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  • AdWords Now Lets You Convert Flash Ads To HTML5

    Google recently launched a new feature in AdWords that lets advertisers convert Flash ads to HTML5, potentially saving time and money.

    “In this increasingly multi-screen world, it’s important for marketers to easily run ads that reach people on different devices,” says Google Display Ads product manager Ashley Jiang. “But with different specs and standards across platforms, this can currently be difficult, especially for marketers who’ve invested in engaging rich media ad units. Since Flash isn’t supported on many tablets, and building a new ad in HTML5 can be expensive and time-consuming, often marketers’ rich media ads aren’t able to run on tablets.”

    Flash to HTML5 conversion

    “Advertisers can now generate an HTML5 version of a Flash image ad with the click of a button, right within the Image Ad upload flow in AdWords,” says Jiang. “Because HTML5 ads can appear on browsers and devices that are incompatible with Flash, running an HTML5 version of an image ad alongside the Flash version in AdWords extends reach across devices. In this initial release, these converted HTML5 ads will show only on iPads, though we hope to extend support to additional tablet and mobile devices in the coming months.”

    In the section on converting ads in Google’s AdWords help center, the company does note that ads may not be 100% identical to the Flash ads. You can, of course, preview it though. Filters and blending are not supported.

  • Google To AdSense Publishers: Only One 300X600 Per Page

    Last month, Google introduced a new ad size for AdSense with the 300X600. The response to the new format seemed pretty good, but perhaps it was too good, because Google has made a change to its policy to ensure publishers only use one of these units per page, at most.

    “Because this new format is larger than all our other ad units, we want to help ensure a balance between content and ads across publisher sites,” says Google policy associate Charles Huang.”With this in mind, going forward, publishers will be permitted to place a maximum of one 300×600 ad unit on each page. If you’ve placed more than one 300×600 ad unit per page on your site, we ask that you remove any additional ad units by Jan 10, 2013. We’ll also be sending email notifications shortly to affected publishers, asking them to make this update.”

    “Please note that the limit for AdSense for content ad units still remains at three per page, so it’ll be possible to place one 300×600 ad unit and up to two other sizes on a page,” he adds. “As always, it’s important to consider both the user and advertiser experiences when placing any additional ad units on your pages.”

    You know that Google doesn’t like pages that don’t have enough content “above the fold,” so it’s no surprise that Google does’t want publishers plastering these bad boys all over their pages.

    Google’s guidelines for ad placement can be found here.

  • Google Is Giving Credit To Merchants To Use Google Shopping

    Google Is Giving Credit To Merchants To Use Google Shopping

    Google announced that it is offering promotional credit to merchants in Australia, Japan, Brazil, Italy, France, The Netherlands, The UK, Germany, and Switzerland to make the transition to Google Shopping as it rolls out to these countries.

    Merchants in said countries can apply to create Product Listing Ads (the basis for the Google Shopping model) for their products by April 12 to qualify. They can also qualify for a monthly credit for 10% of their Product Listing Ad spend.

    “Last month we announced the international rollout of the new Google Shopping model built on Product Listing Ads,” says Google Shopping VP of Product Management, Sameer Samat. “Starting in February 2013, Google Shopping in ten more countries will be transitioning to a new experience built on Product Listing Ads. We believe these changes, and the improved user experience, will create new opportunities for merchants and help retailers of all sizes attract more customers to their stores. The new model will be rolled out completely by the end of Q2 2013.”

    “In an effort to improve the data quality on Google Shopping, we have updated our international feed specifications,” says Samat. “These changes will take effect in March 2013. They will align our global product feeds more closely and enable us to surface better results to users. Advertisers who are using the reduced Product Ads feed spec will need to bring their feeds into compliance with these new requirements. For more information on the upcoming changes, please visit the Help Center.”

    Google will release a new set of Google Shopping program policies in January.

    In the meantime, Bing is encouraging shoppers not to get “Scroogled”.

  • Asian Americans the Most Positive Toward Social Ads

    According to a report from Nielsen, your susceptibility to and tolerance of social media advertising is tied to your ethnicity.

