Internet Users More Willing To Endure Ads For Free Video Content

April 7, 2009

Online viewers of television and other video content are increasingly willing to put up with advertising to get their programs and movies for free, a survey shows.

However, they also are slightly less likely to link through to an advertiser’s Web site to learn more about a product or service.

The study is a clear indication that free is currency of choice on the Internet. It suggests that consumers are becoming more accepting of ads after initially being turned aside by the prospect of ads cluttering videos on sites such as Google’s YouTube.

According to the study conducted by Knowledge Networks and reported by eMarketer, 80 percent of people viewing television online now say they prefer ads in exchange for unpaid programming, compared with 67 percent in 2006.

Similarly, 37 percent said they watched videos with pre-roll ads, an increase from 2006.

However, fewer viewers now forward ads to others and only 25 percent clicked through to n advertiser’s Web site.

That means they are probably less effective.


All In One Guide To Online Movies

March 25, 2009

It is no secret that movies are available for free on the Internet. But online viewing is still a niche activity, largely because of slow broadband connections and because people generally have to watch the videos on their computers.

Enjoying online movies is about more than bandwidth and large screens: its awareness

Enjoying online movies is about more than bandwidth and large screens: it's depends on awareness

Another reason holding back public adoption is awareness. Most people don’t know where to go to find content.

A movie-use guide for beginners published Wednesday could help change that. Helen Anderson published the guide on her Web site, Brainz, and it lists the most popular places to turn to for programming and films.

Included are the usual suspects: Hulu, Fancast and Joost. But then, too, she lists The Web Archive for older films, and peer-to-peer applications, such as  Limewire, eMule and Frostwire.

And of course there are the paid sites at Amazon, iTunes and Netflix.

Check out the article here.


Online Video Advertising Budgets Appear To Be Holding Steady, But Market Consolidation Could Be On The Way

November 13, 2008
One or two aggregators will emerge, says Greg Douglass

One or two aggregators will emerge, says Greg Douglass

The online television and movie market appears ripe for consolidation.

In the next year, one or two big aggregators of streaming Internet content will emerge, said Greg Douglass, global managing director of media and entertainment at Accenture. “At most, there will be three or four at the end of the day.”

Examples aggregators are Comcast’s Fancast and Hulu. But these sites could see competition.

At the same time, online video advertising will increase, despite the downturn, and new forms of advertising could become successful online.

“Ad supported video will continue to grow and will be largest part of the market,” Reed Hasting, CEO of Netflix, said at the NewTeeVee conference in San Francisco. As ad prices rise, broadcasters will need to show fewer ads per episode.

Executives said that so far ad budgets for online video appear to be holding steady. Budgets are being cut for traditional television advertising, but not for digital initiatives, said Douglass.

And traffic appears to continue to grow. In the past six weeks, the online audience for streaming content at Fox Broadcasting has rocketed ahead, said Hardie Tankersley, vice president of online content and strategy.

Douglass said broadcasters might benefit by placing retail ads – such as ad for a boxed set of a program’s first season – at the bottom of the display screen. Use the current video content to drive sales, he suggested.


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