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HOME • MANAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS • MEDIA KIT
Online Video Predictions for 2008
by Jason Glickman, Monday, January 15, 2007, 12:00 PM

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Having spent the holiday season reading everyone else's brilliant predictions for 2007, I decided to engage in a little crystal-ball gazing myself. But since 2007's been predicted to death, I figured I'd up the ante. So without further ado, here are my online video predictions for 2008.

1. Video goes vertical. Not unlike the rise of vertically oriented portals, video content will find well-branded homes for vertical video. Today's repositories for all things video will give way to more focused destinations for travel video, music videos, home video gone wild, amazing sports highlights and the like.

2. Professionally produced content online surpasses amateur content. The vast majority of professionally produced video content hasn't been digitized. Once producers get past the first hurdles (rights, encoding, codecs, digital asset management, hosting, streaming, etc.) they'll find the dollars are there to support a surge in professional production companies driving vast amounts of new and historical content online. Reruns will still be on TV at 3 a.m,. but you'll always be able to find --and advertise on--lost episodes of "The Honeymooners."

3. $12 billion of TV budgets move to online video. According to a recent AAF survey of advertising executives, the majority feel that 10-30% of current spending on traditional broadcast and cable TV ads will shift to online video by 2010. We're definitely on the early side of that curve right now, but 2008 will be the year that big TV budgets with real dollars make the shift in earnest. A big piece of the equation will be the continuing agency shake-up. Before those budgets can really move, interactive and TV buyers will have to work more closely and share more budgets. 2007 will be the year of "sticking our toes in the video water." 2008 is when everyone yells "C'mon in, the water's fine!"

4. TV is a box--one of many. Whether it's their computers, mobile devices, TVs or something else, consumers will be less concerned about which devices and more concerned about their choice of content. With the introduction of Apple's iPhone and AppleTV, more and more people will continue to embrace the concept of "anywhere, anytime" content at the expense of our 72-inch plasma TVs. Content that isn't visually critical, like news and sit-com reruns, will be regularly digested on trains and planes and in places where time is abundant but TVs are not. Trend-setting commuters will, appropriately, kick this trend off, watching Jim Cramer's "Mad Money" on their way to their Wall Street jobs, rather than sacrificing time with family and friends to watch it on a "proper" television.

5. More political advertising online than TV. The 2006 political season was a big bust when it came to online. But by the time the 2008 campaign kicks in, political consultants will have figured out online video. John Edwards announced his bid to run for president on YouTube, clearing the way for other candidates to begin testing the medium. Technologies that have been commonplace among ad networks and media buyers will penetrate the political media on a national level. Geo- and behavioral targeting will enable the national platforms to deliver specific campaign messages to people and regions that are most influenced by those particular issues. Local candidates will be able to buy media on top tier publishers without wasting impressions. Candidates, using video banners, in stream ads and video avatars, will connect with constituents and voters as personally as they would at a town hall. Voters will be the big winners here, establishing an emotive connection with candidates, rather than just knowing if they are pro-life or pro-choice.

6. Video search will make sense. The process of searching for video is still cumbersome, unreliable and very much in its infancy. But the companies with the most money and the most to gain (or lose) are battling to make their video search tools indispensable. Once they get it figured out, it will be the driving force behind a tremendous increase in video consumption online. Due to the increased challenges of indexing video content compared to indexing text-based web pages, content owners and search technology providers will need to work hand-in-hand to develop effective methodologies that enable consumers to find the content they are looking for quickly and easily. Video search will follow a simple mantra: "Ask and ye shall receive."

7. Video blogging will cross the chasm. Video blogging, which lagged behind its text-based cousin in adoption, will experience a surge in popularity as the tools for creating, editing and hosting your own video content become more accessible to the everyday consumer. Video blogs will become less about embedding YouTube links and players into blogs and instead enable people to truly share their "voices" with the masses. The differences between video blogs and video communities will blur, as social networking sites like MySpace will be increasingly dominated by video versions of teen-angst rants and boyfriend bashing, sans the annoying typos and SMS and IM jargon. Video bloggers may actually laugh instead of typing "LOL." Political blogs like the HuffingtonPost and HotSoup.com will also be creating their own video content, with political consultants, commentators and talking heads popping up on blogs as frequently as they do on "Hardball."

