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Non-Tech : Tulipomania Blowoff Contest: Why and When will it end? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bear Down who wrote (847)1/24/1999 9:55:00 PM
From: jpbrody  Respond to of 3543
 
I'm still predicting a big shake up after this weeks Internet Advertising Bureau conference. There's a meeting Wednesday and Thursday in New Orleans. Here's a preview of what they will be talking about:

From Advertising Age:
adage.com
(You have to register, but it's free.)

Five months after convening an industry summit to
figure out new ad models for the Internet, Procter &
Gamble Co. is pushing a model of its own: a $5 cost
per thousand, take it or leave it, according to executives
who have heard the pitch.

The low-ball rate compares with an average $36 CPM
for Web buys, according to ad-serving company
AdKnowledge's September report.

The $5 CPM has been presented to sites by P&G's
buying agency, media.com, over the past few weeks,
but so far it seems most online publishers aren't buying
it.

"We heard the $5 CPM request and graciously
declined," said one new-media executive. "They seem
to want to make the Internet similar to broadcast in
terms of rates."

In the media.com pitch, he said, P&G tried to equate
the Internet audience with the mass broadcast
audience, pushing the $5 CPM to be roughly
equivalent.

Buddy Tucker, associate director-media innovations at
P&G, declined to comment on the specific proposal.

VARIETY OF PRICING MODELS

"We have and will utilize a variety of pricing models to
meet our objectives based on the objectives of the
campaign," Mr. Tucker said.

Asked to comment on industry rumors from last fall
that P&G had put on hold for five months all
interactive projects not set in stone, Mr. Tucker said
P&G has a "strong schedule over the coming months
with an increasing level of participation of brands."

He said that includes the first online advertising for its
Nyquil, Charmin, Dryel and Pert Plus brands.

It's not the first time P&G has used its marketing clout
to effect change to the still nascent medium. In 1996, it
revolutionized Internet ad spending by refusing to pay
on a CPM basis and spearheading the cost-per-click
model. The concept: Pay only for what's delivered.

Since then, as e-commerce revenue sharing,
sponsorships, affinity programs and other pricing
models have evolved, P&G has softened its stance,
pursuing a hybrid page view/performance model.

It's current pitch for the $5 deal is that CPM pricing
will simplify publisher's lives, according to another
new-media executive that turned the proposal down.

"Clearly, doing something on an impression basis, or in
a hybrid way, most publishers would love," the
executive said. "But not at a $5 CPM. I'd love to know
who accepted the deal."

Rich LeFurgy, chairman of the Internet Advertising
Bureau and chairman of FAST Forward, the industry
group formed at P&G's summit to develop new ad
models, was not aware of the proposal.

VALUING THE AUDIENCE

While P&G brought together major marketers, ad
agencies, Web publishers and technology companies at
its FAST summit to figure out how to propel the
Internet as an ad medium, it now seems to be saying
it's fed up with the current return on investment.

A media executive familiar with the plan quipped, "This
is the company that does FAST Forward? Sounds
more like rewind to me."