Teen Content Creators & Consumers

22 12 2005

About 21 million, or 87% of kids ages 12-17, use the Internet. According to a survey by the Pew Internet & American Life Project, half of all teens and 57% of teens who use the Internet have created a blog or webpage, posted original artwork, photography, stories or videos online or remixed online content into their own new creations. The study considers them "Content Creators."

The results highlight that this is a generation of teens eager to share their thoughts, experiences, and creations with the wider Internet population.

Some key findings of the study include:

* 33% of online teens share their own creative content online, such as artwork, photos, stories or videos
* 32% say that they have created or worked on web pages or blogs for others, including friends or school assignments
* 22% report keeping their own personal webpage
* 19% of online teens keep a blog, and 38% of online teens read blogs
* 19% of internet-using teens say they remix content they find online into their own artistic creations.

Teens are often much more enthusiastic authors and readers of blogs than their adult counterparts. Teen bloggers, led by older girls, are a major part of this tech-savvy cohort. "For American teens, blogs are about self-expression, building relationships, and carving out a presence online," said Amanda Lenhart, co-author of the report entitled, "Teen Content Creators and Consumers."

51% of online teens report downloading music, compared to just 18% of adults who report similar behavior. Mary Madden, a Research Specialist at the Project and co-author of the report, said "At a time when social norms around digital content don’t always appear to conform with the letter of the law, many teens are aware of the restrictions on copyrighted material, but believe it’s still permissible to share some content for free." 75% agree with the statement that, "Music downloading and file-sharing is so easy to do, it’s unrealistic to expect people not to do it."

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Bush to Nation - "I’m not Nixon"

21 12 2005

Can’t wait until we find those secret recorders in his oval office….

President George W Bush has admitted he authorised secret monitoring of communications within the United States in the wake of the 2001 terror attacks.

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Rapid US economic growth persists

21 12 2005

See, yet another vote in the B2C camp - no question, it’s longer to rev, but on the whole, am firmly convinced that Consumers, as a class, are _much_ more valuable than Businesses, especially during downturns, where Businesses keep trying to preserve cash they obtain from consumers, who often continue to spend even during downturns, rather than continuing their role in the velocity of money, thereby strongly contributing to downward economic spirals.

The Department of Commerce said that gross domestic product (GDP) increased by an annual rate of 4.1% in the three months to the end of September….Consumer spending, which accounts for nigh on two-thirds of economic activity, increased by more than 4% during the third quarter, up from 3.4% in the previous three month period….

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Family Resources on the Internet and Drilldown on Family Web Media

17 12 2005

Hmmm - didn’ t know that the “family” segment was so small, (definite definitional issues here). In any case, still good info to pop into the files…

Family Resources on the Internet and Drilldown on Family Web Media

A deeper look at family resource destinations including demographics, media, ad types, sizes and delivery types

Top 4 Online Family Resources Destinations
Week ending November 27, 2005 US, Home and Work

Brand or Channel

Unique Audience (000)

Active Reach (%)

BabyCenter

1,374

1.06

AOL Parenting

883

0.68

About Parenting and Family

827

0.64

MyFamily.com

744

0.57

Nielsen//NetRatings NetView

Demographic Data for Family Resources Category
Month of October 2005 US, Home and Work

Category

Target

Unique Audience (000)

Unique Audience (%)

Total

23,277

100

Male

8,339

35.82

Female

14,939

64.18

Age

2 - 11

629

2.7

12 - 17

1,532

6.58

18 - 24

930

3.99

25 - 34

4,736

20.35

35 - 49

9,389

40.33

45+

8,755

37.61

55+

3,923

16.85

65+

1,518

6.52

HH Income

$ 0 - 24999

1,223

5.25

$ 25000 - 49999

5,301

22.77

$ 50000 - 74999

6,196

26.62

$ 75000 - 99999

4,429

19.03

$ 100000 - 149999

4,255

18.28

$ 150000+

1,584

6.81

Nielsen//NetRatings NetView

Data on the Web Media Industry/ Family Segment Week ending November 27, 2005 US, Home and Work

Top 14 Advertisers

Company

Impressions (000)

Share of all Impressions

MyFamily.com, Inc.

1,888

35.1%

Johnson & Johnson

1,687

31.4%

Babies Online, LLC

927

17.2%

Trader Publishing Company

541

10.1%

Nestle USA, Inc.

137

2.5%

5Wits

65

1.2%

MomsWIN

57

1.1%

Nest Entertainment

26

0.5%

Discovery Communications, Inc.

