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  • Ok, LG, This Terrifying Meteor Prank Ad Is Awesome

    Ok, LG, this is really good. I don’t even care if it was staged or not, this is just a great ad.

    It’s also really mean, if these poor people weren’t actually actors. In order to demonstrate the super realism of their Ultra HD 4K television line, LG decided to prank a bunch of job interviewees into thinking their lives were about to end. Seriously. It’s a pretty amazing concept. This particular ad comes to us from Chile:

    LG claims that its new Ultra HD televisions can produce picture quality that’s 4x greater than full HD. Apparently, the picture’s good enough to (maybe) fool people into thinking they’re in the middle of a mass extinction event.

    Image via LG, YouTube

  • ‘Lilyhammer’ Season 2 Teased In New Netflix Originals Ad

    Netflix has released a new advertisement for its original programming, splicing together scenes from House of Cards, Orange is the New Black, Hemlock Grove, Arrested Development, Derek and Lilyhammer.

    The ad briefly teases the second season of Lilyhammer, which is due out this fall. No release date is given. It simply says, “Coming Soon.”

    The video follows a similar one recently released by Netflix, which touts all of its originals’ Emmy nominations.

    In a letter to investors in July, Netflix said Lilyhammer: Season 2 would debut sometime this year. A recent report indicated that it would be coming in the fall, and that a third season is still up in the air.

    Image: Netflix (YouTube)

  • Google’s Christian Oestlien Reportedly Jumps Over To Twitter

    All Things D is reporting that Twitter has hired Christian Oestlien, Google’s Product Management Director, Google Display Advertising, to become its new senior director of growth and international.

    Oestlien, the report says, would report to Twitter VP of Product Michael Sippey.

    It was only Thursday when Oestlien was talking about how much he loves working with “the wonderful cast of characters” at Google:

    Christian Oestlien

    Got this wonderful out-of-office note from one of my engineering leads today, and thought it was good enough to share. Yet another reason I love working with the wonderful cast of characters here at +Google! Enjoy:

    "Thank you for sending that email; your contribution to the greater whole of what makes Google an amazing place to work is important to me, and I'm very happy that I can finally take this moment to congratulate you on your clarity of insight on the text and the decisiveness with which you hit the send-and-archive button.

    Unfortunately, I will be a delayed witness of your splendour. I find myself at Burning Man, dressed in large bug-eyed sunglasses and a top hat, in the middle of the Black Rock Desert. Everyone else around me is quite strange, things are slightly more colourful than they ought to be, everything smells bad, and the music appears to have a strange, tangy aftertaste.

    More immediate gratification of the awesomeness of that email can only be achieved by sending it to one of the many delegates I trust to "make a decision" in my absence;

    But you know those things already, I know. You emailed me personally because you wanted someone with wit, power, influence, style, charm, and modesty to appreciate your unique genius.

    If, however, you must contact me, you'll need the following ingredients:

    * 1 (one) blank, featureless wall
    * 1 (one) shot of vodka
    * 1 (one) pinch of salt.
    * 1 (one) toad of the species Bufo alvarins, preferrably unlicked.

    In quick succession, lick the toad, snort the salt, and throw the vodka over your shoulder. Stare at the blank, featureless wall for 30 – 45 minutes, and I will appear before your eyes to shower well-deserved appreciation upon you."

    Neither company is commenting. Both his LinkedIn and Twitter profiles still have him working at Google.

    It appears that Twitter has a lot going on at the executive level. Last week, Twitter announced that it hired former Ticketmaster boss Nathan Hubbard as its new Head of Commerce.

    In other ad executive shifting news, Yahoo announced today that it has appointed former AOL Networks Chief Ned Brody to the SVP of the Americas role, where he will oversee the company’s ad business in North and South America.

    Image: Christian Oestlien (Google+)

  • Facebook Really Hates Anything Related to Boobies

    If you’re an artist or a breastfeeding mother, you’re probably well aware that Facebook isn’t too fond of boobies. Honestly, the mere appearance of a bare breast is often enough to kick Facebook’s content moderation system into high gear – even if that bare breast is actually just some girl’s elbow. Or a New Yorker cartoon. Or a mastectomy photo.

