Posts Tagged ‘burt’

What’s up with Copybox? And why is ad tech so hard?

8 October, 2009

This is a post I made over at the Burt blog – it’s an update on Copybox and a quick rant about my feeling on creating ad tech vs. lightweight web apps, so I figured it might be relevant here aswell.

Last year we presented Copybox at Techcrunch50. But so far, the number of people we’ve let on is very limited. Partly because Jacob Nielsen tells us to, but mostly because we’re the target audience ourselves and still know plenty of stuff that need fixing. Also, since the economy went south we’ve had to focus most of our limited resources on Rich and other platform part of our products that generates enough money for us to stay in business.

(quick rant on the hardships of building an ad tech business is coming up – ok to skip if you just want the state of Copybox haha)

Burt’s platform sofware is often mission critical to the campaigns we run, and need to be able to scale from hundereds to tens of thousands of requests per second, with zero performance loss in minutes. For real. Add that SLAs that require four nine uptimes are not uncommon, and you realize that we deal with different challenges than the average web startup. Ad tech requires massive scale from the first user, and bailing out using the fail whale just isn’t an option. The people talking about how building a web business these days is “easy”, “cheap” and “fast” certainly haven’t tried to build what we’re doing :)

One big challenge is that creating great advertising technology incorporates the most demanding parts from both B2C and B2B at once, meaning that we need to make products people actually want to use (like in B2C), but feedback cycles are often long and reliability is crucial (like in B2B). Not to mention that working capital can be a real bitch… little depending on your business model I guess (simple licensing deals for instance are not included), but in most cases getting the really attractive gross margins requires a big dip in working cap on your behalf. Not even Amazon or Akamai can save you here. It just costs plenty of money to build the ad exchanges, trading systems and demand side platforms that everyone (incl. Google, Microsoft, Yahoo) are having wet dreams about controlling

In case anyone is keeping score, these are the main reasons why you see lots of ad tech startups raise tens of millions of dollars, still with nothing to show for it. But it’s also the reason we’ve seen a handful of multi billion dollar deal purchases in our market the last two year’s alone, so I guess that’s ok from an investor POV :)

But let’s get back to Copybox! Constrained resources or not, as it turns out, revolutionizing creative writing is a lot harder than we thought. Which is probably one of the reasons that the word processor has been untouched for 20 years. But we are making progress. Burt is probably in iteration 10 or so after Techcrunch50, one big change being that we’re now on the desktop.

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Don’t worry “I’m a PC” fanboys, we’ve got it for you guys too. Also, we’ve started to rework the design with (not so little) help from Andreas and Jaan to push a less dark and gothic feel to something you might actually like to spend 8 hours a day looking at.

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We’ve also realized that for the first full release of Copybox, creating dynamic content is not enough to deliver the kind of organic idea growing (trippy…) kind of experience that we’re aiming for. So we’re adding features that will be part of every writing tool – (good) outlining, remixed “undo/redo” functionality and a (working) set of language tools for grammar, spelling etc. And no in-document formatting, just structure. There are tons of super awesome design tools. Use them.

But first, we’ll release a version of desktop Copybox with dynamic content. ETA 6 weeks. You probably won’t (but it’s not impossible) put a dent in the creative universe with that version of Copybox, but at least you’ll have tangible proof that someone is actually working on making your creative writing tool smarter, better, faster and stronger.

Booyah.

Presenting Rich at DEMO

27 September, 2009

(This post is ripped from Burt’s blog. Make sure to check out the video from my presentation)

Update: The video from our presentation is up. Check it out here.

So last year we had a blast presenting at Techcrunch50, and earlier this year we had a great time talking about Burt at Plugg. And now it’s time to make an appearance on the mother of all launching conferences, DEMO. And since the last Swedish company presenting a product there was Skype, this naturally feels kind of cool :)

So on wed. 23 sep at 12:25, we’ll present Rich, a campaign analytics tool focused on creative agencies. The idea is to give agencies everything they need – and nothing they don’t – on one simple report page, that answers critical questions such as “was the ad visible?”, “how long was it visible?” and “did people notice it?

Using campaign metrics to improve your campaigns thru trial-and-error is not a new concept. In fact it’s been around for over ten years. But despite this, most creatives – the art directors, copywriters etc. making the ads and that would have the most to gain from using these tools – have yet to take advantage of one the most prominent features online media has to offer.

But it’s really no wonder considering that the reporting tools were never built with these guys in mind. The tools were created to satisfy the buyers and sellers of advertising, not the creators of it.

So we thought “what if we created a tool specifically tailored for the creative agency, with metrics that makes sense for them?”. As it turns out, that made all the difference.