    Nielsen looked at interactions with social ads and found that Asian-American consumers are much more likely to react positively, all across the board. They were more likely to share an ad, like an ad, and make a purchase based on the ad.

    Whites were the least likely to share, like, or buy from a social media ad, with Hispanics and African-Americans falling in between the two.

    Nielsen also found that of those who made a purchase after viewing an ad, most obtained a coupon first. Check out their mini-infographic below:

    Nielsen also had this to say on the current state of social media advertising:

    “Consumer attitudes towards advertising on social media are still evolving, though a third of social media users agree that ads on social networking sites are more annoying than other online ads. More than a quarter of users say they don’t mind seeing tailored ads based on their individual profile information. Not only do consumers not mind certain ads, they also engage with them by liking or sharing an ad (26% and 15%, respectively), or actually making a purchase (14%). As attitudes towards advertisements evolve, and ads become more accepted based on consumers’ responsiveness level, social media platforms can become more and more like traditional, ad-supported media.”

    Another recent study from Adobe/Edelman Berland painted a still pretty bleak picture of online ad credibility. Over half of respondents said that most online marketing was “a bunch of bullshit,” and 68% said they were “annoyed” by online ads. In fact, people said they were 7 times more likely to pay attention to their dentist than pay attention to an online ad.

  • Reports: Facebook May Soon Buy Atlas From Microsoft

    Reports are coming out that Facebook and Microsoft are in talks for the former to buy the Atlas ad platform from Microsoft, which picked it up in its acquisition of aQuantive in 2007.

    Sources of these stories appear to all be from outside of either company.

    Nicholas Carlson at Business Insider reports:

    Microsoft has been trying to sell Atlas for years, and one of our sources is close to a company that was interested in buying it. In recent days, Microsoft ended negotiations with this company, and said it was moving forward on a deal with Facebook.

    Since then, Facebook and Microsoft employees have reached out to other ad tech companies to do research for the deal. A source at one of these companies briefed us on the details of those conversations.

    Kara Swisher at All Things D is hearing a similar story, reporting:

    Sources said the social networking giant has been conducting due diligence on the media measurement platform, part of its efforts to create its own advertising network to compete with Google’s DoubleClick offering

    Facebook recently announced proposed changes to its Data Use Policy, which made it more clear that Facebook can easily take advantage of user data to serve ads outside of Facebook.

    As Carlson notes, Facebook’ s partnership with Datalogix, which has seen Facebook measuring the effectiveness of ad campaigns, would also fit nicely into the puzzle.

  • Google Adds Features To DoubleClick For Publishers

    Google announced that it is launching internal redirects to DoubleClick for Advertisers, custom creatives and mobile data transfer features to DoubleClick for Publishers.

    Publishers can use internal redirects when delivering a DFA campaign from DFP, “reducing impression loss, improving ad load times and minimizing the administrative overhead of reconciliation,” Google says.

    “Custom creatives are useful for delivering bespoke creatives developed in-house or provided by advertisers, Google says, adding, “You can now include mobile impressions – with mobile targeting information – in your data transfer files.”

    Google has also added some features for improving the mobile experience. For example, latitude and longitude data can be provided to DFP for geo-targeting precision. You can target and report on whole categories of devices (like smartphones, tablets or feature phones) at once. Additionally, you can deliver a fullscreen video ad in mobile apps on Android and iOS. The video interstitial type includes the option to auto-close the interstitial after the video has completed.

    More on recently added DoubleClick features here.

  • Google Launches Some Text Ad Tweaks

    Google Launches Some Text Ad Tweaks

    Google announced some new enhancements for text ads on the Google Display Network today.

    “Text ads have proven to be a great way to help advertisers extend their Google search campaigns to sites in the Google Display Network, enabling publishers like you to earn revenue from your content,” say Johan Land and Stephen Yuan on Google’s Inside AdSense blog. “This is why we’re continuing to work on improving text ads, even as we introduce new ad formats.”

    Google is rolling out a change that it says will make the look and feel of text ads more consistent across different screens, while making the distinctions fade. There is also a new clickable arrow icon and “slight optimizations” to font size, spacing and text layout.

    Enhanced Text Ads

    “These enhancements are among the largest that we have made to text ads, and our experiments indicate an uplift in clicks across publishers on the Google Display Network,” the pair says.

