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Addressable media updates

NextMark's Blog

Recommendations, updates, and thoughts from the NextMark executive team.

We’re hiring – VP Sales – New York, NY

November 2nd, 2012

82% of online advertising budgets are spent on premium advertising inventory through guaranteed contracts. Yet, most advertising technology to-date has been focused on the other 18% – remnant inventory. The process of creating and executing digital media plans has not been well-served by technology. Digital media buying is still a 42-step process costing agencies more than $40k per campaign in manual labor costs. This inefficiency directly costs the industry more than $1 billion per year in labor and significantly more in lost opportunities because of held back spending.

NextMark is solving this problem with it’s new digital media planning system which is purpose-built for buying digital advertising inventory directly (online display, mobile display, online video, and more). It brings better information, automation, and integration to the process. It’s goal is to improve both the efficiency and effectiveness of digital advertising.

NextMark has a successful track record of delivering powerful media planning tools. Since 2000, it’s been serving both buyers and sellers in 15 media channels – both offline and online. Today, more than 2,000 firms and countless marketers rely on NextMark to help them reach their market.

As VP of Sales, you will lead NextMark’s sales team and establish its New York office. Your goal will be to accelerate the growth of an already growing and profitable business.

Click here to learn more and to apply for the job.

Sandy update – NextMark is online

October 30th, 2012

Our thoughts and prayers are with all our customers and their families along the east coast who’ve been impacted by Hurricane Sandy.

This is a quick update to let you know that the NextMark systems are currently online and open for business. Please let us know if there is anything we can do to help you get back up and running.

The NextMark Team

The 10 Biggest Problems with RFPs

October 26th, 2012

This article was originally published in The Makegood.

It’s the fall media planning season. It’s the time of the year when leaves fall and make a mess of all the yards in the neighborhood. It’s also the time of the year when RFPs fall and make a mess of all the desks and inboxes in the media world.

In The Fiesta Nobody Loves, Doug Weaver writes:

“As we enter the fall season and another online advertising year begins to ebb, the human-powered agency RFP process continues — against all odds — to cling to life. For those looking in from the outside, the RFP (request for proposal) is a weekly ritual in which an agency sends out digital planning requirements to five times as many sites and networks as they’ll be able to buy from. The sales reps get all lathered up, put their entire organization into Def-Con 4 status, and turn a detailed proposal around in 36 or 48 hours with relatively little quality information and — unbeknownst to them — very low odds of really being considered.

“Just about everyone you talk to wants this thing to go away. Clients see it as a waste of their billable hours; planning teams feel that it burns out their people; publishers see it as a massive resource drain; and holding companies are desperate to automate it out of existence. It’s the Rod Blagojevich of business practices.”

It’s no secret to anyone in the business that the digital RFP is a frustrating mess. But why is the RFP universally disliked? Here’s a list of its top 10 problems: Read the rest of this entry »

Visit NextMark at DMA 2012 on October 14-16 in Las Vegas

October 9th, 2012

The Direct Marketing Association is holding its big annual conference at the Mandalay Bay Resort in Las Vegas on October 14-16. The theme for this year’s event is “The Global Event for Real-Time Marketers.”

The DMA has come a long way since its beginnings as the “Direct Mail Marketing Association” many years ago. The focus has shifted from offline to digital marketing channels. While many of the basic principles of direct marketing still hold true, new digital channels are each unique and yet to be fully utilized. The DMA and this conference are leading the discussion on successes, failures, and emerging best practices.

NextMark will be among hundreds of exhibitors and sponsors at DMA 2012. We’ll be showing off our new solutions for digital media planning and digital ad sales.  Please visit us at our booth #920 to discover the latest trends and tools in digital media.

Digital Media Proposals That Win

September 24th, 2012

What are digital media buyers looking for in proposals, and what gets them to say ‘yes’?

After speaking with over 100 interactive media planners and publishers this month, I was surprised to learn how much variability there is in the quality of digital media proposals. It was also a challenge to find the ones that were most effectively aligned with clients’ goals and objectives. I was intent on helping publishers respond more effectively, so I asked a subject matter expert (SME) on the buy side, “what are the top five things you look for in an RFP response?” Here’s what he said:

#1 Completeness — don’t expect to be considered if you neglect to provide a completed proposal with flight dates, impressions, rates and cost for all placements. This may sound obvious, but not all proposals come through with this required information.

#2 Rationale — publishers need to provide rationale for the campaign as a whole, and for all of the proposed pieces of the plan. Publishers need to answer the following question: “Why is the overall campaign and each placement a good fit for the advertiser’s target and goals?”

#3 Differentiation — make sure your points of differentiation are easily identified and clear. If you received an RFP, then it is likely that your competitors have received one too.

#4 Clarification — a vendor who does not ask questions is likely to be perceived as disengaged in the RFP. If you pay close attention and ask good questions, then you’ll be far more likely to address the core needs of the advertiser and subsequently have a much better chance of being accepted.

#5 Brief Sales Pitch — it’s not always true that buyers don’t want to be sold. Here’s what my SME had to say in conclusion of the top 5 things he looks for in an RFP response:

“You gotta sell me. If you aren’t into it, then I won’t be… but just don’t go on too long.” Joel Nierman, Marketing and Media Director at Critical Mass

In addition to these insights from Joel, I’d like to offer an observation of my own. While content is king, format is queen. Media planners have not yet embraced the applications designed to streamline digital media acquisition and ad trafficking processes, but continue on as Excel junkies suffering from spreadsheet substance abuse.

