An executive with Silicon Valley firm Goodmail Systems floated a concept in which NBC Sports could send an email alert when a top American skier, say Bode Miller, is about to leave the starting gate. When the message is opened, Miller's run would be streaming.
The system is tabbed CertifiedVideo and launched in April. Rogers spoke at MediaPost's Email Insider Summit on Tuesday.
Mike Rogers, senior vice president at Goodmail, said the "applications in sports are endless almost." Goodmail has also run a test with Turner Sports with a recent PGA event. Turner sent emails alerting people that the golf tournament had started; a live feed was available when the message was opened.
Turner hoped to drive people to its on-air feed.
In addition, video directly in email is a potential boon for entertainment companies, both as a marketing vehicle and an opportunity to sell ads around the embedded video. More broadly, marketers in a range of industries, from retailer Target to Procter & Gamble, have used the videos to promote products and sales.
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Due to technical issues with Internet Service Providers (ISPs), marketers have had difficulty sending video-mails. They've been relegated to placing links in emails, where a user has to click-through to another page to view the video.
With CertifiedVideo, the video streams automatically once the email is opened, but the audio isn't activated until a person clicks a button, an attempt to avoid customer backlash. Still, an audio opt-in could provide valuable data on engagement.
Goodmail has deals with National Geographic Channel and Scripps networks and is also conducting tests with MSNBC.
So far, AOL is the only ISP to effectively allow CertfiedVideo to be delivered to its users, which limits video-mail's reach. But Rogers said the company expects others to come on board in the first half of next year.
Marketers could embed video in emails until about a decade ago when ISPs, wary of spyware and other problems, blocked JavaScript functionality that allowed the process.