    The changes will happen automatically for most text ads. Arrow color will be based on the color palette publishers are using for their ad units.

  • These Were The 20 Most Shared Video Ads Of 2012

    Unruly Media has put out its annual look at the top 20 video ads of the year, in terms of shares. While, it may not come across as an ad, exactly, the company has put Kony 2012 from the non-profit Invisible Children, at the top of the list.

    The video has generated over 10.1 million shares since launching in early March.

    “Emotive content and bottom-up sharing stole the show this year,” said Unruly co-founder and COO Sarah Wood. “The world’s biggest brands can learn from Invisible Children: it’s not about a 30-second commercial anymore when a 30-minute video gets 10 million global shares.”

    The data is comes from Unruly’s Viral Video Chart, which measures shares (rather than views) across Twitter, Facebook and blogs.

    Here is a look at Unruly’s top 20:

    1. Invisible Children: Kony 2012 – 10,068,928 shares

    2. TNT: A Dramatic Surprise On A Quiet Square – 4,352,283 shares

    3. Abercrombie & Fitch: Call Me Maybe – 2,435,774 shares

    4. DC Shoes: Gymkhana 5 – 2,292,354 shares

    5. P&G: Best Job – 2,227,528 shares

    6. Dancesport Studio: Two-Year-Old Dancing The Jive – 2,094,766 shares

    7. Melbourne Metro: Dumb Ways To Die – 1,217,751 shares

    8. Chevrolet: OK Go, Needing/ Getting – 1,140,769 shares

    9. Volkswagen: The Bark Side – 1,127,479 shares

    10. PBS Studios: Mister Rogers Remixed, Garden Of You Mind – 1,045,039 shares

    11. Google: One Day, Project Glass – 1,025,854 shares

    12. Go Pro: Black Edition, Smaller, Lighter and 2X More Powerful – 989,904 shares

    13. Coke: Unlock The 007 In You. You Have 70 Seconds – 933,601 shares

    14. Nike: Mercurial Vapor VIII: Cristiano Ronaldo vs Rafa Nadal – 921,039

    15. Nike: My Time Is Now – 902,609 shares

    16. Sesame Street Workshop: Share It Maybe – 863,969 shares

    17. Red Bull: Athlete Machine (Red Bull Kluge) – 804,418 shares

    18. Banco Som Sabadell: Som Sabadell FlashMob – 794,749 shares

    19. Air New Zealand and WETA: An Unexpected Briefing – 753,200 shares

    20. Febelfin: Amazing Mind Reader Reveals His ‘Gift’ – 695,896 shares

  • Google Expands Its Click-To-Call Ad Feature

    Google has been working on expanding its click-to-call ad feature in a few different ways. Today in a blog post, Google provided an update about what it’s been doing.

    The company recently introduced a click-to-call button for ads using Call Extensions. Google says early results indicate that the new design has positively impacted advertiser click-through rates and call volume.

    Google is expanding the availability of call forwarding numbers. The feature has been available in the United Staes and in the United Kingdom, but it’s now being expanded into Germany, and to more countries in the coming months.

    Google has also expanded Call Extensions for ads showing in apps on the Google Display Network.

    “Mobile technology is making it easier than ever for people to research products and connect with businesses while they’re on the go,” says Google Mobile Search Ads product manager Anurag Agrawal. “But we all know that sometimes it helps to speak to a real person before making a purchase decision. In fact, research shows that 52% of smartphone users have called a business after looking for local information on their mobile devices. Calls are key in helping consumers connect with businesses in the digital age, so incorporating a click-to-call strategy on mobile is crucial for any company that does business over the phone.”

    “Companies big and small have put click-to-call functionality front and center in their mobile ads to reach customers on the go, and have seen impressive results,” says Agrawal. “For instance, Comcast incorporated click-to-call ads into their mobile strategy, and now find mobile drives more than 10% of online sales. Esurance also reduced their cost per acquisition by 20-30% compared to other channels by using Google mobile ads with click-to-call. With more than 20 million calls made through Google click-to-call ads each month, it’s clear that mobile works when driving calls to businesses. In fact, our studies have shown that adding Call Extensions to mobile ad campaigns have improved advertisers’ average click-through rates by about 6-8%.”

