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Page 1: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

Local online advertising:

The paradox of

the growth imperative

By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers

Page 2: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

The basics: Total online ad revenue

6

7.3

9.4

11.5

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

2002 2003 2004 2005 (p)

Will hit $11.5 billion this year

Have surpassed billboards

Are neck-and-neck with magazines

Will pass yellow pages by 2006

May rival radio by 2009

May hit $20 billion by 2010

– Accounts for more than 2/3 of all online time

Page 3: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

Local online advertising is the fastest growing segment

Page 4: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

How $2.7 billion in local online spend is divided Source:Borrell Assoc

YP6%

Paid Search5%

Newspapers44%

TV4%

Pure Plays40%

Radio1%

Page 5: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

‘New Media’ is no longer new …

Page 6: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

This medium is maturing faster than is reflected in many surveys because of its usage in the workplace

2/3 of all online time– Quickly becoming

more multimedia• Smaller markets

now growing faster

Page 7: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

Internet usage is actually close to critical mass

2000 2001 2002

Total Americans who use the Internet 66.9% 72.3% 71.1% Internet use at home 46.9% 58.4% 59.3% Students who use the Internet at school 59.9% 72.9%

73.7% % who use the Internet at work 42.3% 51.2% 51.2%

HOURS ONLINE

Average numbers of hours online per week 9.4 9.8 11.1

UCLA Internet Study

Page 8: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

Consumer time spent online has stopped growing in U.S.

• In some communities, it’s a long way from Tipperary … Fayetteville, NC is not Greenwich, CT

• Market is Top 20 DMAs• Virtually no demand in our YP markets for online

products

Page 9: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

Looming paradox: The internet cannot produce enough quality inventory to meet demand:

Major search engines defer a significant percentage of the available budgets of booked advertising from winning bidders because they lack sufficient inventory to display those ads.

Yahoo executives voice concern over ad inventory a year ago.

ESPN Motion is sold out, limiting its upside for multimedia spend

Quality publishers – CNET, About.com - experience severe inventory shortages in key verticals – finance, tech, travel

Click fraud aggravates problem as advertisers lose confidence in cpc model

Pharmaceutical spend online is limited by inventory constraints - Weightwatchers has already saturated its web buy and is looking for reach on TV

Page 10: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

Consequences of shortage of quality online inventory …

• Site-based media businesses will not scale to the same degree as their analog counterparts; will have marginal impact in the marketplace as a result

• Three or four portals will continue to dominate• Pricing elasticity is stretched to the limit, putting

the medium at risk of being non-competitive• Big-Iron publishing model is dead; Network

publishing model is king• Online remains viable for DR (cpc, cpa); but

suffers as a branding medium – already happening to hotels industry

Page 11: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

Case study of Company X - the ‘Big-Iron’ model (or why the internet will never produce a WSJ, NBC or NYT - or even a Houston Chronicle – in scale)

• Company X is publisher in key vertical• Has ad rev of $35m • Has ebitda of $8m• Has 6 million uniques and 130 million PVs a month• Company X is already at an 80 % sell-through rate • Company X is trading at 90 times trailing earnings (ttm)• Company X’s upside is severely limited by its size and

ability to grow as the medium reaches maturity

Conclusion: Company X does not scale

Page 12: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

The tail of the internet becomes the growth sector – this is where the medium reaches scale

Page 13: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

Tail as applied to content and publishing

Page 14: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

Two examples of the tail:seatguru.com and mobiletracker.com

Page 15: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

The tail also features

high quality personal brands

Page 16: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

Portals must meet huge growth imperative; they are the first to leverage the tail

• That’s why Google launched AdSense and is launching a new product – or buying a new company – every minute: Blogger, Keyhole, Desktop Search, Gmail, science search, Picasa, Urchin, etc. Same reason why Yahoo! Acquired Flickr …

• That’s why Google is looking to leverage the sales force at BellSouth and others …

• Google and Yahoo eyeing every small and large business in America and plan to be there when that business wants to connect to customers – instantly, seamlessly and without regard to geographic boundaries

