The advertising industry is really good at turning a blind eye
The advertising industry is really good at turning a blind eyePLUS: CNN finally acknowledges realityWelcome! I'm Simon Owens and this is my media industry newsletter. If you've received it, then you either subscribed or someone forwarded it to you. If you fit into the latter camp and want to subscribe, then you can click on this handy little button: Let’s jump into it… The advertising industry is really good at looking the other wayDigiday made some really good points in its reporting on how the advertising industry has reacted to the rise of scammy “made for advertising” websites:
The advertising industry is really good at looking the other way when it comes to fraud, precisely because it has every incentive to look the other way. Nearly every party in the chain makes more money when the client spends more money, and fraudsters are extremely good at helping those clients burn through advertising spend. CNN finally acknowledges realityOne thing that’s befuddled me over the past decade was CNN’s singular focus on growing its ratings on a dying medium, all while nearly every other television network invested heavily on its digital transition. Hell, even Fox News made major investments in its Fox Nation streaming brand. Well, CNN may be finally acknowledging reality with its hire of Mark Thompson, who famously steered The New York Times during its hugely successful digital transition. Margaret Sullivan, the former ombud for the NYT, wrote a piece in the Guardian explaining why she’s bullish on Thompson’s chances of turning CNN around:
I’m looking for more media entrepreneurs to feature on my newsletter and podcastOne of the things I really pride myself on is that I don’t just focus this newsletter on covering the handful of mainstream media companies that every other industry outlet features. Instead, I go the extra mile to find and interview media entrepreneurs who have been quietly killing it behind the scenes. In most cases, the operators I feature have completely bootstrapped their outlets. In that vein, I’m looking for even more entrepreneurs to feature. Specifically, I’m looking for people succeeding in these areas:
Interested in speaking to me? You can find my contact info over here. (please don’t simply hit reply to this newsletter because that’ll go to a different email address. ) Is it time for the media industry to embrace drop shipping?Digital Context Next covered the rise of retail media and explained why brands are increasingly directing their ad dollars to platforms like Amazon and Walmart:
That reminded of my interview with Man of Many co-founder Scott Purcell and his explanation for why the media outlet had invested in launching its own drop shipping store:
Most publishers just use standard affiliate links when recommending a product, but attribution can get messy when the consumer puts off purchasing the item until much later. As retail behemoths consolidate their power and start siphoning away more and more ad dollars from publishers, it may become vital for those publishers to own more of the sale. That would require launching their own dedicated online stores. Twitter’s creator payouts become more transparentWhen Twitter initially rolled out its revenue sharing program, it was essentially a black box, with no one understanding why some creators were receiving checks and others weren’t. But now it’s launched a dashboard with a bit more transparency:
It sucks that Elon has done so much to ruin Twitter, because otherwise I would be more vocal in cheering on the company's attempts to finally share revenue with its creators. Do you sell a product targeted toward marketers, media executives, or professional creators?What a coincidence! That’s exactly who reads my newsletter. You can find out how to reach them over here. The podcast industry is still growingIt may not seem like it — given all the news lately about canceled shows and layoffs — but podcast advertising is still growing, even if it's heavily concentrated within the most popular shows. That's why media companies have been cancelling so many underperforming podcasts — so they can focus more on the hits. Virtual AI influencers were a gimmick…… and it's not surprising that interest in them waned once the novelty wore off.
Vox Media is wading further into paid subscriptionsAside from its acquisition of New York magazine, Vox Media has mainly stuck to free, ad-supported content, but it's now dipping its toes more into paid subscriptions:
A local news success storyA Substack newsletter that publishes local news in the UK has amassed 5,000 paying subscribers. It's recently taken on investment and is expanding into more cities:
ICYMI: How a leading fintech events company pivoted to virtual eventsFintech Nexus charges brands thousands of dollars to sponsor its weekly webinars. Invite your friends and earn rewardsIf you enjoy Simon Owens's Media Newsletter, share it with your friends and earn rewards when they subscribe. |
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