Message From Michael
January 26, 2011
THE RACE IS NOT TO THE SWIFT
THOSE WONDERFUL PEOPLE OUT THERE IN THE DARK
COCKTAIL CHATTER – BIRDS, BUBBLES AND BOWLS
THE RACE IS NOT TO THE SWIFT: But if it were,
Just for the record,
All right, let’s look at more global issues from the Akamai report which, it should be noted, is for the third quarter of last year. According to the report, the global connection speed has increased 14% year to year, reaching an average of 1.9 Mbps. The global average PEAK speed has increased by a third (35%) year to year, reaching an average of 8.1 Mbps. The report says the general broadband connectivity (speeds above 2 Mbps) has increased 6.5% year to year with three out of five (60%) of the world’s Internet users having broadband connectivity. And guess what? The top countries were not Asian. Little Monaco came in first with 96% of its users having broadband connectivity, followed by Tunisia (95%) -- a fact that even the report authors found surprising. Then, the Isle of Man (also 95%), and then
THOSE WONDERFUL PEOPLE OUT THERE IN THE DARK: It sometimes seems that some celebrities share Norma Desmond’s view about the public and her fantasy about her impact. Well, a study by advertising research firm Ace Metrix found that when it comes to advertising, many celebrities aren’t ready for their close-up. It found that advertisements using celebrity endorsements don’t perform any better, and in some cases, perform worse than regular, non-celebrity ads. The study measured what the firm and advertisers call “lift.” How the ad ‘lifts’ the image or impact of the product. Celebrities like Tiger Woods (Nike), Lance Armstrong (Radio Shack), Kenny Mayne (Gillette), Dale Earnhardt (Nationwide Insurance) and Donald Trump (Macy’s) actually had ‘negative lift.’ And then there’s Oprah Winfrey. Her three endorsement ads, for Liberty Mutual and Progressive Insurance, had a positive influence. However, part of the reason for that, according to the study, is that her ads had relevance. The Liberty Mutual ad focused on texting and driving; the Progressive ads talked about cell phone use and distracted driving. The point made by the study is that advertising executives would be better advised to “focus on the creative content… grab attention… demonstrate relevance, and inform viewers.” Especially since, the study says, celebrity endorsements are expensive, costing upwards of $50 Billion in the industry. The study of more than 2,600 ads found that only an eighth (12%) of the celebrity ads had positive lift of ten percent or more over the industry average while a fifth (20%) had negative lift of ten percent or more.
As a side note, the New York Times Media Decoder blog notes a trend toward what is called “promercials” which combine commercials with promotion. For example, ABC’s Cougar Town had Diet Dr. Pepper integrated into the plot. But it also had ‘promercials’ in which the program plot lines were outlined, just like a regular promotion spot. Then the creators added the line that
COCKTAIL CHATTER: A 14-year-old boy has created the latest and hottest game app. That would be news enough. But the game is so popular, it has replaced Angry Birds as the number one game app on iTunes. Instead of squawking birds crashing into a castle full of pigs, fans try to get a bubble to a goat. As reported by the technology blog for ABC News, the game, Bubble Ball, has been downloaded two million times. It is described as a “physics puzzle game.” The boy, Robert Nay, of
This isn’t cocktail chatter, but more like “worth noting” – The Washington Post reports that “uber-Billionaire Warren Buffett is retiring from its board of directors, although Post CEO Donald E. Graham says the board will continue making calls to the “402 area code.” Broadcast website RBR/TVBR notes that Buffett’s company, Berkshire Hathaway, still owns the
FACTOID OF THE WEEK: According to an article in Media Post Publications by tech writer and consultant Nate Pagel, ten years ago it cost $300 to transfer a gigabyte of video. Today it costs 30 cents. Now, normally, I try to verify such statements online, but I haven’t been able to source this one… yet. But it was too good a factoid not to pass on, even if it is with a caveat.
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