You Can't Skip The Commercials When The Channel Is Just Commercials

from the go-ahead-and-try dept

As the traditional TV advertising market deteriorates, big advertisers are scrambling to find new ways of connecting with consumers and promoting their brands. Not surprisingly, since there’s so much hype surrounding online video, many big companies are looking to go down that route. But at the moment, there’s no obvious way to market in this space. Strategies include producing viral web clips, soliciting user-generated commercials, or simply sponsoring TV content that gets distributed online. Now some are looking to take a different approach; starting early next year, Budweiser will launch its own web video site at Bud.tv. There they will offer a range of programming from sports shows, fashion, humor, and commercials made by Bud drinkers — all targeted at Bud’s core young male demographic. Of course, the concept isn’t really new. Large brands have been developing and sponsoring content for a long time. And predictably, others are charging that the move represents a cheapening and commercialization of culture, which is absurd since entertainment and advertising have always gone together. As with any other content offering, the only real measure of success is whether people watch it, which will depend on it being good and well suited to the format. If it’s not good, the fact that it’s online video, or that it’s targeted to a specific niche, will be completely meaningless.


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Comments on “You Can't Skip The Commercials When The Channel Is Just Commercials”

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14 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Well, of course

And predictably, others are charging that the move represents a cheapening and commercialization of culture, which is absurd since entertainment and advertising have always gone together.

Another reason this is absurd is that culture has always been cheap and commercial, at least to the target demographic. You can’t cheapen something by commercializing it when it is already 100% commercialized.

Drama2Sell says:

Product Placement

How come there is no product placement in porn?

Seriously, aren’t the web numbers for watching porn extremely high—can’t the pizza delivery guy who shows up at the naked girls frat house be from Pizza Hut or something?

You know that bud.tv is going to have all these soft-porn type of shows (Girls in Bikinis, Models drinking Bud, etc) Why not just go all out?

Anonymous Coward says:

1 sided media... eh.

How much time have you spent on any one product page before you get tired? This idea is going to be moderately popular upon launch, and it will steadily decline to just another web page. The concept will create some buzz, as it’s doing here, but it wont be insanely popular, as noted by the few comments on this thread… overall… ehhh.

Michael Long says:

Patronage

Can you image if this catches on, or moves from the net to TV? Image a channel where all of the good guys, for some odd reason, drive huge Ford SUVs. Or a “Discovery”-type channel with unbiased educational environmental programming… by Shell.

When you move to a single source of income by a single person, that’s partonage, and the problem with it lies in the fact that patrons are fickle people who also usually demand that you adhere completely to their viewpoint.

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