    Google says advertisers using call forwarding numbers see calls last over six minutes on average.

  • Google Explains Basics Of Paid Links In New Video

    Google put out a new Webmaster Help video today about paid links. There’s no new information, and most of our readers can probably skip this one, but essentially, Cutts is just explaining to the uninitiated the difference between a paid link that passes PageRank and an advertisement link, which does not.

    Clearly, this is still something that comes up with people new to the game. This was, after all, a direct response to a user-submitted question.

    This is still an important part of online marketing that any webmasmter needs to know, so it’s probably a good thing to keep it in the conversation. If you fall into the camp that is still learning the basics, and you want to know more about Google’s guidelines, and paid link policies specifically, start here.

  • Facebook’s AdSense Likely On The Way

    Last week, as reported, Facebook introduced its latest set of proposed changes to its governing documents: its Data Use Policy and Statement of Rights and Responsibilities.

    With the changes, it has been revealed that Facebook can easily use your data to serve you ads outside of Facebook, which would obviously be crucial for building an AdSense-like ad network.

    While Facebook has not announced any new product of the sort, it has been long expected, and seems like only the next likely progression in Facebook’s revenue seeking strategy.

    Forbes highlights the the relevant changes to the Data Use Policy in two major points:

    Facebook used to keep data it received about you from advertisers and third parties for 180 days; now they say they’ll keep it for as long as necessary to provide you with a service. Chief Privacy Officer Erin Egan says that means that if Zynga tells Facebook who their top scoring players are in order to target them with ads, Facebook erases that information as soon as the ad campaign is over. But if Zynga were to post information about its top scoring players on its wall, Facebook is not going to take it down within 180 days.

    Facebook makes it clearer that it can use information about you to display ads to you outside of Facebook. The policy previously stated that the company could serve ads with a social context outside of Facebook. Now it makes it clear they can serve any kinds of ads they want. “Everything you do and say on Facebook can be used to serve you ads,” says Egan. “Our policy says that we can advertise services to you off of Facebook based on data we have on Facebook.”

    Take a moment to let that last quote sink in. “Everything you do and say on Facebook can be used to serve you ads…off of Facebook…” Anything.

    That has to account for some incredible targeting capabilities that could have Google on edge. Facebook, at last count, had over 1.01 billion active users.

  • Have You Seen Google’s New Search App Ads?

    Have You Seen Google’s New Search App Ads?

    Google has put out a pair of new ads for its Search app for iOS, Android and Windows Phone. While the product being advertised is the Search app, it is really the Knowledge Graph and Voice Search features that Google is pushing.

    In the first ad, a little girl tells her mom that it’s “Dress Like A President Day” at school, and that she’s supposed to be Martin Van Buren. The mom uses the app to see what Van Buren looked like via the Knowledge Graph, and successfully creates a costume.

    In the second ad, an umpire uses Voice Search to look up the strike zone in a baseball game.

  • Apple Debuts Two New iPhone 5 Ads Before Black Friday

    Apple has just dropped two new iPhone 5 ads in time for the holiday shopping season. The first, “Turkey,” touts the iPhone’s Photo Stream feature – the ability to share sets of photos with a select group of friends and family.

    The second ad is called “Orchestra” and showcases the iPhone 5’s noise cancellation abilities. You can check them out below:

    It looks like Apple is gearing up for the holiday season – which usually means a blitz in electronics shopping. This always includes Apple, who is once again having an online and in-store Black Friday sale this year. The iPhone 5, along with the iPad mini and the new new iPad are at the center of Apple’s new product lineup this season – as long as they can meet demand, of course.

  • Will Brands Shift Focus Away From Facebook?

    Facebook is a public company. Perhaps you’ve heard. For years, the social network has been a tremendous way for businesses to promote themselves and their products and services to customers and prospects for free, by way of Facebook Pages. There has been quite a bit of controversy, especially in recent weeks, about how many of a Page’s updates are making it to their fans’ News Feeds, as Facebook pushes its monetization efforts (like promoted posts), which are essential for the company to make shareholders happy. The bottom line is that Facebook needs to have a substantial bottom line. That means getting paid by advertisers, even if they offer free advertising, in a sense.