    The point here is that Facebook is a little booby-phobic. Now, they’re at it again.

    The Christmas Island Tourism Association is the latest victim of Facebook’s booby hate. And ad campaign from the board featuring an image of a juvenile booby has been banned from the network.

    One of these guys. You know, boobies.

    Christmas Island is a premiere bird watching destination, and its tourism office decided to market the prevalent seabirds with a Facebook ad. Unfortunately, their accompanying ad copy, “Some gorgeous shots here of some juvenile boobies,” didn’t sit well with Facebook’s content moderators.

    “We have a limited marketing budget so our Facebook campaigns offer us a great opportunity to share the wonderful birdlife on our island. We presumed our original advert was blocked automatically so we appealed to Facebook directly who re-affirmed the campaign was banned due to the sexual language – particularly the use of the word ‘boobies’,” Linda Cash, Marketing Manager of the Christmas Island Tourism Association told Travel News Daily.

    Well, probably that and the slightly off-color “juvenile boobies” part.

    Still – come on, man.

    Images via WIkimedia Commons, Facebook

    [Hat tip AdWeek]

  • Twitter Has Acquired Trendrr

    Twitter Has Acquired Trendrr

    Trendrr announced today that it has been acquired by Twitter. Trendrr is a company that fits right in with all the TV and advertising-related efforts Twitter has been focusing on lately, as it claims to “harness the power of real-time social data for media and advertising.”

    The company posted a note on its blog about the news. Here’s an excerpt:

    Over the last five years we have led the way in working with real-time data and television, unlocking the power and value of engagement around TV and creating compelling media experiences around content.

    That’s why we are excited to be joining Twitter’s world class team, enabling us to realize bigger opportunities that drive better experiences for users, media and marketers – across Twitter and around the globe.

    Having sat at this intersection of TV and social media for years, we’ve analyzed data from lots of platforms. What makes Twitter uniquely compelling among these platforms is its connection to the live moment — people sharing what’s happening, when it’s happening, to the world. We think we can help amplify even stronger the power of that connection to the moment inside of Twitter.

    Trendrr says its Twitter-certified product Curatorr will work with media companies, marketers and display partners, and will continue to honor existing contracts from its Trendrr.TV offering, though it doesn’t plan to establish new ones for that.

    Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

    In other Twitter news, the company also just released a new interface for conversations across its mobile apps and web experience.

    [via All Things D]

    Image: Curatorr

  • Google Launches Cross-Account Conversion Tracking & Search Funnels For AdWords

    Google announced on Monday that it is launching cross-account conversion tracking and search funnels for AdWords, as the first in a series of new features it will be rolling out over the course of the coming months.

    If you have multiple AdWords accounts, you’ll be able to measure conversions across all accounts with one tag, and use cross-account search funnels reports in your My Client Center to get a better handle on your customers’ conversion paths across all keywords in all accounts.

    WIth cross-account conversion tracking, advertisers can create a snippet of code for use across all accounts.

    “A single tag ensures that a conversion is only counted once across your accounts,” explains AdWords product manager Vishal Goenka. “With the cross-account tag, you’ll see assist conversions for all AdWords clicks leading up to a conversion, not just the clicks within one account. This can provide a holistic view of your advertising, and a better understanding of how keywords work together across accounts to drive conversions.”

    “When you add a new AdWords account to your My Client Center account (MCC), you can enable Conversion Tracking with the check of a box,” Goenka says. “In addition, you no longer have to re-define all of your conversions when you create a new account.”

    The search funnels reports include the Overview report, the Top Conversion Paths report and the Assisted Conversions report. The Overview shows you how consumers interact with all of your adds across all accounts, the Top Conversion Paths report shows you which combinations of keywords drive the most conversions, and the Assisted Conversions report shows upper funnel keywords across your accounts that might not be receiving enough value in your attribution measurement.

    For more on the new features, check out Google’s Help Center articles here and here.

    Image: Google

  • Are You Getting More Out Of Paid Search Than From SEO?

    As you’ve probably found out, getting your content seen in Google’s organic listings is not as easy as it used to be. It’s no wonder that businesses are getting more out of paid listings than they are organic search traffic.

    is this the case for your business or do you get more out of organic SEO? Let us know in the comments.

