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A Plan for Spot.Us to Use Community-Centered Ads

Perhaps it’s ironic for me to write about advertising. Fellow Knight
News Challenge winner Dan
Pacheco
can quote me as once saying “f*&# advertising” and one of the
initial inspirations for me to get into journalism was Adbusters Magazine. Below I want
to describe a potential advertising model that Spot.Us hopes to employ
(and others can steal) along with general thoughts about the
diversification of revenue streams.

Community Centered
Advertising

The underlying inspiration for Spot.Us is to
give the public a freelance budget so they can help set the editorial
agenda. Right now that is done via contributions from their own wallet.
But what if they directed an advertising budget? What if the people to
whom an advertisement was directed had a say in where the money it
generated went? I imagine it would look something like this.

A
button on Spot.Us that says “Earn Credits.” Upon clicking a user is sent
to a blatantly sponsored page. We even have our first sponsor Mortgage Revolution. They are holding a fundraising event in San Francisco and part of the proceeds will go to sponsor our first Community Centered Advertising campaign which will try and stir up conversation about the real estate and mortgage industry.

In Community Centered Advertising the sponsor is looking for some kind of engagement with their brand, cause, business, etc. In the case of Mortgage Revolution they hope to stir up a healthy conversation about the real estate and mortgage industry. But let’s use Levi Strauss purely as an example.

Perhaps Levi’s provides
survey questions:

  • What is your favorite cut of jeans?
  • What is a
    memorable Levi’s moment you’ve had?
  • You buy Levi’s jeans because… (multiple
    choice answer).

Or it can be a branded survey simply to get the
customer to think more about Levi’s

  • What year was Levi’s invented?
    (Multiple choice)
  • Guess how much of material X Levi’s produces a
    year?

Or a quick video that people have to watch Hulu-style.

Upon
engaging with the advertisement the Spot.Us community member earns X
credits, which represent real dollars, and they can direct those credits
toward funding the story (or stories) of their choice.

The community still makes the
decisions about what stories get funded but they are doing so with our
advertising budget, not their own money.

At this stage it’s just
theory but we have our first sponsor and hope to roll this feature out
soon and I hope more sponsors will follow (if interested in
details, send me a note: david@spot.us). Then again, we may find that the Spot.Us community reacts negatively to it. Who knows? That’s why we need to try it — even new media experiments need to experiment.

Depending on the level of the
sponsorship Spot.Us would probably take a small overhead fee. But even
if we didn’t, I would feel encouraged that with a low overhead we will
be funding independent reporters. (Want to know when this feature is
live so you can be one of the first to try it out? Sign
up for our newsletter
).

Journalists Awash at Sea

I bring this up because like all news organizations
Spot.Us needs to diversify revenue sources. An analogy I often use is
that, “Journalists are awash at sea. Previously we could rest the
majority of our weight on a few revenue streams — advertising,
classifieds — but now we need to get many revenue streams and a piece of
rope to tie them all together in order to make a stable raft that
distributes our weight.”

This also requires re-thinking and
re-inventing our relationship with classifieds, advertising and even
coupons.

One of the problems I’m observing is that instead of
re-inventing our relationship with classifieds, advertising and even
coupons, news organizations are assuming they can take the old models and
stick them on the web and move on.

Craigslist as Counter-Factual; GroupOn as Factual

I hate when
journalists point to Craigslist as a “killer.” But let’s talk about why
there is so much tension there. The fact is Craigslist was not a
technical innovation. Any newspaper company could have invented it. They
didn’t because it would have drastically re-thought their relationship
with classifieds. The bummer in this is that newspapers were really
always in the advertising and classifieds business and used their
profits to support journalism. That business has dwindled and journalism
has suffered. Imagine if Hearst had created Craigslist? The profits
from that would most likely be pumped back into newspapers.

This
isn’t to knock Craigslist either. With his profits Craig Newmark has
created the Craigslist Foundation which is a HUGE boon for society.
Craig has also supported journalism here and there. Understandably this
isn’t his top issue — but at least it’s on his radar.

Now look
at GroupOn. Take a good hard look.
I think Michael Skolar is right
in his post
I‘m
suggesting you steal the idea for your local news operation fast before
national competitors own the market.”

These
sites represent a new relationship to coupons, one of the last great
revenue streams is being revolutionized right underneath newspapers’ feet.
And once again the technology isn’t mind-blowing. I’m talking to the
big guns (Hearst, McClatchy, Gannett, etc.) when I say “start something
like this up now or buy one of these startups.” The revenue you make can
be reinvested into journalism because that’s what your companies do.

