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November 28, 2005
The game will last for approximately the first two months of the fall television schedule, according to a CBS representative. Clues will be scattered throughout CBS television programs, commercials, the AOL Web site and other media properties, AOL said.
The game could be a sign of a new tactic in the television advertising battle. As
CBS isn't alone. Since May 3, ABC has featured fictitious ads for the mysterious "Hanso Foundation" during commercial breaks of "Lost." Viewers who stayed tuned during commercial breaks were rewarded with "ads" featuring phone numbers and Web sites leading to clues about the show.
The clues are part of the "
"Over the next 12 months, we'll continue to see experiments (in content placement) like this," said Todd Chanko, a JupiterResearch analyst who recently released a report on television advertising. "This is about consumer re-education. We are re-educating people on how to watch TV with their DVR, if you fast-forward without paying attention, you will miss some juicy content, or a possible coupon as in the case of (a recent KFC commercial). More and more commercials will be loaded with features."
Broadcast networks, which base their advertising revenue on ratings, among other things, have been closely monitoring the situation as more and
Undermining the 30-second spot
About 60 percent of advertisers said they plan to decrease their budget for conventional commercial spots as DVRs increasingly become standard accessories in households, according to preliminary research findings released in March by the Association of National Advertisers and Forrester Research.
"Almost 70 percent of advertisers think that DVRs and video-on-demand will reduce or destroy effectiveness of traditional 30-second commercials," the report said.
Networks have been experimenting with online sales of downloadable shows, both with and without commercials, with some degree of success. But even those offerings have to be marketed. While some downloadable shows attract an audience without conventional network television exposure, most rely on standard TV promotion to spark interest. Networks also still need a way to hold on to television advertisers, the revenue model on which the networks' local, affiliate stations depend.
Of course, not every show lends itself to clue-spottings and contests, so networks are experimenting with still other types of content placement.
NBC's popular sitcom "The Office," for example, put together fake public-service announcements that mimic NBC's own "The More You Know," a series of PSAs featuring actors, writers and directors delivering the messages. Because "The Office" PSAs so closely resembled actual PSAs, viewers did not realize they were fake until the announcement series took a bizarre, humorous turn. The fake PSAs also can be viewed for free on
In this case, an advertiser who places a spot next to the online version of the PSA can claim at least one advantage over the advertisers flanking the same PSA on television. Thanks to online tracking software, it's relatively easy to obtain demographic information on the viewers who click on the online PSA video, while the television advertisers flanking the same PSA during a commercial break have much less precise information about who was reached. The ANA/Forrester report found that 97 percent of advertisers wanted better measurement of audience viewership for actual commercials, not just a TV program ratings system.
See more CNET content tagged:
DVR,
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advertiser,
CBS Broadcasting Inc.,
clue



I personally get tired of seeing the same commercial 5 times during one show, seeing commercials for feminine hygeine products, toys, products that don't work, and those "work at home" commercials. I have had enough. Now they are going to start using contests to get people to watch?
If you want people to watch the ads, make sure they fit the target audience for the current show, and that they don't get overburdened. One of the shows I do watch is in a one hour time slot, but last friday, there were 22 minutes of commercials. So there was only 38 minutes of show, minus the 3 minutes for the opening and closing credits, that was only 35 minutes of actual programming.
Maybe the advertisers need to talk to the general public first. Find out how many people are just annoyed to no end. Maybe survey people to find out what really works now, rather than concoct ways to force us to watch them.
The only reason why we get tv shows is because of the commercials. That's why HBO, Cinemax, and the likes cost extra. Anything else is supported or paid for by the commercials. As long as the commercials are not offensive, advertisers don't care if you're happy or not with the amount during the shows. The networks buy the shows, the advertisers pay the networks, viewers pay the cable/satellite providers, and you get the shows.
As a matter of fact, 30mns shows are no more than 21mns. The rest is commercials. So, consider yourself lucky if you get anything over 45mns of a one hour show.
I agree with you that there are a lot of commercials on tv. But, when you consider that shows like "Lost" and whatever else is popular out there, is given away, or is available for free. Then someone/somehow has to get paid for it.
And Satellite Radio is not the answer. The commercials are coming. You'll be paying for the abilitity to find all your favorite satellite radio stations anywhere in the country rather than commercial-free radio. XM and Sirius are losing millions, and the only way for them to be profitable is to start putting in more commercials.
Uhm, what reason do you have to think they care? Marketing people get paid to get in your face. If they don't get in your face, they don't get paid. Where do you think their motivation is, to try not to annoy you, or to get paid? I think they will continue trying to make up new ways to force us to watch stuff (did you hear about the recent patent that could forbid you from changing channels if a commercial is on??) so that they will continue getting paid. No, I don't think they will find a different line of work that is less annoying to we the general public either.
1. People have been skipping commercials forever - long before the DVR, the VCR or even the remote. And there is no way to force people to watch commercials even if the content must be displayed by the TV. The article noted this, haven't advertisers pondered this? Forcing the display of commercials with technology (such as Philips diabling chip) is just going to **** off consumers.
2. Targeted personal advertising via the RFID chips that will be embedded in everything we buy/wear/own is coming. It's coming sooner than you think, and it will antiquate mass blanketing of generic commercial content. Minority Report style advertising is the wave of the future.
The viewers pay to watch advertising. The advertisers pay to get ads shown. The content providers get paid from both ends.