    Google has launched a new Paid & Organic report in AdWords aimed at helping businesses get more out of their paid and organic search campaigns by offering new comparison options.

    “Previously, most search reports showed paid and organic performance separately, without any insights on user behavior when they overlap,” says AdWords product manager Dan Friedman. “The new paid & organic report is the first to let you see and compare your performance for a query when you have either an ad, an organic listing, or both appearing on the search results page.”

    Google suggests using the report to discover potential keywords to add to your AdWords accounts by looking for queries where you only appear in organic search with no associated ads, as well as for optimizing your presence on high value queries and measuring changes to bids, budgets, or keywords and their impact across paid, organic and combined traffic.

    Paid & Organic Report

    Image: Google

    Digital marketing firm IMPAQT was part of the beta testing, and says, “The paid & organic report has been incredibly useful in understanding the interaction between paid and organic search, and the overall synergy when they are working together. For one of our client’s key branded queries, we saw an 18% increase in CTR when paid and organic work together, as opposed to only having the organic listing.”

    It’s worth noting that Google itself shared this quote.

    To take advantage of the Paid & Organic report, you have to link your AdWords account to Webmaster Tools, and you have to be a verified owner or be granted access by one.

    MarketLive has put out a report finding that its merchants saw “significant changes” in the mix of paid/organic traffic. Paid search visits made up about a third of total search engine visits (up from 26% the previous year), while revenue from paid search grew to 44% of total search engine visit revenue (up from 40% in 2012). Interestingly, search visit growth altogether slowed in the first six months of the year, but paid was up 30% while organic was down 3%.

    Paid/Organic Search Traffic

    Image: Marketlive

    Here’s a side-by-side comparison of conversions, order size, new visits, bounce rate and pages per visit. As you can see, paid performs better across the board, except for new visits, which makes sense if you consider brand familiarity.

    Marketlive: Paid vs. Organic

    Image: Marketlive

    The report delves into performance across verticals, device comparisons and more, if you want to check it out (registration required).

    This is only one study, of course, but the signs are pointing to businesses getting more out of paid search than out of organic search. While Google’s new report feature could help both, it certainly seems geared toward using what you learn from your organic performance to put toward your paid campaigns. And again, Google certainly isn’t making things any easier for those trying to be found in organic results.

    For one thing, Google results simply have a lot more types of results than they used to, and on many pages, that means less traditional organic results. For another thing, people are afraid to link out, and to have links pointing toward them, which surely can’t be a great thing for traditional SEO, considering that Google’s algorithm (while including over 200 signals) has historically placed a great deal of its confidence in legitimate linking.

    Between webmaster paranoia, Google’s somewhat mixed messaging and ongoing “advice,” and its ever-changing algorithms, many businesses are finding out the hard way that relying too heavily on organic search is just detrimental. Paid search is less risky. It’s also how Google makes the bulk of its money.

    The AdWords department lost some trust points this week, however, when an account manager’s accidental voice mail recording gained some attention. Basically, he expressed his distaste that the client had upgraded to Google’s Enhanced Campaigns without consulting him, that he would now have to pitch call extensions and site links. He also noted that he didn’t care about bridge pages or parked domains.

    As Ginny Marvin at Search Engine Land writes, the implications of that are that AdWords account reps are paid to upsell new products/services that may or may not be in clients’ best interests, an account rep was willing to ignore a breach of Google’s own policies, and that AdWords account managers are “sales people first and foremost.”

    Google indicated that this person was not an actual Google employee, but a contractor, and that they had already removed them from the AdWords team, but as Marvin points out, it’s unclear whether this is potentially a bigger issue or if this one person’s attitude is just a rare case. Either way, it hasn’t been great for advertiser perception.

    But what are you gonna do?

    Obviously, when it comes to paid and organic search, the idea is to get them to work together. It’s not necessarily an “either or” situation, but there is always a question of how to balance your resources.

    Do you get better performance from paid search or organic SEO? Let us know in the comments.

  • iTunes Radio Will Reportedly Be Available Next Month

    Apple finally unveiled iTunes Radio back at its Worldwide Developers Conference in June after months (if not years) of rumors that the company would launch such a service. At the time, Apple did not give a release date, but said it would be generally available this fall.

