Jul. 03, 2006

Please touch that dial
REMAKING ADS FOR A TIVO WORLD

By Michelle Quinn
San Jose Mercury News

http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/business/technology/14958459.htm


Tech-savvy couch potatoes have given TV commercials the cold shoulder for 
the past few years, ever since TiVo and its ilk unleashed the power to skip 
ahead and get back to the show.

Now advertisers are scrambling to figure out new TV advertising models in 
this age of complete viewer control.

Some advertisers are hoping a new breed of commercials will actually strike 
a chord with users of digital video recorders by tempting them to use the 
pause, fast-forward and rewind technology to see the latest advertising 
creative twists.

Take, for example, a recent KFC commercial for its new Buffalo KFC Snacker 
sandwich, which contained a subliminal message and secret code that only 
could be cracked if played back slowly, frame by frame, with a digital 
video recorder. Viewers could then enter the code (Buffalo) on KFC's Web 
site to get a coupon for the sandwich. The company gave away 75,000 coupons.

Never mind that such ad campaigns have to practically become news stories 
to work. The ad's secrets were so hidden that viewers wouldn't have known 
about them if KFC hadn't leaked the story to the media.

Still, it's clear that advertisers are going to make more of these 
so-called ``DVR ready'' ads. What isn't clear is if these efforts will be 
successful enough to convince advertisers that television is still a good 
place to hawk Cadillacs and Dial soap. The challenge is how to appeal to 
the growing number of viewers with DVRs who are enjoying their TV 
commercial-free.

KFC is not alone in trying new approaches. In the past couple of months, 
Coca-Cola and GE have aired TV ads that contained hidden message or 
scrambled entertainment. And TiVo itself has launched several features to 
coax TiVo users to watch commercials about products and services viewers 
have expressed an interest in.

``We think about consumers and respect the fact that they are in control of 
television viewing,'' said Davina Kent, TiVo's vice president of national 
advertising sales. ``We only choose things that are opt-in, meaning that 
they can choose to view on their own time.''

For example, in a deal that blurs the line between commercials and 
programming, TiVo users watching an episode about the BMW M series on the 
show Test Drive will be able to stop the program at any moment to request 
and watch an ad about the BMW M series. In its press release, TiVo said the 
ability to place ads with products in the show, which appears on the SPEED 
channel this summer, ``opens up more opportunities for advertisers to 
extend their in-program product integration.''

Yes, those products that appear like silent supporting actors in sitcoms 
and TV dramas may soon come with ads a click away.

Founded in 1997, San Jose-based TiVo popularized technology that allowed 
viewers to download TV programs to a hard drive and decide when they watch 
a television show. They can also zip past advertisements.

Now, there are more than 4.4 million households with TiVo subscriptions. 
Together with cable companies that also sell digital video recorders, 13 
percent of households have the technology, according to Forrester Research. 
By 2008, Forrester predicts, 20 percent of households will have it.

It's always been a battle for advertisers to get viewers to actually watch 
TV ads. The remote control and the VCR both made it easy to jump around TV 
channels and duck the product hawking.

But DVR technology has taken ad skipping to a whole new level. One industry 
observer calls it ``remote controls on steroids.'' It's so easy and quick 
to skip ads that some studies show that more than 50 percent of DVR users 
do it (which makes one wonder about the 50 percent who don't do it).

This has made it tricky for networks and advertisers to figure out how to 
price ads without reliable statistics to tell them how many people actually 
are watching programming vs. the advertising. Nielsen and TiVo, which can 
measure second by second what people are watching, including 
advertisements, are working together to provide a more detailed picture. 
But so far, advertisers have balked at paying advertising rates that 
include the DVR audience.

``I'm not aware of anything that is particularly effective,'' said Allen 
Banks, executive vice president and director of media at the advertising 
firm Saatchi & Saatchi. ``Advertisers are trying a number of different 
things to utilize the technology. The reality is that if an advertiser is 
buying advertising on television there's no win-win here.''

Banks pointed out that the DVR technology works better for some products 
than others.

``There are a lot of products that don't have a lot of pizazz. It's just 
the stuff people consume,'' said Banks. ``To suggest there are ways to use 
the technology is naive.''

But others are cautiously optimistic. ``There hasn't been a technology 
invented that can't be leveraged for a marketing tool,'' said Don King, 
group director for Sprite, Coca-Cola, North America.

As more households have DVRs, TV commercials, as we know them, will become 
obsolete, say industry analysts. TV ad models might become more like 
Internet ads, where advertisers pay per clicks. A few advertisers are 
shifting their attitude about DVR technology from utter panic to tentative 
acceptance.

TiVo, too, has a strong incentive to become more advertiser-friendly. 
Growing competition from cable and satellite companies has put pressure on 
TiVo to cut the price of its device. Far from seeing itself as an enemy of 
advertisers, TiVo has pitched itself as an advertiser ally. Since TiVo 
receives information about its users' viewing and clicking habits, it can 
offer advertisers detailed research about how their ad campaigns are 
working -- and the advertising also opens up new sources of revenue for the 
company, though TiVo won't say how much.

TiVo has introduced several ways people can watch ads beyond the ones 
squeezed between TV programs. Viewers can visit its ``Showcase'' and see 
ads. And when people fast forward through ads, a banner ad appears asking 
the viewer to click for more information.

In May, TiVo launched ``Product Watch,'' which allows TiVo users to 
subscribe to brands or categories. For example, viewers can ask to receive 
travel and leisure information to be downloaded to their TiVo hard drive. 
They might receive four two-minute-long vignettes about recreation vehicles 
and travel from Go RVing, a coalition of RV makers and enthusiasts. The 
viewer can also ask to be sent more information or to be contacted by an RV 
dealer. The service is available to people with TiVos with broadband 
capability, about 400,000 households.

``What's interesting about TiVo is that they are certainly trying to 
interact and engage with their users,'' said Jim O'Rourke, who works in 
brand media for The Richards Group, a branding agency based in Dallas. He 
helped create the Go RVing TiVo campaign. ``It's something we can't afford 
to ignore.''

When TiVo announced some of its advertising initiatives, Dave Zatz, who 
writes a TiVo blog called Zatznotfunny, predicted dark days ahead.

But so far, the 34-year-old network engineer from Maryland has been 
pleasantly surprised.

``I'd rather have less advertising,'' said Zatz. ``But if we have to have 
it, I'd like to see advertisers get more creative and trade us for our time.''


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu



Reply with a "Thank you" if you liked this post.
_____________________________

MEDIANEWS mailing list
medianews@twiar.org
To unsubscribe send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to