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Press Release 0004

Lara Sinclair - The Australian

Part Story            
 

FULL Circle has rolled its online arm into a new network called Cogs Media, which aims to simplify the advertising process on the so-called long tail of the internet.

Cogs Media is supported by an automated digital system it claims will allow people to plan, book and place an online campaign, potentially across hundreds of websites, in minutes.

The company is owned equally by Brian Gallagher's Full Circle Media, media company SComms, which has also contributed websites it represents to the network, and Cogs, which is licensing its technology to Cogs Media.

Cogs Media will be headed up by David Mallam, who has a background in website development sales and golf club management and who developed the Cogs Digital platform with developers James and David Craig.

"This will create what is in theory the biggest advertising network, (with) about 60 or 70 internet sites," Mr Mallam said.

"Compared with other ad networks, we can put together thousands of sites, not just 30 or 40, for advertisers. "There is no limit to the scale we can have with this system."

But advertisers and digital media agencies will be able to book campaigns across industry categories, such as sport or the golf channel, as well as by audience demographics.

Mr Mallam said the automated technology and the classification of sites into multiple categories and demographic groups would enable the network to sell advertising spots on niche publishers' websites more often, over time driving up the price that publishers could charge.

Meanwhile, companies advertising across groups of sites would reach more people who often spent more time on niche websites that catered to their interests than on the big portals.

"The ad networks don't value the publisher, they value the space," he said.
"It's all about equality for both partners in the business equation."

Darryl Nelson, digital media research manager at Frost & Sullivan, said that while selling advertising across channels and audiences was not new, the self-serve technology was.

"Generally, on the ad networks side, the campaign is booked and run by the publisher," Mr Nelson said. "(The) self-service platform is quite revolutionary. That's where the performance networks have had an advantage."

Leigh Terry, who heads media agency OMD's digital arm, said the automated technology would allow Cogs to work with advertisers that were too small to use an agency.

"The technology is Cogs's unique selling point," he said. "It's not unique (in that) Google has got lots of agencies working with it, as well as direct advertisers."

It is understood that Telstra, a client of OMD, has been among the first advertisers to trial the network.

"Agencies spend 80 per cent of budgets on the big portals and about 20per cent on the ad networks," he said. "It's almost the reverse in terms of the time they spend allocating that budget."

You only have to believe in the possibility. And it will be delivered!                     

Sent 15 August 2007





Press Release 0003

New Site and Domain - What We Are Now!


                Complete Story             
  A good service provider or ad network wants to help its clients do business more efficiently.

We aim to provide scale and distinct possibilities to advertisers to get website impressions at the right price.  We also see our vision is to get a share of the ad revenue landing on the smallest site in our network with the minimal amount of effort.

The traditional on line ad market has made it very difficult for most networks and publishers to access the best financial result possible. Ad networks inter-trade, they trade across different platforms, with different pricing structures, counting methodologies and many other issues. It’s a market full of nuances  and it makes it harder for everyone to do business in the fastest growing ad space in history.

By being involved in an open network exchange you solve the problem. With open access to all buyers and sellers on a common platform, you no longer have to look elsewhere to increase scale of hits or target marketing. If, at a given moment, you lack needed ad inventory, you naturally acquire more in the exchange. Likewise, if you run out of paying ads, buyers are available in the exchange.

Share a common platform with other networks, advertisers and publishers, and you eliminate friction.

Join in the game.
Do business efficiently.
We challenge you to look at the alternatives!

The digital advertising space has changed forever and COGS Digital has contributed to this possibility.  Join us, support us and participate in our new revolution in online media delivery where every player in the chain wins.
 
You only have to believe in the possibility. And it will be delivered!                      Sent 15 August 2007



Press Release 0002

A Slice                               
                  "The study, conducted in the first quarter of 2007, found that US consumers were more likely to convert after viewing ads on multiple Web sites, suggesting that conversions should be attributed to a full set of impressions and/or clicks, rather than just the single one that preceded the conversion.

Two out of three consumers who eventually bought a product or took a responsive action were reached by ads across multiple portal sites before converting.

Nine in 10 consumers who converted were reached by placements other than the last ad seen. Also, 86.1% of ads which led to a responsive action were seen on multiple placements."

                                                                                                                                     Sent 4 July 2007

Press Release 0001

A Slice                               
                        
 "Times have changed, of course. Today, planning multimedia advertising campaigns is far more complex. But media planners would still prefer to keep things as simple as possible. When it comes to the online portion of their budgets, they buy Google, Yahoo! and a few major vertical-interest sites and, often enough, that is about it.

Merrill Lynch projects that both search and branded advertising will grow online next year, up 27% and 21%, respectively.

But continuing to put the bulk of online ad dollars on large sites could be a mistake. Big, particularly on the Internet, may not be better.

According to new research from Media-Screen, when brand managers and media planners are choosing where to place their ads online, they should not ignore smaller sites with less traffic."

                                                                                                                                   Sent 30 May 2007





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