Mobile operators’ threat to block online ads in Europe this week, reported last week, was startling. The assumption was that, jealous of the pie they’d been missing, operators would hold
Google up for ransom.
This could be the start of a new wave of advertising, one where ads are removed and new ones injected in place.
For centuries advertising has been a vertical
industry. The New York Times ( to my knowledge) never owned forests to pulp, but did own content creation and curation, printing and distribution — and was thus guaranteed to hold onto
all advertising revenue and control. Radio stations, TV stations, cinema, and outdoor were all industries where ads’ route to market was pretty simple.
A cursory glance at a LUNAscape
shows how complex and horizontalized digital forms of advertising have become. A single ad may now involve 10 or more companies, all extracting their share of revenue, all putting themselves in the
path.
I wrote a piece a few months ago saying that the
power and money lie at the interface between people and services, not in their delivery. How long is it before advertising realizes this?
Facebook Instant is about taking other sites’
content, hosting it and then monetizing that layer. at this moment in time Facebook offer brands the chance for them to add their data and sell inventory and charge a mere 30% .
Ad injection is
already a big deal on all other sites — you know, the bit of the Internet outside Facebook. Google studies showed more than 50,000 browser extensions and more than 34,000 software applications
that took control of users’ browsers and injected ads. The study found that about 5.5% of IP addresses accessed Google sites that included injected ads. And already 100,000 plus people
have complained about them so far this year.
If mobile operators are able to block ads with their technology, what’s to stop them from injecting new inventory in their place (Verizon did
just buy AOL) and monetizing that layer more powerfully with better customer and location data?
And where would this trend end? My Panasonic Smart TV is connected to the Internet, a technology
like TV Ad Blocker allows a customer to block ads on linear TV and serve other content — so what’s to stop Samsung or another TV maker from placing its own ads in place of TV content? Once
again, ads could be targeted better, offer richer calls to action and be served in real time.
From connected cars to virtual reality, to smart mirrors to wearables, our lives are about to
become more screen-based than ever. The opportunities to present images to us have never been greater, but the routes to get messages to us will become more aggressively fought over.
So
now’s the time to start thinking in a new way about advertising. Forget the pipes that serve us ads — they are just boring digital pipes that fade into the background. Thinks of new ways
for messages to cross screens, new calls to action, and new, more intimate ways to reach people. And if you’re part of a complex LUNA chart, maybe now’s the time to start realizing that
one day soon you could be disintermediated.