    We’re getting closer. We still don’t have an official date, but a report out from AdAge says it’s coming in September, citing people familiar with advertiser negotiations. Launch partners, the report says, will include McDonald’s, Nissan, Pepsi, Procter & Gamble and possibly a couple others. The deals range from “the high single-digit millions of dollars to tens of millions of dollars, and include a 12 month ad campaign,” it says.

    Apple will hold an event on September 10th, when the next iPhone (or iPhones) is expected to be revealed. It’s likely that iTunes Radio’s launch will also be announced.

    iTunes Radio will debut with over 200 stations and a catalog of music drawing from the iTunes Store. People can listen to stations, then download the songs if they like them. It can be used from an iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, Mac, PC or Apple TV. It will include stations inspired by music users have already listened to, as well as stations curated by Apple and personalized genre-focused stations. Users will be able to create new stations based on specific songs.

    The service will also provide exclusive premieres from top-selling artists, and will host special events like live streams from the iTunes Festival and other exclusive iTunes sessions.

    It will also be integrated with Siri. You’ll be able to give it commands like “play more like this” or “play jazz radio” or ask who plays a particular song.

    The service is free, hence the ads. iTunes Match users will get the service with them.

  • Kids Remain Focal Point Of Netflix Marketing

    Netflix has released yet another ad pushing its Netflix Kids offering with a new YouTube upload “Netflix ‘Supplies’ Ad Spot”.

    “Everyone remembers building a pillow fort as a kid. Now imagine you could take Netflix inside!” the company says in the video description. “Netflix has tons of movies and TV shows for the whole family, including new and classic titles from Disney, Dreamworks, Cartoon Network, Scholastic and more. Oh to be a kid again.”

    Netflix has included kids content as its main focal point of video marketing all summer long, and continues to do so as kids go back to school. In early summer, Netflix launched its Netflix Families site aimed at generating a bigger spike in children’s video streaming while they were on summer vacation. Then, at the end of July, Netflix launched a Netflix Kids TV spot as families prepared for the back-to-school season.

    These are all just parts of what seems to be a broader strategy to push Netflix as a family service. Earlier this year, the company launched a new Family plan, giving subscribers access to four simultaneous streams for $12. More recently, it launched user profiles, which are designed to let households divide up queues and suggestions for various family members.

    Of course, Netflix is working to expand its family-friendly content as well. Most of the company’s original shows have been pretty adult-themed, but in July, it debuted Mako Mermaids for kids, and more episodes will hit the streaming service in September. In addition to that, Netflix recently partnered with DreamWorks Animation, which will see Netflix gaining over 300 hours of new, original programming targeted at young people, and just made all episodes of Goosebumps and The Magic Bus available.

  • People’s Court’s Judge Milian ‘Horrified’ By Business Owner’s Yelp Story

    Yelp is looking for increased user trust as it recently announced more consumer alerts aimed at letting users know about businesses who have been caught with fake reviews. Businesses, on the other hand, continue to voice their frustration with the popular online review site. Just see the comments on our coverage of the alerts.

    One reader pointed out that Yelp came up for discussion on a recent episode of The People’s Court. YouTube user Brock Keeling shared part of the episode:

    Not having seen the rest of the episode, it’s hard to place all of this in the context of the case at hand. Unfortunately, The People’s Court website doesn’t have the episodes archived.

    But in this clip, the business owner says, “The bad comments on the Internet were through Yelp, which to me, is a scam to begin with. If you go on that website, and searched our business name, what comes up is one or two bad statements, and if you go down on the bottom of the page, you can get down to twenty-five statements that are positive.”

    He told Judge Marilyn Milian, “Yelp contacted us, and said, ‘Well, if you advertise with us, then we’ll make sure that those get filtered out.’ We refuse to advertise, and that’s what you see when you go on Yelp.”

    Milian responded, “Wow! I don’t know if what you’re saying is accurate or not, but if it is, it’s pretty outrageous.”

    “And this is true,” she said. “It’s garbage in, garbage out with the Internet. It’s informative because you learned something you may not have known, but you always have to look at it with a skeptical eye. And then of course the other thing that business owners do is they will post forty-two positive things and just have them and their friends post a bunch of positive things, and that will push the negative down the road too.”

