Category Archives: work

More Consolidation

While everyone waits to see what move Microsoft is going to make in the red-hot display advertising M&A frenzy of the last several weeks, AOL (sister company of my employer, comments herein are mine only and do not represent any opinion but my own) has announced the acquisition of ADTECH AG today, a Frankfurt-based online ad serving technology company that produces a product known as Helios IQ in ASP versions for publishers, agencies and email marketing. This comes hot on the heels after yesterday’s announcement of mobile ad network vendor Third Screen Media. The press release indicates that ADTECH will roll up under AOL’s ad network subsidiary, Advertising.com, acquired in 2004. It will be interesting to see how AOL may use this new company. A Clickz.com story summarizes it like this:

It is unclear how the AdTech grab will affect AOL’s relationship with DoubleClick. DoubleClick extended its ad management partnership with AOL in April 2005, winning business across all AOL Media Networks properties including AOL.com, AOL Instant Messenger, CNN, Mapquest and Moviefone.

Although Clickz notes that this arrangement includes CNN, the AOL Media Networks do not include CNN and have not since 2005.

The story goes on to discuss the sense that this may herald a change in this relationship, especially in light of Google’s acquisition of the company. ADTECH only entered the US market around one year ago, but Clickz hypothesizes that if Helios provides all the requirements of AOL, a change in their DoubleClick relationship could be in the works. They also note that it might take years, like their last transition, to make that change.

GameTap Opens the Spigot

So the news broke earlier this week that everyone’s favorite broadband gaming site, Turner’s very own GameTap is expanding their offering to include free-to-play games in an ad-supported environment. You can guess that my team has been actively working on this project for a while. It’s pretty exciting. Much like the varying levels of ‘membership’ on services like Xbox Live, GameTap will offer non-paying, non-registered users access to some games, playable from a light-weight version of their ‘grandaddy’ client. General Manager Stu Snyder (who was just promoted yesterday to a new role as executive vice president and chief operating officer of animation, young adults & kids media in addition to his GameTap role) said it this way in the Business Week story:

“With 2 to 3 million uniques per month, we realized we weren’t monetizing that many uniques to our website,” he says. “We kind of looked back and said, ‘gee, we should [offer an ad-supported version].’ Also, our demographic was looking for an easy way to play games without making a huge time commitment or financial commitment. So we figured why not have all options for all gamers?”

Other content becomes available with a free registration, and users can graduate to the full product and 800+ games with a full subscription. We have also been working to support an ad-supported version of the large range of video content previously only available in the full client known as Gametap TV. I think this ad-supported model has some real legs! Coverage of the project has been widespread, from Business Week, Ars Technica, Kotaku, and the San Jose Mercury News.

Now it gets interesting…

Having been focused on various parts of the ad serving and operations industry for the past ten or more years, and now focused on it pretty much 100% of the time, I find it tremendously exciting to see that one of the largest investments in the post-bubble Internet boom comes to my little corner of the industry – ad serving.

Google’s $3.1 billion all-cash purchase of privately-held DoubleClick announced after trading today (DCLK was bought in 2005 by equity firm Hellman and Friedman for $1.1B) makes their ‘earth-shattering’ purchase price for YouTube pale by comparison for a paltry $1.65B in stock. And this company has actual profit (reportedly $300M last year) built on a core aspect of a large share of the internet publishing sector. Check pretty much any web site business plan these days – and you’ll see online advertising as the lion’s share of projected revenue for the foreseeable future. And while some have scoffed that old-skool ‘display’ advertising is failing to deliver like the contextual advertising that Google built it’s empire on, this purchase is clear validation that display advertising – and more importantly video advertising – are important aspects of the new Internet economy.
In a flash, Google now gains relationships with one of if not the largest aggregation of both publisher and agency business in the digital media space, essentially consolidating the largest player in text-based advertising with their peer in the display ad space. And in a flash, the online advertising business gets a massive validation across the board as the foundation for the next wave (call it Web 2.0 or whatever you’d like) of online activity and as a real business model.

One has to wonder how many publishers who are already at odds with Google (Viacom’s YouTube lawsuit anyone?) may have some level of discomfort with their advertising data residing in Google-owned database like DFP – DoubleClick’s hosted ad serving solution for publishers.

Google now gains a major foothold in the relationship-based world of Madison Avenue in addition to their tremendous reach in the CPA-focused world of search advertising.
It’s not difficult to see how DoubleClick’s announcement last week of their Advertising Exchange may have sweetened this deal significantly, and further demonstrated how the two companies roadmaps were converging. Now having lived through mergers myself, executing on the synergies (shudder, shudder) between these two companies will be an interesting thing to watch. Also interesting will be what happens to other players in the space – like Acquantive, 24/7RealMedia and others.

And will Google follow the model they set when they have acquired other companies? Picasa used to be a pay product. Same with Google Earth (keyhole). As well as Google Analytics (Urchin). Will DoubleClick become a free product one day? Hard to imagine, given the dollars involved today from hundreds of publishers and agencies, but you never know…

It’s interesting to see Google close this deal when only two weeks ago the Wall Street Journal reported that Microsoft was very close to being the buyer; but as an analyst mentioned in the NYTimes story on the purchase, keeping DoubleClick out of Microsoft’s hands was ‘worth billions to Google’ – and that’s what they paid.

Note: My employer is a current customer of DoubleClick and my opinions do not necessarily represent those of TBS Inc. and are my own.

It’s Alive!

Although it’s a somewhat soft launch today (shhh – don’t tell anybody), the Turner Broadcasting new venture I mentioned a few months ago when the splash page was posted has gone live today in all it’s UGC and comedic goodness. Get in there, check out the funny stuff (quite a bit NSFW), register and make some friends (I’m JoeBobATL). There are bits of coverage by members of the team (What do I know?), on Fark.com (one of the providers of content, and a great destination on it’s own) and by another one of the content providers, Olde English. Do check out this goofy woman-on-the-street vid (Making Friends by Chelsea Peretti) and the hilarious Sodom and Gomorrah by Brad Neely, pictured above in this screenshot from the launch. My team was involved in the advertising technology for this – and we’re pretty proud of how this came out. Share and Enjoy!