I
consider the founder of GroupOn a friend, but I doubt his company would
just take profits and subsidize journalism — that’s understandable.
The few companies that historically used profits from advertising,
classifieds and coupons to prop original reporting are few and some of
them are going bankrupt.

Re-inventing our Relationship to Advertising

One of the reasons Facebook is worth so much is because of the
relationship they have created between advertisers and users. As an
example a little birdie at the NY Times once told me that the number two
country for registered users on the New York Times was…Afghanistan.

Before you start scratching your head as to why so many Afghans are
reading the NY Times, consider the image of this registration drop down
from NYTimes.com:

Now you can stop scratching your head.

Compare this to Facebook where most people freely reveal their age,
religion, relationship status and more. Now ask yourself: As an
advertiser, where do you want to be? The site with lots of people
pretending to be Afghans or the site where you can target the customer
you most want? Privacy issues aside, it’s pretty ingenious. And some
might even argue that a good advertisement is good content. If the advertisement is exactly what you were looking for, it isn’t annoying —
it’s helpful.

Interestingly enough the new relationship to advertisers is predicated
on the new relationship with the audience. The more the audience is
ready to reveal about themsleves the more advertising is valued. Same
with GroupOn. If a customer freely reveals they are interested in a
deal before it becomes official, the small business offering the deal
starts licking their chops — rightfully so. And in all cases the user is
incentivized
to reveal the information because it’s in their benefit.
For the Facebook user they are connecting with friends. For the GroupOn
user, they are looking for money saving deals.

With Community Centered Advertising our hope is that community
members are encouraged to reveal something about themselves in exchange
for the ability to fund the original reporting of their choice. Most
news organizations don’t have a system by which individuals can direct
cash towards stories but perhaps they can offer something else?

What incentive can a news organization give to a user so that they
freely reveal more about themselves in an effort to become more
attractive to advertising? I would argue that it’s best if the end goal,
to become attractive to advertisers, is done above the table — as with
Spot.Us’ model and GroupOn’s. There is no deception. You are engaging
with an advertisement. I wouldn’t argue that Facebook is being devious,
but certainly they have come under criticism because users aren’t
sharing their info with advertisers in mind, but rather with their
friends as the goal.

So Now What?

As always, I never claim to have solutions. Just crazy ideas that I
want to execute. Keep your eye open for Community Centered Advertising.
If you’ve never donated on Spot.Us before, I hope this inspires you.
Instead of having to reach for your wallet, you can just donate a
little time and a little bit of your own knowledge. Register
for our newsletter why doncha
!

David Cohn :David Cohn has written for Wired, Seed, Columbia Journalism Review and The New York Times among other publications. While working toward his master’s degree at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism, Cohn worked with Jay Rosen as editor of the groundbreaking Newassignment.net in 2006. Cohn also worked with Jeff Jarvis from Buzzmachine.com to organize the first Networked Journalism Summits. Most recently he is the founding editor of Circa. He was the founder and director of Spot.Us, a nonprofit that is pioneering “community funded reporting.” In academics he has been a lecturer at UC Berkeley’s journalism school and was a fellow at the University of Missouri’s Journalism school at the Reynolds Journalism Institute. He has been a contributing editor at NewsTrust.net, a founding editor of Broowaha and an advisor to many new media projects from OffTheBus.net and Beatblogging.org to The Public Press. He is a frequent speaker on topics related to new media and beyond.

View Comments (4)

  • Why would facing reality and attempting to wean yourself off Knight/grant dollars be deemed ironic in your opening lines?

  • Glad to see your thinking around advertising has evolved a little.

    I have actually moved closer to your original stance after seeing slow initial interest in Printcasting ads, but I think that had to do with the fact that our service is very young, and that we targeted small businesses that were cutting marketing dollars or going out of business during the recession.

    We're finally seeing a trickle of ad dollars come in from a service called MediaBids that lets our publishers place free ads that they choose, then get paid when someone calls a 1-800 number to act on the ad. It's an interesting model that we plan to expand on in the future.

    I like your approach with community-centered advertising. But there is always a catch, and with advertising it's the cost of sales. I think you'll find that businesses are open to experimenting with new ad / marketing models like this, but expect them to pay experimental dollars that are 1/10 or less of what they pay for newspaper display ads. To get a higher rate, you will need to provide more handholding than you may be equipped to provide right now.

    We like working with MediaBids because they handle the sales and handholding with the advertiser. We simply provide the creative that publishers can choose from. The revenue is shared between us and MediaBids, and we then share our portion with publishers.

  • To Clyde

    The irony isn't in weening off Knight money. The irony is that in my search for that I am becoming more interested in and want to re-think advertising something that I have taken strong positions against in the past.

    Dan: I've heard of MediaBids before and I hear it's a really cool lead generator for local businesses. w00t.

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