Basically, Rich is Google Analytics for banners and widgets. It’s third party that runs on top of ad servers such as Atlas and Eyewonder. It can be used for premium inventory or on ad networks and ad exchanges. And the installation is dead simple, it just takes a second or two to track ads with Rich.

The last few weeks have been crazy busy to get Rich in decent shape for Rich. There’s no way that we could have done it without the help from our friends at eLabs – Ruby boutique agency extraordinaire – and CP+B – our favorite agency that has not only provided invaluable feedback on how to design Rich, but also did a huge contribution to the final design. Thanks guys!

But enough talking, there is enough of that going on in marketing analytics as it is. Using metrics to improve your work is a contact sport. So get over to richmetrics.com and get your invite and start getting the insights you never thought possible, in a report you can actually understand.

Death by advertising, according to the Economist

20 March, 2009

So the Economist has an interesting article up on how many large consumer web sites are having problems monetizing their audience’s usage. The point being that advertising isn’t ramping up enough revenues so these services now have to start charging for their services, which is difficult since barriers to entry are low and the user’s will then flee to some copycat service providing the exact same service but for free. And this service will do this for a while and then they will have to start charging and people will flee to another service, etc. etc. etc.

The article is somewhat ironic considering that it’s available for free, on a page surrounded by ads ;) Put that aside, I think that the article misses the mark somewhat since it assumes that Google AdSense is the the be-all-end-all approach to online advertising. And if that didn’t work, nothing will.

But AdSense only caters to the part of the marketing budget that is focused on channeling existing demand, and most advertisers (regardless of the economic climate) still want to invest the majority of their budget into creating new demand, driving new behaviors etc. And we still have no AdSense for that. But for whatever reason, there has been very little innovation in terms of ad technology since AdSense was launched, and most VCs and startups have been focusing on increasing usage, not improving technologies to better monetize that usage. The “solution” lies in enabling a more creatively driven approach to advertising, making it easier for agencies to leverage all that technology that we’ve created over the last few years. Much like what we’re trying to do with Burt.

My guess is that this downturn will lead to a surge in companies that focus on how to better monetize usage. And that the end-result for driving revenues will be a hybrid model, that charge money from both end-users and advertisers. Hum… where have we heard that before?

Presenting Burt at Plugg in Brussels

12 March, 2009

Besides the odd keynote, Burt’s been pretty quiet since the Techcrunch50 presentation, specially considering the time since Techcrunch50 has actually been quite astounding in terms of sales and product development. We’ve also tweaked the concept and product portofolio based on feedback from our advisory board, consisting of some of the world’s greatest advertising entrepreneurs and creatives.

So we know our pitch makes sense for the ad people, but what about the techies? Well, today Burt is presenting another beauty contest for startups so in a couple of hours I guess we’ll know ;)

This time it’s Plugg in Brussels, spearheaded by the extremely friendly Robin Wauters of TechCrunch. So far, the impression is that Plugg is more relaxed and cozy, but it might just be that I’m a tad more comfortable on this side of the pond ;)

Plugg is pretty scary, they give you a 2 minute slot, and 3 companies (of 20 total) are invited to present another 10 minutes the afternoon. It’ll be interesting to see how the pitch for Burt lands. Our business relies on the assumption that techies and ad men have a communication problem so talking about the Internet from the perspective of an ad man at a tech conference obviously poses a challenge.

I’ll put up my slides after the pitch. Wish me luck!

Analyzing web analytics

21 November, 2008

Couple of days ago I finished the last of this season’s speech and seminar tour. As usual, it’s been a whole lot of fun, but I’m glad I can finally get back to focusing on actually doing stuff.

So, for the first time in a while, I managed to get some reading done and scoured thru a couple of web analytics books that has been in the pipeline for a while. Best one, by far, was “Actionable Web Analytics“, which was the only book focusing on why we should analyze and what to actually do with the numbers, compared to just describing the mechanics how we set up GA or Omniture to output some stuff.

What surprises me the most is how I can’t find a single decent approach to analyzing advertising campaigns that aren’t driven by click-thru. This still seems to be a blind spot, despite the fact that everyone is a metric evangelist these days.

It’s all very web site centric, although GA announced support for distributed apps thru their Flash tracker the other day. Also, the customer analytics vendors have in mind are clearly advertisers or publishers, possibly media agencies, but definitely not creative agencies.

There are simpy no decent tools for creative agencies to use to actually improve the quality of their work. Throwing stuff like KPIs or OKRs at creatives just don’t do it.