    Is Facebook the best way to get your messages to customers and fans? What channel do you find best suited to accomplish this goal? Let us know in the comments.

    Meanwhile, some Page owners are finding that their messages are getting through to their fans less often. Maybe these two things are unrelated, but they’re both happening. It is a fact that these days, you have to pay Facebook if you want to ensure that your post is seen by a certain amount of users. While it’s highly unlikely that we’ll see many brands abandoning Facebook as a promotional tool, there is a possibility that more of brands’ efforts are spent elsewhere, where they have more control (without having to pay for it).

    One of the more vocal opponents of Facebook’s handling of Page reach and the News Feed has been uber-preneur and Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban, and he makes that very point. He recently tweeted a screenshot of Facebook trying to charge him thousands of dollars to promote a post from the Mavericks’ Page, saying, “FB is blowing it? This is the first step. The Mavs are considering moving to Tumblr or to new Myspace as primary site.”

    Dan Lyons at ReadWriteWeb reported that Cuban was moving 70 of the companies in which he has invested away from Facebook as the “primary site”. He shared the following quote from Cuban:

    “We are moving far more aggressively into Twitter and reducing any and all emphasis on Facebook. We won’t abandon Facebook, we will still use it, but our priority is to add followers that our brands can reach on non-Facebook platforms first.”

    Cuban has since come out with his own blog post on the subject. “In the past we put FB first, twitter second. FB has been moved to the bottom of a longer list,” he says in that. He points to a statement made by Facebook, which says it can keep the News Feed an “engading service where people come to get the information that is most interesting to them,” and goes on to make an interesting point about the nature of social networks:

    This has to be a good thing, right ? What could possibly be wrong with wanting to improve engagement ? What could possibly be wrong with optimizing their news and information feeds ? IMHO, everything. Defining engagement by clicks, likes, shares, unlikes and reporting works for Google’s search engine, I don’t believe it works for a social network.

    People go to Google Search with every intention of leaving it. They want to “engage, click and leave”. On the exact opposite side of the spectrum, people go to FB with the expectation that it is very likely they will stay on FB for an extended period of time. In fact we spend more than 26 minutes per day on FB. As this study said, FB is an alternative to boredom. FB is far more like TV than it is Google Search.

    Don’t forget, Cuban is the chairman of a television network.

    Later in the post, he says, “We should know better than an algorithm what those who like us actually like. It may well be that it’s a passive relationship. Maybe they just want to see the scores at the end of every quarter in a Mavs game ? Maybe they want to know what show is playing right now on AXS TV ? No one expects them to like, comment or share any of this. It’s just an information source. And can i just say that its really weird when Mavs end of quarter scores show up out of order. Thats how smart the algorithm is.”

    This is really the crux of the whole discussion from the standpoint of the business who wants its messages to be seen by its fans, as well as the users who actually want to see the updates from the Pages they liked in the first place. Can an algorithm better determine what the user should see than the choices made by the user himself? Facebook used to provide all kinds of controls that enabled the user to adjust the frequency of posts they see from people and Pages, as well as if they even want to see any at all. That’s been dropped for a spam/complaint option and the will of the algorithm. Does there need to be another layer of News Feed control applied at the algorithmic level?

    Facebook maintains it is trying to control spam, but couldn’t users easily decide whether or not they wanted to see less updates from any particular Page or friend. If anything, users likely feel they’re being spammed more than ever, with the increase in sponsored posts.

    The main point Cuban is making, is that brands may decide, like he has decided, to invest more of their efforts in channels where they know their messages will reach their fans.

    Facebook reportedly says that Page reach has not decreased overall, but that a News Feed algorithm change did start reducing reach for Pages that get complaints. Facebook’s News Feed product manager shared the “four main factors” that go into determining if a Page post shows up in the News Feed. These are (via Josh Constine at TechCrunch):

    1. If you interacted with an author’s posts before: If you Like every post by a Page that Facebook shows you, it will show you more from that Page.

