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13 OCAK 2002
DOUBLECLİK DE , PROFİLLEMEYİ TEK ETTİ
Web ad giant DoubleClick
(NASDAQ:DCLK) has quietly backed out of selling ads targeted via
profile, discontinuing its Intelligent Targeting unit.
The move, which occurred officially at the
end of December, will mean that New York-based DoubleClick will
sell impressions only in run-of-network or run-of-site buys, or
targeted via cookie-based criteria (such as by the recipient's location
or browser.)
DoubleClick also provided the Intelligent Targeting
technology to consumers of its DART ad server. That practice, too,
is halted.
What's troubling with the news is that effective
profile-based advertising had long been one of online advertising's
major promises. Since its early days, the industry's advocates championed
the online profile as a way to better segment consumers and to derive
greater results from ad buys.
For instance, as opposed to buying Web impressions
based on the hosting site's subject matter, or based on information
gleaned from a user's cookie (like their location or browser), profile-based
targeting could deliver an automobile banner to a user that had
used a search engine to look up "cars" in the past week.
But players increasingly have found it difficult
to convince advertisers to pay a premium for profile-targeted ads.
Rival Web ad player Engage, (NASDAQ:ENGA) which exited the media
business several months ago, had made profile targeting a major
cornerstone of its offering.
Now, DoubleClick's exit of the business indicates
that even the industry leader found it too unprofitable to continue
pushing profile-based ads.
"It's just a question of timing in the
marketplace right now," said Andy Ellenthal, who is director
of sales and business development in DoubleClick's TechSolutions
for Advertisers group. "This isn't the best time tin the marketplace
to be charging a high CPM, certainly can be more expensive than
some of the traditional media."
The move also comes amid DoubleClick's continuing
efforts to focus chiefly on its higher-margin technology and research
offerings, rather than on media sales. Additionally, with the heavy
technology costs associated with capturing, storing and dynamically
targeting profiles, there's a crucial cost savings to be had as
well.
"We've put a heavy emphasis on our technology
and research products in the last year, and we've made a commitment
to be profitable in 2002," Ellenthal said.
While it's abandoning its practice of targeting
ads via profiles, online tracking still plays a major role in DoubleClick's
product line. The company offers Spotlight, which tracks post-click
impressions; and Boomerang, a retargeting offering. DoubleClick
also offers clients of its co-op database, Abacus, a product that
uses profiles and modeling to increase e-mail marketing effectiveness.
Additionally, Ellenthal said that the company
and its partners have seen heightened interest from advertisers
seeking cookie-based targeting.
"Our clients are still using things like
frequency capping and geotargeting and time-of-day pretty heavily,
so there's still an interest," he said. "Things like geotargeting
are something that clients seem willing to play a premium for. Like
an auto company advertising their dealer [locations] or a travel
company offering regional-based fares; or the financial sector,
by time of day."
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