22

0.4%

ClubMom

17

0.3%

A&E Television Networks

4

0.1%

AncestralFindings.com

4

0.1%

The First Years

3

0.1%

FamilyLife

2

0.0%

Total

5,380

100.0%

Source: Nielsen//NetRatings AdRelevance

Top Ad Sizes

Dimensions

Impressions (000)

Share of all Impressions

Leaderboard (728×90)

6,698,334

28.6%

Non-Standard Dimension

4,129,997

17.7%

Medium Rectangle (300×250)

2,272,823

9.7%

Wide Skyscraper (160×600)

1,779,149

7.6%

Button #2 (120×60)

1,499,102

6.4%

Full Banner (468×60)

1,477,648

6.3%

Skyscraper (180×150)

944,148

4.0%

Rectangle (180×150)

911,712

3.9%

Half Banner (234×60)

827,985

3.5%

Micro Bar (88×31)

757,336

3.2%

Button #1 (120×90)

633,655

2.7%

Square Button (125×125)

516,509

2.2%

Unspecified

332,875

1.4%

Large Rectangle (336×280)

246,432

1.1%

Vertical Banner (120×240)

244,900

1.0%

Square (250×250)

67,341

0.3%

Vertical Rectangle (240×400)

40,423

0.2%

Total

23,380,369

100.0%

Source: Nielsen//NetRatings AdRelevance

Ad Delivery Types

Ad Delivery

Impressions (000)

Share of all Impressions

Inline

22,351,369

95.6%

Pop-Under

712,151

3.0%

Floating/Overlay

197,138

0.8%

Pop-Up

103,181

0.4%

Interstitial

16,532

0.1%

Total

23,380,371

100.0%

Source: Nielsen//NetRatings AdRelevance

Note: Nielsen//NetRatings AdRelevance reporting data reflects advertising activity served on pages accessible via the World Wide Web and not within AOL’s proprietary service.



Yahoo acquires Del.icio.us

15 12 2005

Another good secondary data point for intuiting product demand, as expressed through easier investing / funding areas, (combining with the Flickr acquisition) or, at least, what someone with access to Yahoo’s pockets _thinks_ is product demand! :)

One I can get this silly Wiki SW installed, related fundings and M&A will definitely be one of the things in the MR section! :)

“Adding to its social networking offerings, Yahoo said that it has acquired del.icio.us, a New York-based startup that allows users to keep links to Internet content and access them from any computer on the web. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. Del.icio.us will remain in charge of its site, which also allows users to share their favorite links with others, as well as search through other people’s favorites. The company, which has nine employees, has signed up more than 300,000 users since its inception in 2003. Yahoo also has recently acquired social networking sites Flickr and Upcoming.org.”



The UK is the Music Download Capital of Europe

15 12 2005

…People in the UK said they spent 75 pence per month on downloads, this is three times more than the figure in France, Germany, or Italy. According to the British Phonographic Institute, the market in the UK in the first half of 2005 topped 10 million downloads….

It’s not just the kids who care about their mobile music. The UK has the highest number of "silver rockers" in Europe with 21% of the over 50’s using a digital music player.

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One Laptop per Child to produce $100 Laptop by Next Christmas

15 12 2005

Now this definitely is exciting - helping impoverished kids, and thus, impoverished nations, to help themselves in ways we take for granted with our own kids everyday. See? All truly great things start out with one simple thought that everyone else thinks is insane / stupid / foolish. “A $100 laptop?” Come on. “Man landing on the Moon.” A fool’s errand. “Ensuring that every car can travel @ 60 mph at any time of day.” Utter madness. Hey, DOT - hear that last one?! :)

“….[One Laptop per Child] Chairman Nicholas Negroponte said, ‘Any previous doubt that a very-low-cost laptop could be made for education in the developing world has just gone away.’ Quanta has agreed to devote significant engineering resources from the Quanta Research Institute (QRI) in Q1 and Q2, 2006, with a target of bringing the product to market in Q4….”

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Online Anti-Piracy Service Closes

12 12 2005

Woo-hoo - here’s one for the good guys! :) I hate these kind of utterly bogus attempts at supporting failing business models through technology, and specifically this kind, where you’re hiring a company specifically to piss off your most avid consumers.

Again, here’s a bizarre idea that I’ve spoken of before - work on correcting the value imbalance, and crap stunts like what this company used to do, (again, hooray!!! :) ) become unnecessary, (and yes, I’m well-aware that it’s a heck of a lot cheaper to hire a couple of hackers to do this than to address the real issue, but it’s hardly the way to make friends and influence people like - oh - those folks who are your only shot at being able to survive as a business over the long term…).