I was away from tv long enough for all the commercials I used to see to become outdated. The drop in displayed intelligence between commercials at re-subscription time and five months previous was incredible. TV and radio don't rot your brain, marketing agencies do.
Broadcasters would have you think that advertising is in place to support the tv shows when the sad truth is the opposite; shows support the advertising. The real content is the ad, the show it's wrapped isn't anything more than flashy packaging.
I've seen absolute crap targeting the undereducated masses stay on the air for seasons while good writing about a rich and intelligent story line gets tossed off the air after five episodes.
I wake up to the radio's stream of ads. I get ready for work and check the weather while going out the door and yet more ads. I check my email online and I get browser ads, two pop-ups and 70% spam in my inbox. Fine, radio has always been supported by ads, the weather is on tv and ads are just apart of internet life now.
It doesn't stop there though. Now I'm out of the house. public transit and caps are plastered with ads inside and out (even the hubcaps). I'll walk to work instead and for the most part it's quiet sidewalks and park paths until the downtown core when I'm assaulted by two billboards on every building and a whole square full of shinny new giant video screens playing nothing but ads.
Not an hour into my day and I've already found six new products I won't buy because of advertising. I finally get to work and start my day when my cell phone rings with either a telemarketer or txt spam.
Advertising companies are barely above lawyers in the list of businesses most likely to attract soul sucking leeches.
The more good tv shows that get sold on dvd, the less I'll be needing my advertising subscription.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lemming
the company either goes out of the biz or shrinks, then the ads
disappear.
If the ratings disappear from the sch. broadcast, and a Nielsen
box doesn't notch it up, the show then disappears.
So the networks have products buy time during the show to
keep it floating. But what if nobody is either watching the show
nor watching the commericals and buying the product?
I DVR, and I haven't seen a commerical in about 15 years, since I
started using a VCR with a remote. I don't give a damn about
their products, and I don't care about the business end of TV.
I'm not supposed to. Channels I watch, like Boomerang, or MTV
Hits, they don't have commericals at all.
Tech has changed the way Joe Blow is watching TV. He doesn't
want commericals anymore. Companies need to realize that
after generations of bombarding us with ads, we're immune to
their disease. We buy what we want, after either seeing it on the
Net or walking into a store and just seeing the product. We buy
TV on DVD or download it. They can't understand we exist.
Congress and the FCC told them to offer ala carte TV for the
cable and sat companies. It might be the way to go. Pay for a
handful of channels you want, commerical free. Maybe max out
around $50 a month in $5 channels, and be happy. Frankly, I
don't need 400+ channels like I have now. I seem to just watch
lots of sorry movies on HBO, Sho, and Max.
boggart blog
http://greenteeth.blog.co.uk/main
But I didn't get it to skip commercials, I got it because I've been working 12 hour days for the past few weeks and haven't been home for the few shows I like these days. I had no idea what Hanso or whatever it's called had anythign to do with the show without that news story telling me so, as I haven't seen the show very often this season and didn't see it at all last season, so I'm totally clueless at this point.
I mean... who's paying for the TIVO SERVICE? Is it the Ad executes? NO? Oh, that right it's their customers. There loyal TIVO customers, that they are constantly screwing over with stupid crap like, downloadable AD's that eat-up hard drive. space.
In Japan, they have a really great system. Most of the CMs feature Japanese idols - both males and females. The great thing about the geinokai (Japanese entertainment industry) there is that even the biggest of idols and other artists don't get paid that much (the talent agency/artist system is much different than that in the US.) As a result, using them in CMs are quite inexpensive (and the idols can do LOTS and LOTS of CMs.)
Another thing Japan does right is that their CMs are only 15 seconds long. A 15-second Japanese ad does a lot more than most 30-second ads in the US: they're enjoyable to watch, they go right to the point, and they feature famous celebrities that keeps the viewer locked in for the 15-seconds. The more time you allow, the less the focus.
In all, there's just as huge of an attraction to the CMs as the shows themselves. As a matter of fact, Japanese CMs are quite collectible. You can download any CM via P2P or direct downloads. At times, the CMs are downloadable in packages of 100 or more CMs. A fan of Ueto Aya or Itoh Misaki, for example, would collect every single CM they appeared in. They'll watch these CMs dozens of times. And at times, they'll buy whatever products and services these idols endorse...
...which comes down to the most important thing about CMs: the Japanese spend a LOT of money on goods and services - much more than in the US. The Japanese are very persuasive when it comes to marketing. They appear to have a very short attention span, so their tastes can basically change on the fly. So the CMs have a lot of power and influence in Japan's economy.
So rather than putting on these stupid contests and such, just make the commercials more enjoyable to watch. Like the Japanese geinokai, there needs to be more convergance between Hollywood and the commercial industry.
- Give up Network Programming and commercials
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by mbcfdude
May 24, 2006 8:43 AM PDT
- and head over to HBO, ShowTime and Cinemax for their original commercial free programming like Deadwood, Carnival, Weeds, Big Love and much more. Or try IFC and Sundance for some great independant story - even if it's crap, it's still commercial free. I for one like to pay the extra money so I get my full hour or half hour of original programming that is far more original, compelling, dramatic and better acted then anything network television has to offer me - save for one or two guilty pleasures like LOST I can fast forward my Tivo through. I swear the older I get the more I think network television is crap and the movie industry isn't far behind. Who's bright idea was it to remake Possiedon? If you give up network television for some of these original programs for a while you'll find that you'll never want to go back. I just wish the Sci-Fi and Comedy Central channels were commercial free - I'd pay extra for that.
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