    2. Other people’s reactions to a specific post: If everyone else on Facebook shown a post ignores it or complains, it’s less likely to show you that post.

    3. Your interaction with posts of the same type in the past: If you always Like photos, there’s a better chance you’ll see a photo posted by a Page.

    4. If that specific post has received complaints by other users who have seen it, or the Page who posted it has received lots complaints in the past, you’ll be less likely to see that post. This factor became a lot more prevalent starting in September 2012.

    From one perspective, there do seem to be some flaws with this approach. In the case of number one, it goes back to what Cuban said about users simply looking for information. You don’t necessarily need to interact with a post to find it useful or valuable. Sometimes reading is enough. In fact, I would go so far as to say, often, reading is enough. As far as number two goes, how can Facebook determine if everyone else on Facebook is ignoring a post if so many people aren’t seeing it in the first place? Facebook is “less likely to show you that post,” but how can you ignore it if you never even saw it?

    Facebook says it started penalizing things that have more complaints, but it’s the user that liked the Page in the first place isn’t it? Isn’t that ball still in the user’s court? Just because some people complain about a post from a Page that thousands of people “like,” does that mean that others that “like” the Page should see less posts from that Page too, when they went out of their way to “like” it in the first place?

    Some are skeptical about Facebook’s intentions, given the expansion of Promoted Posts. If you’re not reaching enough of your fans, you can always pay Facebook to reach more of them (still not all of them in many cases).

    Some think Facebook is becoming too monetization-friendly and not enough user-friendly. Today’s Facebook certainly doesn’t seem like what the Jesse Eisenberg version of Mark Zuckerberg envisioned. But again, Facebook is at the stage where making money means a lot now. It’s been a while since it was just a few guys in a dorm.

    And it’s not as if Facebook has stopped thinking about users. In fact, they’ve even made some moves of late that are directly related to Page reach and the News Feed.

    There’s a dedicated Pages feed. Of course that mobile share feature should be beneficial for Page posts too. There’s also a hidden URL where you can actually see “all” friend activity in your News Feed (if it’s that important to you, you can bookmark it).

    Despite all the uproar (seemingly mostly in the press and Blogosphere and less in actual everyday conversation), Facebook probably doesn’t have to worry much about losing users over it. People are hooked, and at last count, there were 1.01 billion of them (active ones), with more using Facebook via mobile devices all the time (again, that mobile share feature should be helpful in getting posts seen more).

    Facebook is also working on search, so that may be useful for businesses and Page owners when it’s all said and done.

    Cuban does make the point that “Some of the best sources of current information are searches on Twitter, Tumblr and Instagram (the irony), and of course relevant websites.” Facebook could get better in this area with whatever it has up its sleeve in the search department, but the nature of the way most people use Facebook (more private and less public) could impede such an endeavor, when compared to these other sources of information.

    If nothing else, despite all the features the Internet’s major social networks have borrowed from each other over the years, there may be enough room for them to continue to differentiate themselves in how people use them, so that they can continue to live along side one another for years to come. Still, it’s going to be interesting to see how brand use trends, and if Cuban is right about that.

    Do you think it’s getting harder to reach people through Facebook? Would you (or do you) pay to promote posts? Let us know in the comments.

  • Twitter Study Says Twitter Exposure Drives Purchases

    Twitter has partnered with Compete for another study that shows that exposure on Twitter is good for business. This time, they looked at Twitter’s effect on online shopping by analyzing 7,600 users and their purchasing behavior as it pertains to 700 retailers on Twitter.

    Here’s the gist of the study: People who see tweets from retailers are more likely to purchase a product.

    Twitter users who see retailer Tweets are more likely to make online purchases. During the timeframe that Compete analyzed, 27% of general internet users bought something from a retail website. Twitter users, however, made purchases at a rate of 33% from the same sites during the same period. When Twitter users were exposed to a Tweet from a retailer, that purchase rate increased to 39%. This represents a lift of 1. 4X and 1.2X, respectively, and is true across a variety of retail categories.

    Furthermore, quantity matters:

    The more retailer Tweets people see, they more they visit retail sites and make online purchases. As people are exposed to more retailer Tweets, the likelihood that they will visit a retail website and make online purchases grows. Twitter users exposed to Tweets from retailers on 12 or more days were 32% more likely to purchase from those retailers compared to all users exposed to retail Tweets.

