Local mobile ads to shoot up, but local online spend to drop

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

A report from BIA’s The Kelsey Group should be a kick in the rear for local media to get its mobile plan in order.  At the same time, another report from the same group empahsizes the importance of having a strong mobile ad plan in place — it projects the local online ad spend to start dropping.  InternetNews.com writes:

Local mobile ad revenue will grow to $3.1 billion in 2013, up from $160 million last year, while mobile search will reach $2.3 billion, according to the firm’s forecasts. Local searches made up 27.8 percent of all searches in 2008, but are expected to hit 35.1 percent in 2013, according to the report, “Going Mobile: The Mobile Local Media Opportunity.”

In another recent study, “U.S. Local Media Annual Forecast (2008-2013),” BIA/Kelsey forecast U.S. local advertising revenues to decline from $155.3 billion in 2008 to $144.4 billion in 2013, representing a negative 1.4 percent compound annual growth rate (CAGR).

Only the local interactive segment will show growth throughout the forecast period. All other local media will experience marginal to rapid declines in the next 18 to 36 months. A small number of traditional media will rebound with a revived economy beginning in 2011, though most traditional media will continue to decline, albeit at a slower pace, according to the report.

We have had plenty of opportunities before to shift our efforts to where the money is going, but as an industry we’ve simply been too slow to change. Here, again, is an opportunity. Terry Heaton is right when he writes that our local news applications will need to be free downloads because  “There may be hard-core fans willing to pay for access to special applications, but as a general brand-extension play, paid mobile applications are just wishful thinking.”

No more wishful thinking. Follow the money.

Disgusting: Advertorial Masquerades as TV News Website

Monday, June 8th, 2009

Advertorials have always been on the dark side of shady. But, thanks to some product called “Reservatrol,” we now have a new low: an advertorial made up to look like a (non-existent, thank God) TV news website:

Fake TV Station Ad Used to Sell "Health" Product

Fake TV Station Ad Used to Sell "Health" Product

The links at the top (Weather, Entertainment, etc.) all go to an order page for their “miracle product.” It claims to be rich in antioxidants, blah blah blah. Does this stuff work? Who knows? The Better Business Bureau says beware of the company’s misleading sales practices.

The site is at news 3 news (dot) com (which I write intentionally so as not to give them the Google Juice power of an actual hyperlink. In the words of Jerry Seinfeld, they can Cramitol.

Where was this appalling piece of work linked from? NewsBlues says it found it on Drudge.