Archive for the ‘aol’ Category

Where Does the Birth of Viral Take Place?

Friday, April 22nd, 2011

How do people stumble upon content today? Excuse the Internet pun. A new report from Outbrain claims that while search still attributes for the majority of content discovery, that social media sharing is beginning to take up an even larger chunk of the pie. And this makes sense, right? In fact, even “search”-related finds are still a gray area to me. After all, someone created the content, and is now sharing it. It’s simply that the stumbles are happening organically, rather than through direct shares via social media outlets.

According to Outbrain’s research, the top three sources of traffic to content were Google, AOL and Yahoo. Facebook and Twitter showed up 4th and 8th on the list, respectively.

This puts search at 41% of content discovery. Content sites linking to other content sites at 31%. Portal homepages at 17%. And social media at 11%. Because the most-connected maven among your friends still probably only has a millionth of the views as AOL gets every day. That’s why social’s still behind, but catching up.

AOL Goes From Irrelevant to Hyper-Relevant

Monday, March 14th, 2011

For years, AOL was a punchline. The once was of the Internet. You made fun of people who still had AOL addresses. “You’ve got mail” was a stale joke of struggling comedians.

Well, get ready for the comeback. AOL has been moving. Recently, they bought Outside.In, a hyper-local news aggregate where you can type in your home address and see the news that literally hits home for you. Combine that with their rapidly growing Patch.com local presence, and AOL has cornered the market on hyper-local news, the seemingly next big thing.

If AOL ends up back as an industry leader again, they will become the new posterchild of perseverance in the Web 2.Woah world!

Web Branding Successes and Failures for 2010

Wednesday, December 29th, 2010

2010 was the year of the “privacy debate“. The beginning of a conversation regarding what it is, what it means and how to protect it. From Wikileaks in the political sphere to Facebook’s all-access to personal data, people have become more and more fearful of who has access to their “private” information.

So, from a branding perspective, what does that mean? In a technological era where data access is the key to providing a unique user experience, how have user’s perceptions of the big Web brands adjusted this past year?

Well, the answer is, not well. Google. Yahoo. Bing. Facebook. MySpace. All suffered losses of positive public perception over the year. The only brand to improve? AOL. But perhaps that’s simply because at the beginning of the year, public perception was that AOL no longer existed….just kidding. Kind of.

Bing went down by the least amount of the major search engines, which makes sense based on all the positive PR they’ve received from their unique search engine enhancements. But it still has to be a bit of a buzzkill that overall, their public perception is a net loss. And despite the brief uptick in perception due to MySpace’s relaunch, they’ve currently fallen even further than where they originally were before it.

As we become more and more aware of the power these companies have over us, is it even possible to keep a positive impression of them over the long term?

You’ve Got Mail with AOL’s New Project Phoenix

Friday, November 19th, 2010

Right before Facebook announced their new facebook.com e-mail (that’s not just e-mail) service, AOL Mail beat them to the punch by announcing their new version of AOL Mail, called “Project Phoenix.”

Now, I suppose it makes sense for AOL to try and stay in the e-mail business. After all, “You’ve Got Mail” was the quintessential e-mail alert of the 90s. But…we’re moving into the second decade out from that now. Has AOL created something worthy of this new technological era?

Well, think of Project Phoenix like Outlook. It’s an e-mail aggregate really. Yes, it has social media connectivity, in that you can update your channels directly from your inbox. But, Facebook’s new e-mail announcement looks to bring e-mail in within your existing social media channels themselves – where you already are. So, will Project Phoenix make AOL e-mail customers happy they’ve stuck with their original system for the past 20 years. Yes, definitely. Will it be enough to convince new people to make the jump over to AOL? Hardly.

AOL Creates a Political Advertising Hub

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

Earlier this year, a Supreme Court ruling lifted the restrictions corporations had in terms of political advertising spending. What does that mean for the future of political campaign funding? It’s hard to say. But AOL wants to take advantage of whatever this next evolution of political persuasion looks like, and has already jumped behind a service they think is going to start being big during these upcoming November elections.

AOL’s Advertising Politics Hub is aimed at campaigns, advocacy groups and companies looking to target audiences online. Fundraising. Building name recognition. Organizing operations. Persuading voters. And responding in real-time to negative coverage.

It’s a no-brainer to me. This seems like a great organizational tool. The only questions is whether or not a bigger name like Google steps into the race and gives AOL some competition. But as of today with this new launch, AOL looks to be the go-to-resource for political marketers hoping to reach their constituencies.

AOL Launches Self-Serve Ad Platform

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

AOL launched a beta version of Advertising.com Ad Desk, a new self-serve display ad platform that’s aimed at medium- sized Internet marketing advertisers.

This ad platform will allow advertisers have more control of their online ad campaigns. It will let advertisers access demographic information and audience size across AOL’s properties.

“Transparency and control are the future of online advertising,” said Jeff Levick, Executive Vice President, AOL Advertising. “Providing clients with a greater level of personalized control over digital marketing campaigns is paramount as organizations continue to look for innovative ways to promote their brands and evaluate their ROI when planning campaigns.

“We believe Advertising.com Ad Desk is our client’s on-ramp to display advertising as it provides increased self-management and access to proprietary AOL information that has previously never been available.”

AOL has stated that its Ad Desk platform would evolve over time to meet the needs of the larger advertisers and agencies.

“This is a beta version of Advertising.com Ad Desk,” added Levick. “We are working directly with larger agencies and Internet marketing advertisers now to define the future updates of this tool to ensure it meets their needs and requirements as well.”