Prepare For Digital Integration

Wednesday, April 25, 2007 13:11

All media will be going digital in the next five years, said Brian McAndrews, president/CEO of aQuantive.

In the keynote address at an industry conference titled “The Digital Decade: What the Last Five Years Can Teach Us About the Next Five,” Lynne Johnson, a senior editor at FastCompany.com, interviewed Mr. McAndrews yesterday about how past developments will influence the future of digital.

“I think we’ll be a lot closer to all digital in the next five years,” Mr. McAndrews said. “The market will be significantly larger, and it is our belief is that ultimately all media will become digital. The biggest medium of all, television, will become digital. The Internet is the beginning, but it is still one channel.”

“I think what will happen is we’ll take our learning from the Internet and repurpose that for other media, specifically in video-on-demand,” he said.

He said to expect more sophistication in dynamic ad insertion into video and more analytics measurement and fragmentation. In addition, the Web site will replace the 30-second commercial as the key brand-engagement tool in the next five years.

“Television will still be around but there will be more dynamic content and the Web site will be the main way to engage consumers,” Mr. McAndrews said. “Most messaging is aimed at driving people to the Web site.”

Also expect more on-demand technologies in the next five years.

“On-demand is important because consumers want it and they are demanding it, and the cable companies are responding to the consumer demand for control,” Mr. McAndrews said.

Currently the economic model is subscription based, but since consumers like free programming, marketers and cable companies are working on ways to develop more ways for dynamic marketing and ad insertion.

Viral should become the new broadcast as marketers and content providers focus on the integration of channels.

“When we think about integration, it has to be relevant to other channels of media,” Mr. McAndrews said. “If we think about online video, we have to think of its interactivity with television. If we think about mobile, we have to think of how it is interactive with online.”

This integration may take more work upfront, but it will give marketers more feedback in the end.

“Digital becomes increasingly the seat at the table where you are informed much better about how your consumer is going to interact,” Mr. McAndrews said.

Source: DM News

http://geoff-caplan.com, email geoffcaplan@mac.com

Blog Widget by LinkWithin
Share and Enjoy:
  • Facebook
  • TwitThis
  • StumbleUpon
  • Digg
  • LinkedIn
  • Google
  • E-mail this story to a friend!
  • Live
  • Reddit
  • Sphinn
Share This Post

Related posts:

  1. Online, offline marketing integration still lagging: SES panel It is no longer just a good idea to add...
  2. TV’s Last Gasp: The New Age of Digital Content If you haven’t noticed it yet, the TV industry is...
  3. Digital Asset Optimization for News Content In the world of using search engine optimization tactics...
  4. Digital Television Transition Digital-to-Analog Converter Box Coupon There have been a a lot of questions about...
  5. Western Digital WD TV HD Media Player Streams from Hard Drives on the Cheap Western Digital, better known for storage than HD video equipment,...

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.