So sure, we need our creative briefs to become more data driven, but where are the tools to make us do that? Campaign analytics tools are mostly tied to ad serving vendors, making it very difficult for agencies to learn stuff cross-clients since the data is siloed. And what’s up with the CTR, especially using it as a measure of success for banners with a simple message, such as “This is an ad for diet coke, please buy it”… sheesh. Just because CTR can be measured doesn’t mean it’s relevant.

And also, how difficult can it be for ad serving vendors add plug and play tracking for exposure time, hover, non-CTR events etc etc.? And how come there’s no dead easy way to get insights on what frequencies, media context or individual characteristics (geodemo or psychographics) what seems to trigger different types of responses?

Gah, do I have to create everything myself? ;)

Upcoming keynote on Infusion (Amsterdam, NL) – on remixing and reactive ads

5 November, 2008

I’m going to Amsterdam next week to deliver a keynote on the Infusion conference, on how we can create more entertaining, clever and persuasive marketing by applying lessons from electronica music, gaming, social media, web mashups and advertising from the late 60s.

Naturally, I will focus to some extent on reactive ads, but mostly I’ll put reactive ads in context of the larger trend of the remix culture, drawing parallels between punk music and intellectual property pirates etc. It’ll be a hoot. If you happen to be there, don’t miss it or at least, e-mail (vonsydow AT byburt.com) or tweet me and we’ll grab coffee!

Gustav and Gustav – Reactive advertising, Web 2.0 Berlin

24 October, 2008

Came home yesterday from Web 2.0 Europe after delivering the first of a series of speeches on the topic of “Reactive advertising”, which is mine and Gustav Martners idea on how to improve the ad model for brand marketing online and better monetize the social media space in one big swoop.

Case you happened to not be there, here are the slides from “Reactive advertising”!

(stupid wordpress.com won’t let me embed them right in the blog)

Web 3.0 ads = big yawn?

17 October, 2008

Another day, another keynote on how tweaking ad placement just a little bit more will save day… So R/W/W has this post on a keynote speech from Web 3.0 Conference in Santa Clara by Amiad Solomon from Peer39. All in all he makes a good case on how the semantic web concept can be applied to improve targeting accuracy, which is probably true, specially in the long tail.

However, the reasoning is still stuck in the “right product to the right person at the right time” paradigm. The bottleneck for online advertising nowadays isn’t targeting, it’s getting people to see the ad… targeting is great all in all, but the reason for the arbitrage between online media consumption and ad spend is simply that brand advertisers don’t have an appealing model to create demand for products and brands which people don’t know they want. One more time – if people don’t see your ad, it doesn’t matter if they’re in your targeting audience (or that they’re in desperate need of your product for that matter).

So, we need to leverage data beyond simple targeting and instead use it as input to remix the message and content so that the shape of the ad will appeal to each unique viewer…. which is what we’re going for (shameless plug) at Burt. Looking forward to releasing Copybox and Meme Machine, just a month or three away from showing what we’re going for and why it will spark a creative explosion!

Yeah, yeah… maybe then people will get it ;) More on this next wednesday, when I’m speaking at Web 2.0 Europe. See you there!

Future of Web Apps and the future of Burt and Copybox

8 October, 2008

Another week, another geek conference. This time it’s a old time favorite, FOWA in London. I spent the morning listening to Alvi from Plurk disclosing the ideas driving the awesome Plurk UI, and how to approach adaptive UIs and personalized experiences. Not bad at all.

The time since we presented Copybox at Techrunch50 has been insane, thousands of e-mails with suggestions, praise, invite requests etc. We’ll be making some cool announcements in the coming weeks on how we’re planning to proceed to build the worlds first creative writing tool and how the business is going to be built… yes, we have a business model ;)

Time to start listening to the speakers again!

Copybox by Burt, TechCrunch50 and reactive ads

8 September, 2008

So I’m in San Francisco for the week, and we’re on Techcrunch50 about to present Copybox, the “Photoshop for copywriters” that’s our first product to officially launch from Burt.

The ideas that are created in Copybox are built around the concept of “reactive advertising”. Reactive ads represents a shift from focusing onwho gets shown what (content, ads etc.), to how stuff is presented when it’s shown… reactive ads are thus shaped by the circumstances for each exposure.

Reactive ads leverage the same pool of mined data that’s currently being used for ad targeting, recommendation engines, mash-ups etc. and hits the advertising sweet spot by enabling publishers to better monetize their data and ad inventory, and at the same time responding to advertisers’ urgent need for increased visibility and impact of their digital campaigns.

I’ll get back to a more complete post on this subject, once I get some feedback from this week, which will be a huge leap forward in making this type of ads come true all over the web.

More posts from me on the subject of reactive ads:

Reactive advertising – a meme is born
Quality of social networking ads
Reactive ads and the Web 2.0 expo

Wish me luck!