"Search is not where it's at," Steve Jobs said at an event at Apple headquarters last week. "People are not searching on a mobile device like they are on the desktop."
Take that,
Google.
Last week was certainly invigorating. Everyone in the Bay Area, it seemed, was showing off their new iPads. And many people -- well, geeks at any rate -- were buzzing
about the new operating system Jobs had announced. And the promise of Apple's new iAds platform, also announced last week, was in the air.
Applemania was so pervasive that when I went to the
San Francisco Symphony on Thursday night to see Duncan Sheik perform a suite of songs from his new musical "Whisper House," I was only mildly surprised to see him carrying an iPad instead of sheet
music, which he placed on his music stand and dutifully sang from throughout the performance.
For my part, I love my new iPad. All the Google apps I use and enjoy are more useful
and lovelier on the iPad, especially YouTube. I bought the GQ app to get a magazine-type experience and it was amazing, showing great promise for the glossy magazines of yore.
Similarly, game apps are more fun and more immersive on the iPad.
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Most surprisingly, it brings a murky pain point into more specific relief. That is, the iPad makes clear all the ways in which
either your smartphone or your laptop are limiting when used for casual entertainment. Whereas a laptop is too bulky and relies too much on a browser, the iPhone, which is so perfect for general
on-the-go-ness, is simply too small for movies, books, magazines, newspapers, videos or gazing adoringly at the Web site you just spent several months remodeling. Which is why the iPad is ideal
for lying on the couch and reading The New York Times for hours on end, or reclining on a plane to watch a good movie, or playing an invigorating game of Scrabble.
It's this new
experience, then, that makes Apple's new iAd introduction so intriguing. In Jobs's usual hyperbolic fashion, he says the advertising platform will forever change the way advertising is engaged, used
and enjoyed online.
Because the iAd platform will be part and parcel of the new OS, apps deploying these ads will provide a seamless experience not only to interact with advertising,
but even to complete transactions. Once done with an ad, which, presumably, will be as immersive and beautiful to behold as everything else on the iPad, the user is returned to the app to resume
his activities. What isn't clear is the ability of advertisers to target any given audience segment across multiple apps, and the degree to which Apple will expose what it knows about its users
to marketers.
Despite the uncertainty, what is certain is that iAds won't include search-related advertising. (Search, you see, is so not where it's at.) Except there's a
huge opportunity here that could be a real gold mine for Apple.
Consider the Epicurious app, which I also downloaded for free on my iPad. I was able to search for a number of recipes,
pull together a dinner menu, create a shopping list and send that list to my iPhone. Imagine if marketers could have bid on promotions or coupon insertions around the items on my shopping
list. Perhaps Epicurious and other app developers will figure this out for themselves. Still, an AdWords-like system would make it easier for advertisers to target search-related action
occurring within individual apps across the entire app ecosystem.
Beyond the iAd environment, search advertisers will be able to leverage a whole slew of newer search ad options from Google
and Yahoo, including site links, product extensions, local extensions, mobile ads and coupons, and rich ads in search (which include video, images and logos). Imagine how gorgeously much of this
will render on the iPad. Imagine the click-through rates that might be achieved.
Yes, last week was a hyperbolic one and mostly justified, at that. But despite a raft of new
opportunities for advertisers, there is still much uncertain terrain for Apple and app developers to negotiate. I anticipate the thrills and spills will keep on coming.