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Forrester: TV Ads Will Start to Resemble Web Ads

By Jake Swearingen | Aug 27, 2008

internet-tv-duality.jpgA few weeks back, I asked some experts in the ad world when interactive ad spend would surpass television ad spend. One of the most interesting responses came from Dave Martin, a Vice President of Interactive Media at Ignite, who said:

Online spend won’t surpass television, instead TV is going to become interactive with addressable cable and data-collection at the set top box level. As digital cable becomes more addressable, it will require interactive media specialists to take full advantage of the new targeting capabilities in the living room. We’ll see an appreciable shift within 3 years from “TV advertising” to “Interactive TV advertising.”

A new report, “Personal TV: The Reinvention Of Television,” authored by David Graves over at analyst shop Forrester, reinforces that point. The report lays out a much more detailed plan of where the market is moving, and how television advertising will be able to fight against the two main forces hampering marketers right now: fragmentation and ad skipping.

Graves foresees television networks teaming up with cable operators and telco companies to create what he dubs “Personal TV.” Set-top boxes will be set up, and marketers will be able to show non-skippable ads to viewers of both real-time events and to those watching Video On Demand services. Why would viewers, particularly those who have grown accustomed to zapping through ads on their TiVos and On Demand cable boxes, be willing to go back to non-skippable ads? Price, according to Graves. “The benefit for viewers is a free [Video On Demand] system,” he writes in the report’s abstract. Meanwhile, marketers are able to draw up tremendous amounts of targeting data on consumers, and use it to greatly increase ROI on television advertising. So essentially, think of it as a set-top box version of Hulu.

It’s certainly an appealing vision, but there’s significant obstacles in the way, to my mind. One, networks and cable operators have had historical problems playing nice with one another, and telcos and cable companies have been at each others throats for years now. Two, as television’s digital to analog conversion has shown, tech uptake is nearly always slower than anticipated. Many couch surfers are perfectly happy with the status quo, and significant advantages will have to be offered to get some to adopt a set-top box — subsidization from whatever amalgamation of network, cable operator, and telco offering these “Personal TVs” won’t be enough.

Photo from Flickr user Tim Pritlove, CC 2.0

Jake Swearingen has written for Wired and Business 2.0, covering everything from locative technology to high-definition online video.

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  •  
    1

    ndlicht1

    08/28/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Forrester: TV Ads Will Start to Resemble Web Ads

    TV Ads really seem invasive. Five car commercials in a row for different brands - does it influence our buy? No. We go on line, research, get competitive prices and then buy. TV ads are too random to work anymore v internet search tools.

    Tivo lets us define what we see and when, commercial free. It and clones of it are popular, aren't they.

    10 random commercials in a row and the short actual programming in between, its annoying and it is totally untargeted so its a waste of money. Awareness isnt what works unless we have a need to buy. Am I alone in that feeling?

    Maybe the future will let us "select" commercial groups by our needs and then, like the internet, click for details

    ndlicht
    www.ucanpreventbadhires.com
    answers@ucanpreventbadhires.com

  •  
    2

    chansen@...

    08/28/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Forrester: TV Ads Will Start to Resemble Web Ads

    Maybe I should read the full report before commenting, but from what I read here, I think the whole idea of "people want the content to be free, so they'll accept ads" is a little flawed. Those of us who can afford it spend hundreds of dollars on our TiVos, partly to time shift, but partly to avoid those ads.

    What's more, the people who are willing to watch the ads to get the "free" programming very well may not be the affluent target many advertisers really want to reach. It reminds me of the free ISPs of a decade ago.

  •  
    3

    qtip101a@...

    08/29/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Forrester: TV Ads Will Start to Resemble Web Ads

    I agree with Chansen - I have TiVO to not watch the ads.
    If one thing in particular I have control over is Television
    watching - then take the adds and ditch them with the
    service like TiVO.

    I got sick and tired of Wal-Mart and Chevy and Ford and
    Chrysler and Toyota, etc filling my head space.

    Can't get enough of my TiVO!

  •  
    4

    Aimee333

    08/29/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Forrester: TV Ads Will Start to Resemble Web Ads

    I have strange insight having been a producer and director in television and radio. I too have become acustomed to hopping past commercials. And NOTHING would infuriate me more as a viewer than the option NOT to hop! However, I can forsee the advantage to advertisers of having an interactive commercial...used maybe during Prime moments, ie superbowl. If you have HD now you know that you can personalize different shot angles during football games. I could actually see all those shots being sponsered with links to the advertisers site.
    The ONLY way this will work is when the "BIG" networks decide to buy the "Big" dish or cable companies. Full ownership will open the doors to this "personalized" television opportunity.
    But, I still think it stinks!

  •  
    5

    Jake Swearingen

    08/29/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Forrester: TV Ads Will Start to Resemble Web Ads

    @ndlicht Completely agree that current television marketing works mainly for branding purposes (Toyota makes nice-looking cars) as opposed to direct action (I want to buy a Toyota). However, branding has been shown in numerous, numerous studies to actively influence our buying decisions. Even if the ad for a new Prius doesn't cause you to buy one right then, when it does come time to buy a car, a Prius may be more in mind than it would have been.

    That said, what the Forrester report is positing is a future where the type of targeting common within Internet advertising will move to the television set. Which would be very attractive to advertisers. Even if people are spending more time on the Internet, television ads still, over all, are seen in a much more positive light than Internet advertising. Thanks for commenting!

  •  
    6

    Jake Swearingen

    08/29/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Forrester: TV Ads Will Start to Resemble Web Ads

    @chansen Re: "I think the whole idea of "people want the content to be free, so they'll accept ads" is a little flawed. Those of us who can afford it spend hundreds of dollars on our TiVos, partly to time shift, but partly to avoid those ads."

    I have no doubt that even if the Forrester reports idea of "Personal TV" comes to pass, there will be premium versions that remove ads for those willing to pay. But don't discount the lure of free. Hulu.com is doing a very nice business for itself offering up free content with unskippable ads. Of course, I could go to someplace like sidereel.com and find the same shows without ads, or download everything off BitTorrent, but Hulu makes the experience easy, attractive, and legal.

    "What's more, the people who are willing to watch the ads to get the "free" programming very well may not be the affluent target many advertisers really want to reach."

    Those willing to watch ads may not be in the most affluent categories, true, but consumers are consumers are consumers -- up and down the socioeconomic ladder, they need goods and services, and advertisers will be interested in marketing to a captive audience whenever possible.

  •  
    7

    Jake Swearingen

    08/29/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Forrester: TV Ads Will Start to Resemble Web Ads

    @Aimee333

    I think the idea of subsidized alternate angles holds promise -- it's something seen outside of the normal viewing experience, so ads won't seem intrusive.

    Also agreed that it will more than likely take consolidation to make highly targeted television advertising truly work. I enjoy being able to skip ads now, and it does feel like a drag to watch them when I'm caught watching something not on DVR. That said, there are still certain events that I'll put up with advertising -- sporting events is an obvious one.

    If advertising is able to have a higher ROI, and therefore make commercial time more valuable, I could see something where viewers see fewer ads, but are unable to skip them. Or maybe not.

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