For all the good native advertising does for brands, a big roadblock the digital ad form faces is its ability to scale, said AOL CEO Tim Armstrong at a breakfast event this morning in New York. "I think it's beneficial, overall, for brands. I think there's a danger, though, that native advertising that's not scaled is not going to solve the issue that publishers have in terms of monetization. So I think what needs to happen is native advertising at scale," Armstrong said at a Media Minds discussion hosted by the Knight Foundation and Gannett. Armstrong called on the publishing community to band together to create standards around native advertising. If a company can't do it at scale, Armstrong said, "it's going to end up being too expensive to actually create native ads on all these different platforms, and that's going to even lean more heavily into programmatic, because it can be done at a high scale." In the long run, with online services becoming more global and attracting more users, small-figure native ad campaigns just won't make much sense, Armstrong added. "I think we can all help ourselves out by having native kind of connected together," he said. Armstrong's deputy, CEO of AOL Brand Group Susan Lyne, followed up to note that native is especially effective on mobile. Ads that fit into the user experience on mobile are a "much less intrusive way to engage with a consumer" than miniature banner ads or full-screen takeovers, she said. Earlier in the program,... Continue reading at 'AdWeek'
[ AdWeek | 2013-06-13 00:00:00 UTC ]
When Erin Morgenstern’s first novel, The Night Circus, debuted last September, PW predicted in a starred review that this magical tale was destined for bestsellerdom. The hardcover went on to sell 167,000 copies through the outlets tracked by Nielsen BookScan, and the paperback, which was... Continue reading at Publishers Weekly
[ Publishers Weekly | 2012-07-20 00:00:00 UTC ]
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Because California is losing more Borders stores than any other state in the country, the region's booksellers are uniquely poised to find ways to turn the ramifications of the bankruptcy proceedings to their advantage. "In the long run, the indies will benefit because there will be fewer... Continue reading at Publishers Weekly
[ Publishers Weekly | 2011-04-11 00:00:00 UTC ]
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