By B.L. Ochman
Promoted Tweets, Twitter’s long-awaited new ad platform, will be a certain game changer for the advertising industry (and everyone else.) The sea change is that ad agencies will have to give up their century old practice of getting paid for media buys and giving the creative away for nothing. From now on, ideas rule.
Until now, Madison Avenue has either ignored or bumbled such remarkable online ad opportunities as advertising on blogs and social bookmarking sites. That’s because the budgets are too small to support ad agencies’ bloated financial model.
Advertising on blogs and in other emerging media outlets has always needed to resonate to be effective, and traditional agencies have failed to adapt to the differences between new media ads and the tired interruption model of old media.
Agencies easily make $250-500K (and often much more!) to produce and buy a 30-second TV spot. A company can make a significant brand splash for a week, with advertising on a dozen or more relevant blogs with $25 or 50K.
While a print ad can easily cost $250K+ for photography, design, photography, models and production, it’s rare to see that size budget for a StumbleUpon campaign or for content sponsorship in a social network.
Madison Avenue has not wanted to be bothered with the (relatively) small budgets involved in even the biggest blog and social media ad campaigns.
So the push/interuption/how-obnoxious-do-we-have-to-be-before-you-look-at-these-damn-banner-ads school of advertising keeps feeding on itself in the endless quest for more money.
But relevancy will now rule on Twitter’s Promoted Tweets, and other online advertising is sure to follow. Because if people don’t find Promoted Tweets interesting enough to interact with and share, the ads will be banished.
Promoted Tweets will use a “Resonance Model” which will combine earned and paid media. There will be, he said, a multiple axis of engagement that measures not just clickthrus, but also replies, favoriting, link clicks, the influence of the people who re-Tweet, the use of a hashtag in conversations about the PT. There will be a total of nine resonance factors in all.
When Promoted Tweets don’t resonate, they will simply disappear. Twitter’s Chief Operating Officer Dick Costolo explained at last week at AdAge Digital and again at Twitter’s first developer’s conference, Chirp, that Twitter will continue to be one to many real time transparent communication that represents the interests of users. If the ads don’t resonate, they will not continue to run.
There will be no way to make them bigger, to add more flashturbation, to make them louder, to make them cover the other Tweets we’re trying to read. They’ll live and die on how much they resonate – like ideas have done for centuries.
Bonus link: Dear Madison Avenue: Please read Debunking Five Myths About Blog Advertising.
Promoted Tweets: a wake-up call for Madison Ave (and everyone else too)
Categories: Ad targeting, Advertisement, Advertising Campaigns, Alternative Marketing, B.L. Ochman, Blog Advertising
Tags: , BL Ochman, Promoted Tweets, Twitter ad platform, Twitter advertising, Twitter resonance model
Tags: , BL Ochman, Promoted Tweets, Twitter ad platform, Twitter advertising, Twitter resonance model
B.L. I have been reading and absorbing how promoted tweets will impact marketing but you are the first to offer this insight on how it relates to Madison Avenue. While budgets and distribution models have changed (and will continue to evolve), one of the most profound changes is in consumer interaction and behavior. Sadly, in the past “flashturbation” (love that term) and big fat budgets knocked others out of the way so I love the thought that great ideas will rule the day.
What a lot of people seem to miss is that Advertising on Twitter already exists, has for at least a year. Twitter’s Promoted Tweets is a newcomer to the area, albeit a very important one. Sites like http://ad.ly, http://be-a-magpie.com, and http://www.pay4tweet.com have also been using tweets for ads.
As important as resonance is, gaming the system with automated tools will be the annoying little cousin (in the much the same way “flashturbation” compares to static banner ads), and will probably be embraced by big brands as time goes on. Unfortunately, these techniques will likely tarnish the image of smaller players, like those mentioned above.
Fortunately, Twitter has a lot of checks in place to keep that from happening. Hopefully, the big budgets of Madison Avenue won’t entice Twitter to loosen their rules by too much.