It’s about time, as The RIAA, etc., keeps working harder and harder to make sure that it keeps killing any services working on what is very much a high-demand service,*1* *2*to see at least the nail driven into the coffin of one of theirs.

It’s funny, but if there were a RIAA for text content owners, there would be no search engines at all, (no Google, no Yahoo) as they all locate content that inherently has all IP rights reserved, (by its very production) and point directly to the most “useful” IP, most often taken out of the context desired by the copyright owner, facilitating _massive_ copyright infringement, while concurrently making money by selling ads around these infringements, and, of course, not sharing a dime of this revenue with the copyright holders of the content itself, (and, in fact, concurrently charges the IP-infringed should they wish to get people to examine their content in its originally-designed context, and for its original purpose). Instead, Search has become a multi-billion dollar industry, with tremendous growth potential, and has become a critical part of all our lives on what could have been entirely snuffed out in the early days of the Web, if the “PublisheRIAA” had been established. And we all would have been… better off therefore?

—————

*1* Normal folks outside of college campuses won’t be able to use for several years, at least, but some darned fool gives The RIAA access to Internet2, and they promptly work to shut down a file sharing service in its infancy there - i2Hub - read more here

*2* As well as the solutions that these services would drive to the increasingly-problematic bandwidth expenses for individual bloggers / podcasters, etc., (and if you don’t think this is a real issue and hindrance to richer and richer media being created by more and more individuals, go ahead - try producing your own show, and find out the entirely-counter-to-radio economics of doing so, due to both bandwidth expenses and the obscurity of royalty payment schemes, and then tell me that continued work isn’t needed to solve these issues).

And what about VoIP - Skype gets bought out for literally billions of dollars, by providing us the ability to make phone calls anywhere around the world for free, (or, really, rather by making it now included as part of our bandwidth expenses). And where did this technology come from? Yep, some of those “pirates” from Kazaa, (and yes, can still hold them out as laudable for the Kazaa product itself, as I can entirely without conflict consider them scumbags for largely being the naiscent force behind the growth of the spyware industry - tech good, business model bad).

A company that fought net piracy by adding fake files to file-sharing networks is being closed down.

Overpeer led efforts to battle the rising popularity of file-sharing networks such as Kazaa.

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Online Shoppers Concerns: ID Theft, Spam and Spyware: Survey

12 12 2005

Again, have to be careful as to the motives of the sponsor, but….

December 1, 2005 — TRUSTe, the independent online trust authority, and TNS announced the results of their 2005 Holiday Shopping/Online Trust Survey. It revealed that while 78 percent of American Internet users plan to conduct some shopping online this year, 69 percent of those shoppers will limit their online purchasing because of fears associated with misuse of personal information. The 1,005 consumers surveyed also indicated that concerns about privacy issues will deter more than 40 percent of consumers from shopping at smaller online retailers.

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Behavioral Sometimes Beats Contextual–But There’s No Need to Fight

12 12 2005

Continued good info from MediaPost*1*. Though hardly conclusive, definitely some intriguing findings to keep paying attention to, even after discounting for the study being commissioned by Tacoda, especially on the clutter side, (not sure I entirely buy the “surprise” thing - though, thinking about it while writing this, I s’pose some of the effect of clutter could be diminished by some kinds of ads - Victoria’s Secret ones mostly coming to mind - not sure how far back out of id impulses that kind of anti-clutter effect could have..).

Anyway, as I said, certainly interesting to keep an eye on.

———-

*1* I do really wish MediaPost’d get their act together on their links so that I don’t have to keep clogging this up with the full text from their articles, (i.e. not once have the links they’ve embedded actually worked).

Behavioral Sometimes Beats Contextual–But There’s No Need To Fight
by Kate Kaye, Friday, December 9, 2005

LIKE MOST of his marketing industry brethren, Bill Harvey has long considered contextual advertising to be the holy grail of effective ad targeting when it comes to branding, click-through rates and ROI. But a number of recent case studies measuring the outcomes of behaviorally targeted campaigns against contextually targeted campaigns for advertisers including BMW and Snapple has Harvey, the president of research and consulting firm Next Century Media, reconsidering this commonly held belief. Harvey’s company has teamed up with behavioral targeting outfit Tacoda Systems to conduct an extensive series of studies analyzing this unexpected phenomenon. Behavioral Insider spoke with Harvey about his initial findings and future research plans.

