MTV Networks is currently selling ad inventory for the format it officially declared the best for online video, and the media company expects other Web publishers to follow suit, said Jason Witt, SVP and GM of MTV's digital advertising unit in an interview with Andy last week in Manhattan.
Based on a study it commissioned, MTV said a five-second pre-roll ad combined with a lower-third ad is the most effective and consumer-friendly ad unit for short-form video on sites like MTV.com and ComedyCentral.com.
In the study, MTV measured ads and consumer reaction to them across a range of audiences, videos and ads. The network's efforts occur against a backdrop of increased industry research into the best ad formats for online video. The agency Starcom is testing online ad formats; so is ESPN.
In his interview with Beet.TV, Witt explained MTV's goals with the study. "We wanted to take a fresh look at whether or not there was a better video ad than pre-roll that could be more effective," he said.
In the research, MTV tested three types of online video ads and benchmarked their performance against a 30-second pre-roll. The 5-second pre-roll with the lower third came up the winner, even beating out more novel and unusual ad formats, Witt said.
"If the ad is too disruptive, users will tune out," he said. "You don't have to be in their face to make an impression."
Daisy Whitney
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Great.. I can't understand why all networks don't adopt similar interfaces and setup. I don't even mind their adds because they make the content so easy to access. Where as ABCs interface silverlight blows. When my girl watches Greys Anatomy, it's so frustrating to find the missed episodes, go full screen or pop in and out to another site. Plus their adds are more annoying for some reason I can't explain.