• IAC (Ask Jeeves), AOL, MSFT not far behind …

Page 17: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

Biggest prize in the tail? Local markets dominated by yellow pages and newspapers

Page 18: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

So how are we doing? Here is one assessment:

“ … despite some exceptions, online newspapers are mostly cluttered sites that do a mediocre job of displaying the wealth of local content that they possess. They typically also don’t showcase their advertisers very well or offer a very satisfying user experience.” – Greg Sterling, Kelsey

“Any momentum that newspapers are starting to build online is challenged by the “commoditization” of news (Yahoo! News is the No. 1 news site), also the emergence of local search and a growing number of other sites that offer local information and classified listings. Craigslist and eBay are the most obvious and prominent examples.”

Page 19: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

Incumbents (yellow pages and newspapers) attempted to force the big-iron model onto the internet

• Most of the content not readily seen• Expect user to gravitate to web site• Fails to serve the intent of the user• Publishing is the wrong model online –

pulls users with content; online, model must be built around user’s intent; lean-back medium vs lean-forward medium

Page 20: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

Online Revenue as % of Total Gross Revenues

Copyright 2005, Borrell Associates Inc.

2001

2002

2003

2004

Washington Post Co. 3.6% 4.2% 5.4% 6.6%

Belo Corp. 1.8% 2.7% 3.3% 4.1%

Knight Ridder 1.4% 1.9% 2.7% 3.8%

New York Times Co. 2.1% 2.4% 2.9% 3.8%

McClatchy 1.5% 2.1% 2.5% 3.5%

Gannett 1.2% 1.5% 2.1% 3.0%

Tribune Co. 1.5% 1.9% 2.3% 3.0%

Media General 0.6% 1.2% 1.8% 2.5%

Lee Enterprises 0.9% 1.5% 1.4% 1.7%

Journal Register 0.9% 1.0% 1.2% 1.3% Sources: SEC documents, company statements.

Page 21: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

Recent M&A pointing to a desire to play in this new sandbox …

• Dow Jones acquires MarketWatch for $460 million

• BellSouth, SBC acquires YellowPages.com for $100 m

• NYT acquires About.com for $410 m• Three Bears – KRI, TRB, GCI – acquires

Topix.net for ?• Yahoo! buys Flickr• IAC acquires Ask for $1.9 b• Google acquires Urchin

Page 22: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

How to win: shedding the big-iron publishing model and embracing the open architectural of participation

• Big-Iron: Proprietary content, controlled distribution, competitor lock-out, pull audience to content

• Open architecture: Free content, organic distribution, leverage competition (Google’s top search term is ‘Yahoo’), meet and serve audience intent – not publisher’s

Page 23: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

Winning with local search – newspapers and YP publishers joining forces

• One search box serving a single intent • Harnessing the best knowledge of the

community to serve that intent, arrayed against services and commerce targeted to that intent

• Riding the distribution of the internet• Feet on the street selling to those services and

SMEs• Leveraging our traditional media assets

Page 24: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

Our core strengths• Most trusted local brand – in a world of

unlimited and “unfettered” content, users will trust the guiding hand of newspapers; opportunity to enable and assure a network of high quality blogs (March 25 headline in WSJ - ‘Many Advertisers Find Blogging frontier is still too wild’)

• Create a local network where advertisers trust where their ads appear

• Feet on the street sales force

Page 25: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

Publishers embrace blogging

Page 26: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.
Page 27: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.
Page 28: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.
Page 29: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.
Page 30: Local online advertising: The paradox of the growth imperative By Lincoln Millstein, Hearst Newspapers.

New economic imperatives of ‘unlimited’ choice in content RSS and blogging are early enablers of this

model – adopt them Google is a massive distribution point – learn to

exploit it, instead of having Google exploit you Leverage the distributed assets of the internet Use a light-weight oversight model to ensure

quality control Serve your customers; they will reward you

with their loyalty Aggregate, aggregate, aggregate Network, network, network


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