and statements as to management’s expectations and intentions with respect to U.S. BASED TELECOMMUNICATIONS COMPANY. These statements generally can be identified by use of forward-looking words such as “may”, “will”, “expect”, “estimate”, “anticipate”, “intends”, “believe” or “continue” or the negative thereof or similar variations. These forward‐looking statements involve numerous risks and uncertainties and actual results might differ materially from results suggested in any forward-looking statements. Important factors that may cause actual results to vary include without limitation, risks relating to the integration with U.S. BASED TELECOMMUNICATIONS COMPANY and general economic conditions. In making the forward‐looking statements in this news release, the Company has applied several material assumptions, including without limitation that the U.S. BASED TELECOMMUNICATIONS COMPANY partnership will be successfully completed in the time expected by management and its commercial agreement with U.S. BASED TELECOMMUNICATIONS COMPANY will produce the desired results, generate the anticipated revenue and expand GLN’s global reach per management’s expectations. GLN does not assume any obligation to update the forward-looking statements, or to update the reasons why actual results could differ from those reflected in the forward looking-statements, other than as required by applicable securities laws. Additional information identifying risks and uncertainties is contained in GLN’s filings with the Canadian securities regulators, which filings are available at www.sedar.com.

SOURCE Good Life Networks Inc.

What do the latest trends in video mean for marketers? #DigitalAdvertising #Adtech $GOOD.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 11:17 AM on Friday, July 6th, 2018

By Rebecca Sentance @ Econsultancy

  • If one trend in content publishing and social media has been constant over the past few years, it’s the huge and growing popularity of online video.

Long-form video, short-form video, live video, square video, video advertising… Whatever the format, video has built up a tremendous amount of buzz in the marketing industry for its ability to engage and entertain, with brands increasingly making it a core part of their marketing strategies.

With this in mind, it’s no surprise that venture capitalist and internet expert Mary Meeker devoted several portions of her landmark Internet Trends Report this year to the trends and developments in online video.

What does Meeker’s report have to say about the state of online video in 2018, and what new opportunities does video in 2018 present for marketers? (N.B. Econsultancy runs a Video Marketing Strategy training course and subscribers can download our Online Video Best Practice Guide)

Video is mobile

There was a time not too long ago when the idea of watching online videos on a mobile device was laughable. Mobile internet speeds were too slow, videos ate up too much data, and screen sizes weren’t optimised for video viewing.

Now, however, with faster connection speeds, better support for video from mobile apps and websites, and smartphone screens that are built for multimedia, mobile video consumption has taken off.

Meeker’s report shows that video consumption on mobile has been on the rise since 2012, but really started to shoot upwards in 2015, with the global number of minutes viewed per day rising from around 14 minutes in 2015 to an estimated 35 minutes in 2018.

And nowhere is mobile video consumption growing faster than in the world’s largest internet market, China – more on that later on.

Livestreaming is emerging

Over the past few years, livestreaming has emerged as one of the most popular types of online video.

Previously the sole preserve of hobbyists and event organisers, the last three years in particular have seen live video come into its own as a widespread entertainment medium and social tool, with the launch of services like Periscope and Facebook Live, and the rise of broadcasting platforms like Twitch.

Meeker’s report illustrates the latter with a graph showing that average daily streaming hours on Twitch have increased more than fivefold between 2012 and 2017, from around three million daily views in 2012 to approximately 16 million in 2017.

China: Short-form mobile video in the driver’s seat

Since 2016, mobile internet in China has experienced a phenomenal surge in usage.

Meeker’s report cites data from the China Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, which reports that mobile data consumption in China has leapt from nine exabytes in 2016 to 25 exabytes in 2017 (an increase of 177%).

An increasing amount of that data usage is being devoted to mobile video. Data from QuestMobile shows that between 2016 and 2018, the portion of time that Chinese consumers spent interacting with mobile video on a daily basis (as a percentage of all mobile media) increased from 13% to 22%.

A breakdown of that video consumption into different formats – long-form, short-form and livestreaming – reveals that short-form video is largely responsible for the increase, with short-form video consumption rising steeply between 2017 and 2018.

Long-form video has also seen a general increase in popularity, rising from a little over 200 million daily mobile media hours in 2016 to around 375 million in 2018.

Meeker observes that China’s leading short-form video apps, Douyin (known as Tik-Tok outside of China) and Kuaishou, are both seeing phenomenal success, with huge and growing userbases and a high level of engagement.

Both enjoy somewhere in the region of 100 million daily active users, with an average of 52 minutes spent using the app every day.