    “That didn’t happen,” the business owner said. “They filtered out every positive statement…and you can check that yourself.”

    “I’m horrified,” said Judge Milian.

    Yelp has been accused of the practices this man talks about repeatedly. The Washington Post recently ran a video report on this topic, prompting Yelp to take to its blog to deny such allegations.

    The company called such stories “sensational,” and said, “No, Yelp doesn’t ‘extort’ small businesses,” though clearly, not everyone is convinced.

  • Google Launches New ‘DoubleClick Studio Layouts’ Rich Media Ad Tool

    Google’s DoubleClick has announced the launch of a new tool, which it says will let you build rich media ads in minutes, and get them live in hours.

    After testing the tool with partners, Google is now launching it to the public.

    “With today’s launch, you no longer have to toil through the hand-coding of a long tear sheet, or undergo multiple creative revisions for a simple ad,” says product manager Tal Snir in a blog post. “Studio Layouts provides a pre-built rich media ad shell, so you can simply select a layout, upload your existing assets and publish. You can even build HTML5 ads using the same basic assets. Because the structure of the ad is already created for you, there are fewer places for the creative to break, meaning your ads can get through QA with few to zero revisions. With Studio Layouts, you can build rich media and HTML5 ads much faster, reach more people with your existing assets and upgrade your basic image ads to rich media.”

    Google has a case study about how Samsung was able to use Studio Layouts for an effective Galaxy S4 campaign in Turkey.

    Studio layouts

    There’s a new “Layouts” tab in the top navigation bar of the DoubleClick Studio interface. That Layouts Gallery can be found there.

    Google says it will roll out new Layouts formats and features over the course of the coming six months. In the next few weeks, it will launch Layouts for the IAB Rising Star formats Cascade, Billboard and Sidekick, in addition to an HTML5 GDN Lightbox format.

  • New AdWords Editor Lets You Manage Upgraded Sitelinks

    Google announced that the latest version of AdWords Editor is now available for download. This version supports upgraded sitelinks for enhanced campaigns.

    With the new version, available here, you can view and manage sitelinks and settings. This includes device preference. You can do so using the new “Sitelinks (upgraded)” tab.

    You can also add, edit or remove sitelinks at the campaign and ad group levels. You can copy/paste upgraded sitelinks between campaigns or ad groups.

    With version 10.2, you can also include upgraded sitelinks in imports and exports.

    All AdWords campaigns have been upgraded to Enhanced Campaigns, a process that began last month.

    The new version does include some other updates, such as a file size limit of 150K on all image ads. Accelerated delivery is now allowed for campaigns using automatic bidding.

    When you add user lists on the Audiences tab in the new version, there’s a new “No. of search users” column, which gives you info about the search audience, and shows the size, a dash (if it’s unavailable) or “Display only” if the list is Display only.

    There are a few other tweaks, which you can learn about in the release notes.

    Advertisers will see a prompt to get the latest version of Adwords Editor the next time they launch it.

  • Got An Hour To Spare To Get More Out Of Your Google Search Ads?

    Google thinks you can be getting more out of your search campaigns with Remarketing Lists for Search Ads (RLSA).

    Google launched RLSA out of beta in June, making the feature available to all advertisers using Enhanced Campaigns. Now, the company has released an hour-long “Learn with Google” webinar about using it.

    RLSA, Google says, “brings together intent, context and audience to help you get more sales and leads with great ROI. With RLSA, you can modify bids, ads, and keywords for past site visitors.”

    The webinar provides a feature overview, tips for usage strategies, and a set-up walkthrough.

  • Facebook’s Video Ads Are Going to Annoy You, Zuck Knows This, and He’s Working on Making Them Less Intrusive

    Facebook’s Video Ads Are Going to Annoy You, Zuck Knows This, and He’s Working on Making Them Less Intrusive

    Facebook is going to launch video ads in your news feed before the end of the year – that’s pretty much inevitable. And it seems that the main thing preventing the company from launching them right now is the fear that they will piss everyone off.