    Twitter payed for another study back in October than looked at Twitter’s influence on political donations. That study found that simply being a Twitter users increases a person’s likelihood of visiting a campaign donation page. Furthermore, “this likelihood increases when Twitter users are exposed to political Tweets either from political handles they follow, retweets by users they follow, Promoted Product campaigns by a political handle, or searches on political terms. Twitter users exposed to any of these kinds of political Tweets are almost twice as likely (97%) as other Twitter users to visit an online political donation page.”

    Like this most recent study, that study is a pretty strong argument for making your tweets have a larger reach through Twitter’s family of promoted products (tweets, accounts, and trends). These studies are obviously beneficial to Twitter’s advertising strategy, but that doesn’t mean that they aren’t true. Exposure can indeed drive a lot of things – purchases being one of them.

    You can check out Twitter and Compete’s full report here.

  • Melbourne Metro’s “Dumb Ways to Die” Campaign Is Rather Brilliant

    Trains are dangerous things. And if you’re not careful around them, you could end up dying in the dumbest way possible.

    That’s the message behind a new viral ad campaign for Melbourne, Australia’s Metro Trains. They’ve tapped a local artist to record a catchy little tune and set it too the cutest little death animations you’l ever see. The result is “Dumb Way to Die.” Check out the video below and be prepared, it will get stuck in your head:

    “This campaign is designed to draw people to the safety message, rather than frighten them away. Especially in our younger segments. We want to create a lasting understanding that you shouldn’t take risks around trains, that the prospect of death or serious injury is ever-present and that we as a community need to be aware of what constitutes both safe and dumb behavior,” Metro Trains’ Marketing Manager Chloe Alsop told Australian media news site Mumbrella.

    The viral video isn’t the only weapon of the campaign. They will also be running print and radio ads, as well as giant posters inside the train stations that feature our cute little friends and the lyrics to the song.

    There’s even a Tumblr blog set up with fun GIFs of all the dumb ways to die featured in the video.

    Sometimes, you need a little bit of humor to sprinkle on deathly serious ad campaigns. Metro Trains, you’re doing it right.

    (image)

    [via reddit]

  • AdWords Gets Airport Targeting, Updates To Location Extensions

    Google announced some improvements to location targeting and location extensions in AdWords.

    For location targeting, advertisers can now target specific airports – over 350 of them.

    “With airport targeting, you can offer relevant, last-minute travel and entertainment opportunities, promote your mobile application to airport travelers, amplify interest in your in-airport campaigns, build your brands with mobile display ads, and much more,” explains group product manager Smita Hashim. “Plus, you can easily review the performance of these campaigns using geographic performance reports.”

    Airport Targeting

    For location extensions, Google has added the ability to include them alongside sitelinks, increased map size on desktop and laptop computers, added better location matching, added online conversion reporting, and added more countries.

    Location extensions can be shown alongside one-line sitelinks on desktop and laptop, and will also show with two-line and three-line sitelinks. On desktops and laptops, the new bigger maps will replace the current expandable maps, and when location extension addresses are clicked, the new map panels will appear to the right of the top search results.

    Location Extension Maps

    “Early testing suggests that users will click to see locations on a map more frequently than with our previous design,” says Hashim.

    Location extensions are now available in Argentina, Bulgaria, Romania, Russia, UAE, and Vietnam. Geo-targeting options have been expanded in the United Kingdom, departments in France, and cities in Argentina, Russia, and United Arab Emirates.

  • Microsoft Announces Skype Ads For Windows 8

    Skype started running ads last year, even before it was acquired by Microsoft, but from the sound of it, they’re really just getting started. At the Monaco Media Forum today, Skype President Tony Bates announced the launch of Skype Ads for Windows 8.

    On the Microsoft Advertising blog, Sandhya Venkatachalam shares some of what he had to say about the launch:

    Advertising on Skype for Windows 8 has been built into the experience from the ground up and is completely congruous to the native Skype experience. This means brands can take advantage of Skype’s new fast, fluid and easy to use design just as much as users. The result is an inviting and engaging environment for our audience and for brands to start interacting in new ways that are completely natural to the Skype experience.

