| The
Top 10 Things to Know in 2006 in Interactive Advertising
Overview
Since last year's list proved to be quite the hit (who'da
thunk we'd hit 9 for 10?), I decided to put together
another list of the things you'll need to know
in this upcoming year.
Mind you, there's every chance you won't be personally
involved in a project using any of the items on the
list below, but you sure will hear about them. So read
on, and become familiar with the terms you're going
to hear a whole lot of over the next 10 months.
Without further ado, the top 10 things you’ll
need to know in 2006:
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| It looks
like a box, but it feels like a screaming, self-aware
sneaker! |
10. RFID
Radio Frequency Identification should probably be listed
not as the tenth, but the first thing you'll need to
know this year. The thing is, almost everybody with
a "C" in their three-letter title is fighting
against it, and it's a losing battle. That someone can
put a sticker on a product, and treat it like a person,
is mind-blowing. RFID applies to toilet brushes, cell
phones, video games, cars, airplanes, people, cows,
and SO MUCH MORE! Every day it becomes cheaper to label
something at the end of the production line, and follow
it until it's put in the trash by the consumer.
9. Mixcast / iMix
Remember the days of the "mix tape," when
folks would send tapes of music to their friends and
loved ones to customize music experience? Well, they're
back, only this time, they're text files. That's right,
Mixcasts are lists of songs that friends can send to
each other as content. No worries about copyright infringements.
No worries about theft. I simply send you a list of
15 songs, with title, artist, and recording information,
and you can find them and make your own CD/playlist.
Think of it as a way of being a disc jockey, only by
telling others what to play.
8. BD-R (Blu-Ray)
These are compact discs that use compression and burn
technologies that allow for much greater storage capability.
Current Bluray specs estimate about 27 gigabytes per
disc. In addition to higher levels of storage, bluray
discs offer more scratch resistance, and the potential
to achieve 100-200 GB storage levels in the very near
future. This means that folks won't be sweating HD television,
and will be looking forward to burning entire hard drives
on one simple laser disc again.
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| News-specific
sites regulate our news reading. |
7. News Blogs
We've seen the rise of blogs, and we've seen the rise
of online news sites being the first point of contact
for people. This year is all about people looking to
news blogging sites for first-hand information on stuff.
Whether it is Major League Baseball trade rumors and
information, or people feeding weather information from
home, news blogs will find a real home this year.
6. KevPix
We all love family web sites. We all love photographs.
We all love web sites featuring photographs of events,
family, and more. But we don't have a simple online
way to replicate the slideshow of previous years. Enter
KevPix, the practice of displaying images online while
timed to a multimedia slideshow. The technology isn't
anything new, but the practice will explode, what with
most people having a digital camera, and no simple way
to share it outside of holding up a phone to a friend's
face. The concept is named after Kevin Glennon, the
esteemed namesake of this web site.
5. Mobile Short Codes (and the "Great Land
Grab")
Though short codes are nothing new, they're a finite
sum, and going. A short code is that five-digit number
(at least in the US) you dial into your mobile phone
for special promotions. These numbers are established
for specific campaigns, but can be extended if a campaign
series is expected. Basically, Pepsi could buy PEPSI
(73774) and Coke could buy 4COKE (42653). The problem
is that short codes, like domain names, will continue
to be gobbled up by entrepreneurs. This year, every
advertising agency is going to be dealing with mobile
phones, and should be thinking strategically about their
clients' short codes long before they find they're already
gone.
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| One little
device, but SO much music! |
4. iPod DJ-ing
2006 will continue to be owned by bars and taverns that
play their music from an iPod. When you walk into an
Irish Pub in Chicago, you'll hear music that will NO
DOUBT be coming from an iPod. What's growing in popularity
is that pubs and bars offer patrons the chance to "DJ"
for 15 minutes or so, meaning they bring up their own
iPods, plug in, and play their own tunes for the establishment.
If you have never seen this, you either live in the
sticks, or clearly don't get out to places that rightfully
call themselves "bars" or "pubs."
3. Digital Radio
My underdog pick for growing in popularity this year,
digital radio is going to happen at some point. Maybe
in June, or maybe in 2008, but it's going to happen.
Basically, digital radio is when regular radio stations
have multiple channels per station. For example, "regular"
rock on FM 101.1, "digital" rock on FM 101.1b,
"special offers" on FM 101.1c, and "event
listings" on FM 101.1d. It's still rather flexible
what stations will do, but there are MANY resources
out there that can get you up to speed, and fast. Digital
radio will offer limited, but relevant, ways for broadcasters
to interact and take purchase orders from listeners.
2. WiMAX
Take wireless Internet connectivity, and spread it across
a radius of many miles, and you have WiMAX. We've already
got WiFi connections in coffee shops and sections of
your office, but WiMAX is when you have Internet connectivity,
say, in the five miles surrounding Boston. This is an
important term to know because it's already reality,
and will be launching in metro region after region seemingly
every day this year.
1. Fixed Mobile Convergence (FMC)
FMC is the seamless transition from traditional wired
(landline) providers to wireless (cellular/mobile) providers
(and possibibly from wireless to wireless carriers).
At its most basic, FMC would allow the user to take
a call in her office, and walk out the door to the car
without losing service. Expansions upon the idea would
include one's ability to go from network to network,
and tower to tower, without losing a connection. Because
FMC will dramatically influence the way business is
done, it will have not trickle down, but deluge-down
ramifications on everybody in the B2B marketplace. For
example, losing contact wouldn't be an issue for streaming
video, teleconferences, and more.
In Conclusion
If you learned anything by this, it's that you need
to call Kevin Glennon. Yes, he's a flirt and yes he
loves new discussions, but if you want to talk about
something avant garde and over the top, you need
to speak with him now, and in your words. Call him.
(617) 413-1124.
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