Meanwhile, in a sign of things to come, spending on Chinese TV networks has been gradually declining since 2014 in favour of spending on online video platforms.

The content budgets for video platforms such as iQiyi, Youku and Tencent Video – which often produce their own, original, long-form video content – officially eclipsed those of Chinese television networks in 2017.

What do these trends mean for marketers?

Meeker’s report clearly indicates that the domination of online video content isn’t going away any time soon, with new content forms coming to the fore, and new markets emerging where video is wildly popular.

Here’s how marketers can take advantage.

Invest in mobile video content and advertising

The best way to be present in front of an audience consuming increasing amounts of video on mobile is to – you guessed it – produce mobile video.

If you’ve been considering devoting some of your content marketing budget to video content, or making a bigger push towards producing mobile-optimised video, here are some reasons why it could benefit your brand.

  • According to statistics released by Invodo, mobile shoppers are three times as likely to view a video as desktop shoppers
  • These videos get results, too – shoppers who view video are 1.81 times more likely to purchase than non-viewers, and retailers report a 40% uplift in purchases as a result of video
  • People are much more likely to view instructional videos on their smartphone. So if you’re a brand that sells DIY supplies, homeware or hardware, you can cater to this audience by producing how-to videos – as Home Depot has done to great success, racking up more 1 million monthly views on their YouTube channel (source: Tubular Labs).

Even if you don’t have the resources to devote to producing your own video content, mobile video advertising can be an equally effective way to get in front of a mobile audience.

Econsultancy’s Trend Briefing report, Putting Video in Context for 2018, found that mobile video ad revenues are set to rise from $3.5 billion in 2015 to $13.5 billion in 2020, and mobile video ad spend is set to overtake fixed (desktop) ad spend in 2018.

A 2016 whitepaper by Videology, The Mobile Impact: Driving Brand Metrics through Mobile Video Advertising, found that one CPG advertiser achieved a 125% lift in message awareness by using a mobile-focused approach for its video campaign.

Another brand, a major provider of streaming video content, reportedly achieved a 121% lift in brand awareness by targeting mobile users based on their TV viewing habits – and the mobile video campaign was twice as effective as the same campaign run on desktop.

There are more opportunities to target users with mobile video advertising than ever before, with social networks like Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and Snapchat all offering video ad placements. Programmatic advertising exchanges have also expanded their offerings to include mobile video ads, to cater to the demand for this format.

Produce or sponsor live video

Similarly, companies such as Facebook, Instagram and YouTube have responded to the newfound demand for live video by implementing ways for users to monetise their livestreams.

As with mobile video, brands and marketers can decide whether they want to directly produce live video content for their brand, or simply monetise other creators’ live videos with advertising or sponsorships.

If you’re thinking of producing your own live video, have a read of some of our case studies below to learn how other brands have found success – or check out our seven helpful tips for livestreaming.

If you’d rather put advertising budget towards monetising someone else’s video, there are a couple of options for doing so. Brands can sponsor event livestreams – such as live concerts, or gaming competitions – on platforms like Twitch, YouTube, and even Tumblr.

Influencer livestreaming is also on the rise, as influencer marketing – which is in high demand amongst brands as a means of engaging social audiences – moves towards the newly popular medium of live video. Brands like Mashable, Make-A-Wish and Kohl’s have partnered with social influencers and vloggers to create compelling livestream campaigns.

As for live video advertising, Facebook has recently introduced an “in-stream” live video ad format that will only play once at least five minutes of a livestream have elapsed – not unlike an advert break on television. YouTube also offers pre-roll, mid-roll and display and overlay ads for monetising livestreams.

Consider China

Thanks to the dramatic rise of online video in China, video marketing is becoming an extremely effective way for brands to target a Chinese audience.

As we saw from Meeker’s report, China’s online video landscape is made up of a completely different set of platforms. Instead of YouTube and Facebook (both of which are blocked in China), brands need to look to platforms such as Youku, iQiyi and Tencent Video (for long-form video) and Kuaishou, Douyin, Miaopai and Meipai (for short-form video) to reach Chinese users.

Marketing to China isn’t something that will make sense for every brand, but those who do want to tap into China’s massive and growing market, video has proved an excellent medium.

In 2016, for example, L’Oreal ran a giveaway on short video platform Meipai in which it encouraged users to upload and share their Halloween makeup videos for the chance to receive a free gift. More than 11,000 users uploaded videos, which netted more than 60 million views in total for the brand.

Source: https://www.econsultancy.com/blog/70080-what-do-the-latest-trends-in-video-mean-for-marketers-stats