Here's an interesting article. Wonder if GMST will go head to head with WINK and their "back end" customer response. Also, don't know if selling "customer response" is legal from a privacy point of view...
Interactive-TV Expert Wink Gets Some Big Investors to Bat an Eye
By YOCHI DREAZEN Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
For almost two decades, advertisers have been hearing that interactive television would be the Next Big Thing in television technology. A number of efforts have flopped, disappointing advertisers that envisioned millions of couch potatoes happily clicking to request information or make a purchase.
But one tortoise in this high-tech race is pulling ahead of a lot of the hares: Wink Communications of Alameda, Calif. It has been around since 1994, offering basic interactive functions through existing cable boxes and TV remote controls. Wink, already in 150,000 U.S. homes, expects to be available in 1.5 million homes reached by cable or satellite broadcasts by the end of the year, although the increasingly cluttered interactive-TV market has lots of contenders.
Wink, which aims to go public soon, got a boost Monday when satellite broadcaster DirecTV, a unit of GM's Hughes Electronics, invested $15 million for a 4% stake, and pledged to install the Wink technology in at least four million of its home systems by the end of 2001. Microsoft last month agreed to invest $30 million for a 10% stake, planning to use Wink's behind-the-scenes technology in future versions of WebTV, which offers e-mail and Internet access through set-top boxes.
Wink's own technology is fairly simple, allowing TV networks and advertisers to embed simple interactive elements into their broadcasts. When content with an interactive element is available, a small, translucent "i" appears on the viewer's screen. With a click of the remote, the information itself, such as searchable sports scores on ESPN, appears in a black box at the bottom of the screen.
Current Wink-enhanced commercials generally allow consumers to request coupons, product samples or information by clicking some buttons on their remotes. In the near future, Wink hopes to roll out technology that would give viewers the ability to purchase goods directly through their TV sets, using a credit-card number.
CBS, General Electric's NBC, Walt Disney's ABC and ESPN and Time Warner's CNN are among those that have licensed Wink's software, along with advertisers that include Charles Schwab, AT&T, Clorox and Ford Motor. Wink's technology can run on more-advanced cable and satellite boxes as well. Some companies' previous interactive efforts relied on data that had to be entered by system employees at considerable cost, but the Internet now allows computers to update the interactive snippets automatically and cheaply.
Advertisers particularly like Wink's invisible "back-end" functions: It can provide precise tracking data about consumer responses to shows and commercials. Nor are the tracking data limited to those who actually responded to an interactive ad: Wink can also chart how many viewers actually watched a commercial without switching the station, potentially allowing companies to judge the efficacy of their ad campaigns as never before.
"We can add some new measurability to television advertising that wasn't there before," says Allan Thygesen, Wink senior vice president. "This provides hard data on the effectiveness of a television advertising campaign."
Advertisers say they signed on with the company to get in on the ground floor of a promising, if unproven, technology, although they don't expect to reap any financial benefits in the short term. "We have close to six million customers. Not that many people even have Wink, so our opportunity for new business development isn't actually all that big right now," says John Lane, the director of Internet advertising at Charles Schwab. "We got into this for the future."
"This was about starting to learn how amenable the market is to this type of advertising," says Stephen Block, advertising group director at AT&T. "We wanted to see how this interaction happened a lot more than we wanted to get new customers."
Some advertisers simply add interactive enhancements to existing commercials, curbing the cost of creating new ads. "We like that we can still use our traditional ads," says Peter DeLuca, Schwab's vice president, advertising. Schwab spots allow consumers to request information about financial services.
Wink, which has yet to become profitable, gets revenue largely from the sales leads it refers to advertisers, with lesser sums coming from companies and networks licensing its technology. It is somewhat protected because it isn't going head-to-head with companies like Microsoft and America Online to provide the glitzy "interface" customers see when they watch interactive TV, the "front end."
"Wink created a proprietary system because there wasn't one out there, but their real assets are in tracking viewer responses," says Josh Bernoff, an analyst with the technology-consulting firm Forrester Research. For Wink, "it doesn't matter what's on the front end." |