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Bad news for banner ads = good news for 'featuretisements'?

BlueTie tying up with Amazon.com, FTD.com and BlackBerry maker RIM

February 15, 2008 12:00 PM ET

Active Comments
Attila T. Hun says: The more invasive, the more irritating! Clever is as clever does, but such schemes have caused many to build DO...
David Koretz says: BlueTie uses no pop-ups, no banner ads, and no scanning of personal content. All Featuretisements are executed exclusively based on...


Computerworld - On the surface, Web advertising seems healthy. Revenue in the U.S. last year was up 27% to $25.5 billion, according to IDC Corp.

The lion's share -- 62%, according to the Interactive Advertising Bureau (PDF format) -- still comes from two standby structures: text links targeted through contextual programs such as Google Inc.'s AdSense, and plain old banner ads.

But some experts predict that rates for banners and text links, called CPMs, are due for a fall. They blame a slowing economy and a glut of page views as more Web publishers turn away from subscriptions and toward ad-supported models.

Others say banner ads are less effective than previously thought. A study released Tuesday found that about half of all clicks on display ads were by a tiny, non-representative, and economically unattractive group of Web users.

These "natural-born clickers," according to the study by ad agency Starcom USA, Web analytics firm Tacoda, and digital audience measurement firm comScore, comprise a 6% slice of the population that is between 25 and 44 years old and in households with income of less than $40,000 a year.

Enter the 'featuretisement'

None of this bad news around Web advertising would surprise BlueTie Inc. CEO David Koretz, who says CPM rates are already "horrible."

Instead, the 28-year-old CEO has been banging the drum for the past year for a new Web marketing technique developed by BlueTie. The company's calling it a 'featuretisement.'

For advertisers or retailers, featuretisements blend the targeting of AdSense with the one-click sale of an auction or store listing, Koretz said. For users working inside a Web application such as BlueTie's hosted e-mail and collaboration software (think a SaaS version of Microsoft's Outlook), they minimize disruption.

"With Web applications, it's all about workflow, and whether you're enhancing or disrupting it," he said.

Working with clients such as travel booker Orbitz.com and business search engine Business.com, BlueTie was able to generate about 70 cents last year from each of its 4 million users, scattered among 230,000 mostly small- and medium-sized firms.

The effort was successful enough that BlueTie has already inked similar deals with Amazon.com and FTD.com as well as BlackBerry maker Research In Motion Ltd., according to Koretz.

Amazon.com did not return a request for comment. But both RIM and FTD.com separately confirmed that they are working with Rochester, N.Y.-based BlueTie.

How it works

BlueTie is also offering a private beta of the feature that it hopes to eventually syndicate to other Web app providers, the same way Facebook released its controversial Beacon Web advertising program.

To activate a featuretisement, a BlueTie user logs into his Web-based calendar and types in an appointment. For instance, a user might go into March 18 and add "hotels in Chicago until March 20, 2008." Immediately, an Orbitz search form pops up, already filled out with the right city and dates.



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