    The Wall Street Journal quotes sources familiar with the new ads, who claim that Mark Zuckerberg and his team of engineers are “toiling” over how to make the video ads less distracting – or at least tolerable to the vast majority of Facebook users. Of course, the ads need to make an impact and need to be seen by users, but Facebook has to balance that with the fact that they could drive some people away if the new video ads are too annoying.

    And it’s not that Facebook is simple taking their time. The WSJ indicates that there has actually been a real delay. Sources claim that some advertisers had already created video ads, thinking that they would be able to run this summer, only to be forced to “find alternative marketing plans for time-sensitive products after delays.”

    Part of the delay is so that Facebook can upgrade their video technology so that the ads can load quickly.

    When the ads finally debut, they won’t dominate your news feed. Ad executives briefed on Facebook’s plans said that the video ads will autoplay – but without sound. Users will only see ads from one advertiser per day, but could see up to three from that one advertiser.

    Advertisers will reportedly pay between $1 and $2.5 million per day to run the ads.

    Although the ads haven’t even surfaced yet, some analysts project that they could generate up to a billion dollars in revenue for Facebook in 2014.

  • Google Makes Video Advertising Easier

    Google announced today that it has simplified the process for starting video advertising with AdWords with a new campaign creation flow. The new design, Google says, eliminates clutter, and focuses on the key components of the advertiser’s first video ad campaign.

    These would be the video itself, the thumbnail copy, the budget and the target audience.

    It’s essentially now a four-step process, which includes selecting the video (assuming you’ve already uploaded it to YouTube), adding some text to appear alongside the video, determining your budget and selecting your target.

    That’s pretty much all there is to it. Here’s what it looks like:

    In other AdWords news, Google has also launched a new type of ad on the mobile Google Maps apps (including iPad).

  • New Google Maps Ads Come With New Click Type

    New Google Maps Ads Come With New Click Type

    Google announced an updated ad experience for Google Maps on Android, iPhone and iPad today. Ads will now appear at the bottom of the screen when the user searches for something.

    The ads include a title, ad text and a link to get directions, and users can swipe up to get more info. Google calls this new click type “Get location details”. The standard CPC charge applies.

    “When users click on an ad to get location details, they’ll see additional information such as the business’s address, phone number, photos, reviews and more. From here, there are a number of paid and free click actions they can take,” says Google Maps product manager Salahuddin Choudhary. “Free actions include saving business information for later, sharing a business with a friend, or starting navigation. Aggregated reporting for these free clicks is available in your account.”

    Here’s that it looks like before and after the ad is expanded:

    New Google Maps ads

    New Google Maps ads

    “Paid clicks include the initial ‘get location details’ click, get directions, click-to-call and clicks on the ad headline,” says Choudhary. “AdWords will only charge for up to two paid clicks per ad impression. Reporting for these paid clicks can be found by segmenting reports in your account by ‘click type.’”

    To take advantage of the new ad style, advertisers have to use location extensions or create ads with AdWords Express.

  • Twitter Now Measures Tweet Impact On Offline Sales

    Twitter is making new efforts to measure the impact of Twitter advertising campaigns on offline sales. The company has partnered with Datalogix to do so.

    Twitter announced a new capability it is providing called “offline sales impact,” which it says can quantify the impact of promoted and organic tweets on offline sales for consumer packaged goods.

    Twitter says it has found three key results from its initial tests. These are that engagement drives greater in-store sales, brands’ organic tweets drive sales and followers who see promoted tweets buy more. Twitter had Datalogix run studies for 35 brands to come up with its results.

    Offline Sales

    “Users who engaged with a brand’s Promoted Tweets purchased more from that brand than a statistically identical control group, resulting in an 12 percent average sales lift,” says Twitter revenue product manager Ameet Ranadive. “The results also demonstrate a sales lift among users who simply viewed the Promoted Tweets without engaging, averaging a 2% lift in sales. This proves that both impressions and engagements from Promoted Tweets are valuable to a brand.”

    “Users exposed to a brand’s organic Tweets bought more from that brand than those who were not exposed, producing a 8 percent average sales lift,” says Ranadive. “This lift was nearly 3x greater among users who saw 5 or more organic Tweets over the measurement period. The implication of this finding is that brands who actively build their follower base and regularly tweet to their followers can see an increase in offline sales.”