Behavioral Insider: In a recent presentation you gave, you cited many examples of behavioral targeting (BT) outperforming contextual (CT), run-of-network (RON) and demographic targeting. It seems like the running theme in that presentation was that advertisers will find such results surprising. Why would they be surprised?

Harvey: Well, it’s not surprising that BT would beat RON. But there are two media variables of effectiveness. They’re the target and the unique effect of the environment. Between BT and CT, the target is the same, so the only variation is the editorial environment. In that situation, you have the choice of reaching the target (let’s say, people who are interested in buying a new car) either at a site that’s all about cars, or reaching them in some context that has nothing to do with cars. You’d think that it ought to be more effective in the context of people who are there for the purpose of making a new-car-buying decision.

BI: And it seems that’s been the consensus throughout the history of advertising.

Harvey: Absolutely. ‘Editorial environment’ was what we called it in the magazine field. I’m a great believer in it; I’ve done 28 studies to show the value of it on the Internet in terms of Internet sponsorships. So, suddenly to find that no-context has more effect than context, that’s the surprising part. And incidentally, it doesn’t always happen this way. It’s only that 25-50 percent of the time [we’re finding BT is more effective than CT].

BI: What are the reasons that you hypothesize are behind the better effectiveness of behavioral in these cases?

Harvey: We’ve got two hypotheses so far. One we call ‘clamor.’ Clamor is, for example, [when] you go to a car site and there are all these car ads competing for your attention. Also, there’s strong car editorial. So, it’s possible that some people coming to the site are drawn to the editorial, or maybe their eyes are even avoiding all of those competing car ads.

BI: Do you consider clutter to be the same thing?

Harvey: Yes, clutter is the generic term for it, but as it affects this specific question of BT vs. CT… we’re calling it clamor.

And then the other hypothesis is what we call ’surprise.’ Let’s say you’ve gone to fashion sites, so you’re behaviorally targeted as interested in fashion, and you go to a baby-care site and you see a fashion ad. You’re not expecting that, so you’re surprised.

….What we’ve learned… is [that] our brains are hard-wired to a survival program to form an expectation, a model of what we’re going to find in any given environment. To the extent that what is actually in the environment meets the expectation, we don’t notice it. But then when something isn’t expected, the eyes are drawn to it, and in the brain there’s a potential [cerebral cortex] wave called the P300 wave.

….For example, we’re doing a test right now with Panasonic… an InsightExpress ‘traditional’ branding study, and we’re also doing an eye-tracking study with the same Panasonic ads (there are five different units). So, the eye-tracking study is to see whether eyes are avoiding the Panasonic ads in CT or not. We’re planning to do a brainwave study to see if in behavioral targeting there’s a P300 wave indicating surprise, and if the eyes are drawn to the surprising element.

BI: So there’s a real human factor to these studies as opposed to just tracking online interaction.

Harvey: Well, we want to know the ‘why.’ We’re getting the facts about the interaction, we’re’getting the facts about the purchase intent, all that’s great…. But the idea of BT was never to replace contextual targeting. It was always to extend the reach and frequency of contextual targeting; often with contextual targeting, the inventory is sold out.

BI: They’ve kind of worked hand-in-hand at this point.

Harvey: And probably always will. It’s our intent to make both CT and BT better and to learn how to mix them in different contexts. There’s no competition.

BI: Do you see pockets of verticals or environments that might be more conducive to behavioral working better than contextual?

Harvey: Over the next year we want to collect as many case studies as we can; we’ve asked the industry for their case studies. We’re going to look at them by the dimensions you’re talking about to see under what conditions we get BT beating CT in branding and click-through and ROI and what’s the optimal mix. One of our aims is also to see whether CT can be improved. If clamor is deleterious, under what conditions can we fix it? Can we make it economically viable for both buyer and seller for there to be more solo sponsorships, or restructure pages or ad units so the clamor effect is minimized?

BI: Over what period of time will the study be conducted?

Harvey: It’ll be over at least a year. There are really many studies involved…. The Internet has now gone through the original enthusiasm and then the bubble, and now it’s in a mature phase of rapid growth. Unlike the traditional media psychological approach between buyer and seller which was always adversarial, now, to some extent, Internet sellers are more interested in helping buyers achieve effectiveness and approach things more as a partnership, not as a fight. It’s not so much negotiating, it’s more about success together. If we can contribute to that by doing the best research, then that’s a good thing.

Kate Kaye is a Contributing Writer.



Some solid pointers on picking a PR agency

5 12 2005

A bit generic, but a fine primer for those who’ve never done, (or never done well). More here.