OMMA Panel: Video Hyper-Distribution or Hype?

Putting your content anywhere and everywhere your audience may travel has become the mantra of publishing, but how true is that for video? As medium sized publishers watch Hulu, ABC and CBS pursue various flavors of hyper-distribution strategy for their video, should other publishers follow suit or establish more controlled distribution schemes tailored to their own particular content and partnerships? And what are the promising business models around syndicated video. Who controls the ad space when your video property leaves your site?

Moderator:
Gary Gannaway, CEO, WorldNow
Speakers:
Chris Allen, VP, Director of Video Innovation, Starcom
Mike Henry, SVP, Veoh
Eric Hadley, CMO, Heavy.com
Patrick Keane, Executive Vice President & Chief Marketing Officer, CBS Interactive
Rebecca Paoletti, Director, Video Strategy, Yahoo

Online video right now still smells like an online media buy more than a traditional or broadcast media buy.

Rebecca: We’re always up against TV budgets. eMarketer took their spending estimates down a few weeks ago. But we’ve spent the last few months focusing on helping TV buyers understand that there is a TV like experience online, and help them understand the metrics that we can provide. If we can get the TV buyers to move just 1% of their budgets over, they could make a dramatic impact on the industry without making too much of an impact on their overall marketing.

Q: Does the money need to come from TV?
A: yes, yes, yes.

Q: What are the challenges to convincing them to spend the 1%? And whats the solution?
Rebecca: Education about the online video experience. Is it porn, is it UGC, is it a well lit environment? Is it a quality experience? TV people still think the online viewing experience is poor. We also need to educate them about metrics and buying, which is very different to them. CPM, CPC, CPE, and what is the value for that engagement? Showing the value online to TV people is the challenge.

A: Scale is the one impediment that is going to change over time that TV people will respond to. Also, understanding what works is the most important thing. In a video rich environment, how do you have to think differently about marketing to them? Stretching the definition of what the video marketplace is presents a challenge as well. We can’t compare them to what the audience looks like in a linear world. On syndication, we have the opportunity to talk to marketers not just as media buyers, but as content partners. They are learning that they can target content the same way they can target advertising.

Patrick: Advertisers need to understand that online video isn’t just “dog on skateboard.” Cost is also an issue for TV buyers. We’re talking $15 CPMs vs $30 for premium online video. Often times you are dealing with a buyer who is looking at GRPs and simple costs. Advertisers also don’t want to buy the same audience three, four and five times. So measurement is an impediment right now.

Hadley: Explaining the CPM & GRP issue is critical. Helping them create advertising and content for the web, rather than repurposing TV is key. You need to understand that it is a different experience and different mentality.

Q: We are in a marketplace where we don’t have budgets. What needs to happen to get video to scale? Does everyone need to get together ala Walmart? Where will we be 5 years from now?

A: Users are going to migrate to the destination where they can find the broadest range of content and have the best experience.

Patrick: It depends on a lot of issues, one of which is navigation. If the economics are right and the partnership made sense, things could be different. But this isn’t “Free Lunchville.” At Google, we spent a lot of time figuring out how to help people find content. On TV, we’ve got a remote control. There needs to be much better navigation for discovery. But discovery of a great content experience with online video isn’t there. I’d love to see the metaphor of search apply to video on TV as well as the Web.

Rebecca: With video, we don’t see the same billions and billions of page views like we do with text based pages. When you look at where people watch video, they all have their favorite destination, and that is because they believe that they will be able to find the content they are looking for will be there.

Hadley: There are a lot of different ways to find things. If you ask a 10 year old, you’ll get a very different answer than if you ask a 30 year old. The phone will be a big part of it. Convergence. It is going to be a different generational mentality.

Chris: Reach, scale and measurement are the biggest barriers. People buy TV for reach. Until there is an easier way to get that reach, people will still buy TV. On measureability, I’d like to be able to buy by demo, like I can on TV. There is a complimentary effect with online to TV. If CBS skews older on TV, we can get younger viewers on CBS.com. Also, people expect a certain type of content from the providers. If you want to watch Grey’s Anatomy, you go to ABC.com. Swingtown didn’t do very well because it wasn’t a “CBS” type show.

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