So the takeaway is this — be creative and differentiate from the competition, but NOT at the expense of changing format. Make the numbers portion of your proposal fit the RFP template and it will be easier for the planner to say ‘yes’ to everything else. If this is not provided, then ask the question (#4 above) “how can I best provide you with the numbers so you don’t need to transpose them on your end?”… now you’re helping the buyer on an individual level as well.

John Henry vs. Programmatic Buying

September 19th, 2012

Two articles published this week have caught my attention despite my recently self-imposed “information diet.” They rise above the din because of the keen observations they make on the changing workforce at advertising agencies.

“There’s a lot of inexperienced people on the ground doing a lot of grunt work.” – Forrester analyst Joanna O’Connell in Agencies in the Age of Machines by Brian Morrissey

“Accepting that there will be fewer and fewer staffers at the agency doing the grunt work of RFPs and spreadsheets: Do you really see more than a tiny handful of those people being retrained and redirected into right-brain Marketecture jobs?” – Upstream Group founder and CEO Doug Weaver in Brave New Agency

The disruptive force here is the rise of automated, programmatic buying machines. These machines eliminate manual human toil and efficiently grind towards their narrow objectives.

These articles remind me of the legend of John Henry vs. the steam-powered hammer.  In this folk tale, the status quo of hard manual labor is disrupted by a new technology: the steam-powered hammer. The laborers’ hero, John Henry, challenges the machine to a race. Through super-human strength and determination, John Henry wins the race. However, he dies at the finish line from over-exertion.

Is the digital media workforce composed of modern day John Henry’s? Will we suffer the fate of John Henry and die in our race against the machine? That’s one possible future.

Or can we adapt from laborer to knowledge worker? For this, we have to move from driving spikes to driving strategy. We have to move beyond today’s sledgehammer – Microsoft Excel – to tools that free our time and our brains to focus on higher-value pursuits. We have to train our right brain. Unfortunately, many won’t make the transition and will become obsolete. But those who adapt will survive and thrive.

Visit NextMark at IAB MIXX Oct 1-2 in NYC

September 14th, 2012

Please come visit the NextMark team at the IAB MIXX conference on October 1-2 in New York City. We’re really excited to be part of this conference – it’s *the* cornerstone digital advertising event of Advertising Week 2012. The IAB has put together a phenomenal agenda: the art and science of digital creativity, the ramifications of viewable impression metrics, Dennis Crowley of Foursquare, Neal Mohan of Google, Microsoft, Sheryl Sandberg of Facebook, AOL, Mastercard, Twitter, Tumblr, elections, Charlie Rose, Marc Andreesen, and more. Wow!

You can visit us and the other vendors for free with “expo only” passes. You’ll find us in the exhibit hall at booth #103. But when you see the agenda, you’ll probably want to go “all in” with the full conference pass.  Check it out here: http://www.iab.net/mixx

 

What inspires great design?

September 10th, 2012

As a product company trying to break some new ground in ad tech, I especially appreciate this “too long to tweet” quote from Robert Brunner of Ammunition Group in an interview with AdExchanger:

“You seldom find greatness in the data. I always say that if great design was born in research there would be a lot more great design, because everybody can do research, hire researchers and gather information. It’s the rare people that sift through it and find beauty, inspiration and passion, and bring that out. That’s what always makes a great product.”

Amen. Data can tell you if you succeeded of failed, but rarely points you directly to a great design.

Are you still relying on the RFP? … Why?

August 28th, 2012

Last year in The Fiesta Nobody Loves, Doug Weaver of The Upstream Group landed a few well-deserved whacks on the RFP:

“As we enter the fall season and another online advertising year begins to ebb, the human-powered agency RFP process continues — against all odds — to cling to life. For those looking in from the outside, the RFP (request for proposal) is a weekly ritual in which an agency sends out digital planning requirements to five times as many sites and networks as they’ll be able to buy from. The sales reps get all lathered up, put their entire organization into Def-Con 4 status, and turn a detailed proposal around in 36 or 48 hours with relatively little quality information and — unbeknownst to them — very low odds of really being considered.

“Just about everyone you talk to wants this thing to go away. Clients see it as a waste of their billable hours; planning teams feel that it burns out their people; publishers see it as a massive resource drain; and holding companies are desperate to automate it out of existence. It’s the Rod Blagojevich of business practices.”

So, here we are a year later… Are you still relying the RFP? Really? Why?

Maybe you should try Media Magnet. It gives you the good parts of the RFP (fresh proposals) without all the hassles of the RFP.

Three good reasons to try it: It’s easy. It works. And it’s free.

Get it here: http://nextmark.com/magnet

Need a replacement for Google’s DoubleClick Ad Planner?

August 27th, 2012

Google has just announced it will discontinue a number of features of its DoubleClick Ad Planner on September 5, 2012. Among the changes, Google is dropping “domains or ad placements that are not part of the Google Display Network (GDN).”

Some are unhappy with these changes because they’ll no longer be able to use the tool for direct sold premium placements. These placements are outside the GDN and still comprise the majority of online display media spending today.

That’s the bad news. The good news is there are alternatives to help you through the transition.

For non-GDN site and placement information, you can use the IAB Digital Advertising Directory. It’s a free tool with virtually all the top sites indexed found here: http://directory.iab.net/ You can also use free tools from Alexa, Compete, and Quantcast for site discovery.

As an alternative to Ad Planner’s phased out “Publisher Center,” publishers can create and maintain their own listings in the directory with NextMark’s Data Card Publisher – also a free tool found here: http://nextmark.com/media-sales/publisher/

Finally, if you need a new way to create media plans, you can use NextMark’s new Digital Media Planner. It’s a low cost and easy-to-use alternative for non-GDN sites and placements. It’s currently in private beta, but you can get free access here: http://nextmark.com/dmp