    “Beyond generating sales lifts by reaching followers organically, Promoted Tweets augment the sales impact,” he adds. “Followers who are exposed to Promoted Tweets purchased 29 percent more from that brand than followers reached by organic Tweets alone.”

    The new offering, at least for now, is only available in the U.S. to Twitter CPG advertisers.

  • AOL Buys Adap.tv In Armstrong’s Biggest Deal Yet

    AOL Buys Adap.tv In Armstrong’s Biggest Deal Yet

    AOL just announced that it is acquiring Adap.tv for $405 million ($322 million in cash and about $83 million in stock). As some have pointed out, this is the biggest acquisition the company has made since Tim Armstrong took over in 2009 (The Huffington Post was $315 million).

    According to AOL, the acquisition will give it “a unique end-to-end solution and video stack for publishers and advertisers.”

    Armstrong says, “AOL is a leader in online video and the combination of AOL and Adap.tv will create the leading video platform in the industry. The Adap.tv founders and team are on a mission to make advertising as easy as e-commerce and the two companies together will aggressively pursue that vision.”

    He added, “Two trends are prevalent in the video space right now – the movement from linear television to online video and the shift from manual transactions to programmatic media buying. Adap.tv is positioned squarely in front of the huge opportunity these trends are presenting.

    “At Adap.tv, we are focused on building the most important business within the most important category in digital advertising,” said Adap.tv CEO Amir Ashkenazi. “We believe that most TV advertising will soon be traded programmatically on platforms like ours. The combination of AOL and Adap.tv accelerates our vision of efficient and effective TV and video advertising.”

    Adap.tv will be independently operate as part of AOL’s video organization led by Ran Harnevo. It will be included as part of the AOL Networks solution, which includes Advertising.com, the AOL On Network, Be On, ADTECH and Pictela.

    While the boards of both AOL and Adap.tv have approved the deal, it is subject to closing conditions. The companies expect it to close in Q3.

    Image: Ashkenazi and Armstrong (BusinessWire)

  • Peyton & Eli Manning Rap, Mock Alexander Graham Bell’s Death In New DirecTV Ad

    DirecTV has a new “Football on Your Phone” ad out today, and it features the Manning brothers rapping about just that. As one who would fully expect for this to be incredibly unfunny, I have to admit I was pleasantly surprised.

    Also, Eli doesn’t care what Alexander Graham Bell thinks, because he’s dead.

    I would imagine we’ll be seeing a condensed version of this on television, which will inevitably be way overplayed. Something tells me the Graham Bell part won’t be in the edited version.

  • Google Adds New Performance Comparison Feature To AdWords

    Google announced on Monday that it is rolling out a new AdWords feature that lets advertisers compare metrics across different time periods by putting data into AdWords tables.

    The new feature comes in the form of expandable columns, available when advertisers have “compare dates” enabled in their date selectors. There will be a new + button at the top of some columns, and when clicked it will expand to show you the data for the appropriate column for the week.

    “Click the + above Clicks, for example, and the Clicks column expands to show you this week’s Clicks, last week’s Clicks, the absolute change and the percent change,” explains AdWords product manager David Rodriguez.

    Compare Date

    The feature is being added to a variety of reports on most metrics. The columns can be sorted and filtered.

    This makes it easy, for example, to create a saved filter which finds all campaigns that saw a decrease in clicks of 20% or more,” says Rodriguez.

    Filter

    The feature is rolling out over the course of the next few days, so if you don’t immediately see it, sit tight.

  • Google Launches AdSense Mobile Apps

    Google Launches AdSense Mobile Apps

    Google has released a new AdSense app for Android and iOS.

    The description says, “The Google AdSense app provides an easy way to access key data from your AdSense account. Access reporting features anywhere, directly from your mobile phone. The first version of the app gives you access to: the key earnings information, top custom and URL channels, ad units and sites reports, payment alerts.”

    Here’s a look at the Android version:

    Adsense app

    AdSense app

    AdSense app

    AdSense app

    AdSense app

    AdSense app

    The app is available both in Google Play and in the Apple App Store.

    In other mobile Adsense-related news, Google last week launched a new responsive design ad unit. More on that here.

    [via Cult of Android]