Dave Donohue: nerd-in-residence

Entries categorized as ‘Events’

Broadcast video, Internet streams, and new metrics

July 12, 2007 · No Comments

Like many music fans - especially those of us trying to avoid heat and humidity - I spent much of Saturday trying to tune in what I could of the Live Earth shows being held around the world. Even on Charlottesville’s relatively archaic cable system, I was able to juggle performances in London, the US, Sydney, andTokyo via Bravo, CNBC, NBC, and the Sundance Channel. I understand that US-based satellite customers and those with the means to hack into Intelsat’s feed actually got to see quite a bit more over the course of the day.

On Tuesday, I was shocked to see how poorly the event fared by conventional broadcast standards, at least in the US and UK. Here in the US, it came in dead last, beaten handily by Fox Networks’ reruns of America’s Most Wanted, of all things. While the US live broadcast pulled in less than three million viewers, MSN is claiming that it streamed the Live Earth feed more than 10 million times over the course of the day, surpassing by far a record set by Live 8 in 2005.

Those numbers are by no means apples to apples. Streams misfire, users log off and on, you name it. Clearly, however, they indicate that a sizable portion of the lucrative audience of youngish music consumers was watching Saturday’s happenings via their MacBooks, laptops, or something other than their TVs. If they even own TVs.

I’m no broadcast expert and rely on some brilliant colleagues to help me understand the mysteries of radio and TV, but as far as I can tell grand-scale events like Live Earth are finding their true audiences on the Web. That has an impact for advertisers, for sure, but for PR people it creates a huge opportunity to extend the shelf life of a broadcast. Some users will rewind their TiVo’d hours of NBC coverage for some finite amount of time, but you can still watch Live Earth days later right now via the Web, and that will continue to be the case for weeks, if not months.

Simultaneously, the page view - the metric that we all used to use to benchmark the success of, well, everything - was more or less laid to rest this week as well. Online video was specifically cited as one of the drivers behind that decision. It’s not just Google/YouTube that is causing this sea change; upstarts like Revision3 are helping push individual program even as social networks like Facebook make video sharing available to millions of enthusiastic members.

I’m glad I’m not in the advertising game. They have to figure out how to monetize content. We, on the other hand, have a huge opportunity to create it for a lucrative audience that is unmistakably moving towards online platforms.  Elinor Mills at c|net is promising a short-term analysis that should educate all of us.

The fun is just beginning :)

Categories: Events · Measurement · Publishing · Video

BusinessWeek, influencers, and the unconference

May 13, 2007 · 2 Comments

After a long period of trying to go completely digital, I’ve renewed subscriptions to several print publications that I can’t do my job without. As dependent as I’ve become on RSS feeds, I always feel as if I’m missing the occasional important story in a print book.

That’s how I came to find Scott Kirsner’s story titled Take Your PowerPoint and… on page 73 of the May 14 issue of BusinessWeek. It’s the highest-profile coverage I’ve seen of unconferences, and includes mentions of several of the tech industry’s best-known unevents, including BarCamp (which is referred to as one event, though it’s really many) and DemoCamp. I was surprised to find that the unconference concept has spread to other industries so quickly, and learned about ArtCamp.   [As Greg Beuthin kindly pointed out below, WineCamp is another of Chris Messina's efforts that is more related to a beautiful setting rather than the equally beautiful beverage].

What struck me about this piece was its coverage of several individuals who are very well known to those of us in tech PR as bloggers, but who are making their mark in the broader business community for their work beyond the blogosphere. Dave Winer is being sought out by BusinessWeek not because he’s the protoblogger, but because he knows that big, dark rooms + PowerPoint sometimes = snoozefest. Doug Gold, who runs Mass Events Labs with David Berlind, chimes in with his views about the future of the conference business. Kirsner also provides great coverage of Chris Messina and Web2Open, which was semi-integrated with the much larger O’Reilly Web 2.0 show that received heavy coverage as usual.

I don’t know enough about the economics of the conference business to tell whether unconferences will supplant Moscone Center-sized shows. My best guess is peaceful coexistence - for every BarCamp, there’s a D: All Things Digital that features vendors clamoring for the spotlight. What I do know is that there’s a new generation in tech PR made up of people who don’t know Walt Mossberg as the guy who reviews consumer tech for millions, but as the guy who runs D with Kara Swisher.

As the influence of bloggers continues to grow, we need to be mindful that their sphere of influence grows well beyond their blogs. A post from Berlind means that thousands of people read about your client, but a positive impression on David might mean an influence on the future direction of MashupCamp (note: David is very clear that coverage from the blog doesn’t imply a relationship with a conference). The same people who are clamoring for attention on Dave Winer’s blog need to know that Winer’s now considered enough of a thought leader to be offering expert commentary to BusinessWeek.

It’s great to see all of these folks getting the attention they deserve from BusinessWeek, and it’s a great reminder that the same names we’re pitching for the blogs of today will be tomorrow’s experts commenting in the WSJ, New York Times, and elsewhere.

Categories: Blogging · Events · Uncategorized