8. Video communities. Communities will be redefined, and hopefully, bring the "personal" back into personal computing. So far, being submerged in Second Life, spending hours IMing and posting comments on people's MySpace pages has left us with "virtually" social people lacking real-world social skills. Video communities will emerge as video chatrooms with dozens (or more) people in a chatroom at once, actually talking to the other people, rather than hiding behind emoticons, avatars and buddy icons.

After an explosion of useless video content in 2006, and the development of very useful video tools and widgets in 2007, 2008 will be the year when video becomes the language of the people's Internet.

2 people recommend this article. 

7 comments on "Online Video Predictions for 2008"

  1. Kim Hurwitz from MWG Media
    commented on: September 08, 2008 at 8:33 PM
    Jason,

    Now that we're into month 9 of 2008 I reviewed your predictions for this year in web video. I think you really did well spotting the trends and major growth areas. Everything always goes so SLOOOOW though, doesn't it? However, I'm sure this year has a lot of content currently 'in development' that will strike before the year is out. My gut feeling is that some of the mechanics still need to be figured out before the major creative releases take hold and this area gains mass adoption. There are too many video players, content formats and a lack of comprehensive metrics across the various video sites and screens right now. Progress IS being made and those companies who can figure this out (and make it simple and free/low cost) will rule. Very good content is starting to emerge which is very exciting. --Kim Hurwitz of www.mwgmedia.com

  2. Robert Konecny from CybeRealities
    commented on: December 31, 2007 at 5:16 AM
    video grow up in niche segment ,as seen on www.iCooking.tv for example.

  3. Frank Sinton from Mefeedia.com
    commented on: December 24, 2007 at 6:22 PM
    Excellent predications. To the mainstream, "online video" has meant YouTube to date. 2008 will change all of this.

  4. Kevin Nalty from WillVideoForFood
    commented on: January 16, 2007 at 6:06 AM
    Jason- bold move prediciting so far out. My two cents on your piece: http://nalts.wordpress.com/2007/01/16/forget-2007-online-video-this-guys-looking-at-2008/

  5. Dean C. Smith from www.YouSurfTubes.com
    commented on: January 15, 2007 at 7:17 PM
    Another prediction... Professional Producers of Video Content will be in high demand as new "Web-Video Channels" evolve from "Video Communities". Then we can talk about targeted advertising...

  6. anthony ingram from TheBoxStopsHere.com
    commented on: January 15, 2007 at 4:36 PM
    Video needs to grow up before it will really catch on. Just like email has "understood standards" of behavior, so must video before it becomes a norm. (www.TheBoxStopsHere.com)

  7. Pete Ianace from ESPRE Solutions Inc.
    commented on: January 15, 2007 at 3:50 PM
    Jason, I couldn't agree more with your predictions. I am the CEO of a Company focused on providing the tools needed to bring many of your predictions to life. We are completing a set of tools called eViewMediaEngine (ME) that will take the hard part of producing, compressing, publishing and distributing video over the web of the table and let those that want to create the art (interactive video content and video collaboration productions)do what they do best. A few highlights of what we will offer follow. Our objective is to allow both consumers and those in the business of delivering high end video productions to both be able to use and apply this tool set. We feel if embedding video into a current communications process adds significant value then a high adoption rate will ensue. So what are the success criteria of achieving a high adoption rate? It has to work with major effort. It has to be part of a working environment and not something external to it. (In a consumer situation it has to bring your social network (friends and family) to your experience on a real time basis.) It has to be easy to learn, use and manage. It has to be very reliable. Most of all it has to be ubiquitous. It won't become a habit to use if it isn't available anytime, anywhere. If you would like additional details please feel free to email me at pete@espresolutions.com.

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JASON GLICKMAN
  • Jason Glickman is an Internet advertising veteran with expertise in emerging interactive technologies. He is co-founder and CEO of Tremor Media (www.tremormedia.com).


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