    The advertising experience in Skype for Windows 8 leverages the solid foundation we have built over the last 12 months. In May we launched Conversation Ads which give users the opportunity to discuss the products and services they love with each other live. This was a complement to our homepage sponsorships on both Desktop and Mobile that were well suited for advertisers who want to build awareness and who wanted a consistent multi-screen experience for their campaigns.

    Skype has over 280 million monthly users, and is growing at a rate of 40% year-over-year. Video calling has grown to over 50% of all calls on Skype.

  • Google Rolls Out Google Shopping To More Countries

    Google Rolls Out Google Shopping To More Countries

    Google announced this morning that it is now rolling out Google Shopping to more countries, after completing the transition in the U.S. on October 17. This, for those who haven’t kept up, is a move from a free “everyone can list” model to a paid inclusion model, which is integrated with Google’s product listing ads.

    The roll out includes: United Kingdom, Germany, France, Japan, Italy, Spain, Netherlands, Brazil, Australia and Switzerland. The rollout, much as it was in the U.S., will be gradual.

    On February 13, Google says, users in these countries will start seeing “visually cleaner” results for shopping queries, including new commercial formats on Google.com that will display products in a single unit, and replace the current search results.

    “These visually cleaner results for shopping queries will enable shoppers to refine a search by brand or price, and feature larger product images to provide a better sense of a product’s attributes,” says Sameer Samat, Vice President of Product Management, Google Shopping. “Starting today, we’ll begin testing this new format for a small percentage of searches.”

    The transition to the commercial model will be complete by the end of the second quarter of 2013, Google says. Google will also offer some new (but unspecified) incentives, indicating that more details will be coming soon.

    For all our coverage on Google Shopping, see this page.

  • AdSense Gets A Big 300X600 Ad Unit

    AdSense Gets A Big 300X600 Ad Unit

    Google announced a new ad size for AdSense today: the 300X600.

    “As screens grow and web content continues to become richer, the format and capabilities of ad units continue to evolve as well,” says AdSense UI engineer Omer Gimenez Llach, adding that one of the top requests from publishers has been for larger ad sizes.

    “The 300×600 unit, sometimes referred to as a half page unit, provides a larger space for advertisers to get their message across and can offer users rich engagement,” he adds. “As mentioned in our recently released Display Business Trends, the 300×600 is one of the fastest growing sizes by impressions and is indicative of a trend where publishers are offering more visually impactful ad sizes that are preferred by brand advertisers. Because this unit is new to our network, you’ll currently see a large number of text ads in these placements. Over time we’ll continue to build a wide range of text and display ad inventory eligible to appear in this full slot as well.”

    Google has guidelines for ad placement here (you know how they feel about having too many above the fold).

    The unit will be available in AdSense accounts soon, but the exact time has not been specified.

  • Google To Invest In More YouTube Content [Report]

    Google’s plans for YouTube appear to be working out. Last year, Google invested $100 million into a set of new original channels to lure advertisers and make YouTube the monetization machine it always seemed like it should be. Advertisers are buying into it now, and Google is reportedly getting ready to renew its investments in these channels.

    That does not mean, however, that all of the channels from the original line up will be getting more money from Google. In fact only a fraction – something like 30% – 40%, according to AdAge will get part of a new round of funding from Google, but that’s just Google using what it has learned over the past year, and moving forward accordingly.

    AdAge has talked with Google, some of the content producers involved in the project, and advertisers, and has learned that Google is getting ready to provide its second round of content (which, from the sound of it, will be roughly equivalent to the first round, on a per channel basis) to the lucky partners.

    Those who made the cut should reportedly be finding out from Google within the next few weeks. It will be interesting to see how many of the channels that don’t get new funding continue on with their regularly scheduled programming.

    In addition to the channels, YouTube has become an important destination for live streaming events, which if the company continues to build upon, could help it tremendously in its battle with television for acquiring eyeballs that stick around for longer amounts of time.

    Last month, YouTube launched more original channels, including content from France, Germany, the UK, and more from the US.