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Using the users: VideoGenie CEO and founder Justin Nassiri, right, and technical lead Rob Starling, center, presented onstage at the TechCrunch Disrupt conference in New York last week. VideoGenie is among a new breed of advertising companies hoping to weave advertising into users' online social activities.
John Federico
Can advertisers take advantage of users' online social activities?
Google seems to have nailed the online search advertising market, finding the magic formula to attract both advertisers and consumers. The Web is still wide open, however, for approaches to advertising that catch users at other points in their online lives, perhaps when they're not actively searching for something. At TechCrunch Disrupt, a Web technologies conference in New York last week, there was a crowded field of companies hoping to provide new ways for brands to advertise online or to consolidate existing efforts to communicate through social media.
WeReward, for example, which made it to the second round in the startup battlefield competition at the event, is an Orlando, FL-based company that attempts to convert social activities that consumers are already enjoying into ways for advertisers to get attention. The company noted that users are already using services such as Foursquare to share their locations, and sharing photos through sites such as Flickr. WeReward adds an incentive for users who participate in advertising-related activities.
For example, a company such as Domino's, which is a client, might offer rewards to users who post photos of themselves getting pizzas delivered. Users can check out lists of tasks from advertisers and claim points for completing them, and these points can be redeemed for discounts or small sums of money.
Another startup, VideoGenie, based in Palo Alto, is hoping to harness users' passion for creating videos and posting them online. Brands can issue calls for videos on certain subjects, and the company's platform makes it easy for everyday people to produce usable content. The platform gives users a specific prompt and a tight time constraint, which VideoGenie hopes will make it more likely that the brand will be able to use the video without editing. The platform also makes it easy for the brand to offer rewards or discounts to users who complete videos or whose videos are selected. This startup is currently profitable, and is backed by angel investors that include Google's Eric Schmidt.
Several companies at the event, such as GeoToko, a Canadian startup, hoped to help brands harness the dizzying array of social services through a single interface. GeoToko, for example, works with the review site Yelp, the location-based services Foursquare and Gowalla, and the microblogging site Twitter. The company hopes brands will use its platform to offer prizes, discounts, and contests through all of these sites, increasing efficiency for advertisers.
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vnedovic
71 Comments
tricks
These are just many tricks people come up with to earn money in a hit-and-run fashion. Too short-sighted. The future is in using computer vision. Contact me to tell you how ;)
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