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Microcap & Penny Stocks : Global Network Inc. - GNNU

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To: MikeF8 who wrote (19)1/22/2000 2:22:00 PM
From: Mike Perras  Read Replies (1) of 394
 
Very Interesting Article, plays well for both GNNU & QBIZ.

Study: Online Ad Spending Jumped to $1.2 Billion in 3Q 1999

January 18, 2000 By Pamela Parker

Spending on online advertising rose to $1.2 billion in the third quarter of 1999, putting
the industry on track for a $4.4 billion dollar year, according to a new report
conducted by PriceWaterhouseCoopers for the Internet Advertising Bureau.

The $1.2 billion figure is up 30 percent from the second quarter of 1999, and up 148
percent from the same period in 1998. In fact, the total revenue number for 1998 was
only $1.9 billion.

"This is really a blowout quarter that sets the stage for a blowout year," says Rich
LeFurgy, chairman of the IAB and general partner at Walden VC, noting that a $4.4
billion year would far exceed analysts' expectations for the industry.

Banners still rule when it comes to revenues, despite numerous "beyond the banner"
efforts, accounting for 55 percent of third quarter numbers. Sponsorships were next,
with 27 percent. Interstitials came in at four percent, e-mails doubled to two percent,
from one percent. And the "other" category, which includes rich media, classified,
keyword buys, and referral fees, brought in 12 percent of revenues.

"Banners are still the bedrock of the Internet advertising economy, along with
sponsorships," said LeFurgy.

The report also found that the overwhelming majority of deals are being done on a
cash basis, despite attention being paid to barter and package agreements. Ninety-four
percent of the third quarter transactions were cash deals, five percent were barters,
and one percent were package, or cross-media deals. These percentages weren't
substantially changed from earlier quarters.

Who was doing the advertising? Consumer related spending was the big cash cow,
accounting for 32 percent of all revenues. Computer-related buys came in at 21
percent; financial services was next at 19 percent; telecom-related services drew six
percent of dollars spent; and business services were next with five percent.

The top ten media companies are still attracting most of the dollars, too around 72
percent of revenue, up from 70 percent a year ago.

A hybrid of the CPM and performance-based pricing model was the most popular in
the third quarter, accounting for 55 percent of deals. Next came straight CPM deals,
with 37 percent. Straight performance deals came in at eight percent, which was up
slightly from earlier periods.

All in all, the third quarter cemented the idea that Internet advertising is here to stay, it's
growing, and marketers are increasingly including it in their media mix.

"This first billion dollar quarter signals that the industry's growth shows no signs of
slowing down. Such robust growth is important because online advertising is key to
many online business models including the support of free content and services, and
subsidizing e-commerce," says LeFurgy.

The Advertising Revenue Report, conducted by the New Media Group of
PricewaterhouseCoopers, was started by the IAB in 1996 and represents data
gathered directly from more than 200 companies representing over 1500 Web sites.
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