Mobile advertising. Remixed.

Posts Tagged ‘google’

Ad Network APIs are coming … bravo!

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

There are now sufficient numbers of mobile ad networks offering APIs that it can be considered a trend: By mid 2011 every ad network worth its salt will be offering APIs to its customers to access their data.  Google has had an API for a while, and so has Yahoo.  Admob launched their beta API Q1 this year, ZestAdz today, and I hear word from others who are working on their APIs right now.

This is excellent news for advertisers and agencies who need to exercise more timely and effective control over their mobile ad campaigns.  Keep it coming!

Google had no choice but to buy Admob

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Many reporters are talking about Google’s purchase of AdMob as a logical step to ‘further their strategy in mobile advertising’ but it was nothing of the sort. It was simply buying its ticket onto the boat that it missed. Google’s forays into mobile advertising have been nothing short of mediocre, trying to duplicate their web search advertising model onto mobile without fully understanding the real issues of device fragmentation and small screen size. Writing a google mobile ad (no banners here) forced you to split your call to action into two ugly halves; an 18 character (2-3 word!) headline and an equally short subtext. Add the url onto the end and you get a half-screen size unreadable text ad on anything other than a smartphone (with dumbphones still at 60% of the ad market). Response rates were understandably poor. I once met a Google representative at a mobile advertising workshop and spent 5 minutes explaining to him why Admob’s approach was so much better, including their %phn% innovation that inserts the user’s own phone model into the ad text itself. He’d never heard of it, because he hadn’t even checked out the competition for himself.

Admob, on the other hand, just went for simple and mobile-ready and grew it from there. It also took a leaf from Google’s book and offered a free mobile analytics tool to help advertisers and publishers make more sense of their forays into mobile, something which Google only just got round to last month. With their recent push into iphone and android in-app advertising, real revenues more than doubling every year, their Google-like ‘open’ positioning, and their knowledge and ability to generate constant buzz and keep the top spot in mobile marketing globally, Admob was in the right place for Google.

Was $750m the right price? Admob currently serves around 10bn ad impressions a month, at click through rates of say 1-3%, average CPC $0.05-0.10. They get a 40% cut of adspend. Take away 140 employees salaries and tech costs, and you end up with between $17m and $127m yearly EBITDA. At a valuation of a multiple of 6-8 times profits, this puts Admob somewhere in the range of $100m to $1Bn. I suspect their revenues were at the lower end of the scale, but frankly Google’s need under the circumstances was great. Given the growth potential of mobile advertising, the $750m price tag for Admob looks like an excellent deal.

Google offers simple advice to improve your mobile marketing

Friday, October 16th, 2009

This Google GoMobile page is a nice, high level summary of the things to bear in mind when running a mobile ad campaign.  The important message here is that you have to get the context right, and consider mobile as just one channel in the whole mix.  The most active advertisers on mobile these days tend to be mobile-only or at best internet-only plays.  It’s easy to extend your offer onto mobile.  But for the rest, who are used to other marketing approaches, mobile is an extra channel and the most difficult decision is not whether to use the mobile channel, but how best to integrate it into the mix.

Oh right. Enter left, Microsoft.

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

Microsoft finally seems to have a proper mobile advertising offer.  The new Bing search engine for mobile (could have been called ‘Ming’ but unfortunately didn’t make it past the committee) is now offering mobile search advertising, delivered via their mobile Bing search engine.  Time to get your skates on and start checking out the new kid on the block.  They may even have half a chance of beating Google at the mobile advertising game, given Google’s very disappointing performance in this space so far …

http://advertising.microsoft.com/mobile-advertising?s_cid=us_sp_mobm_62009