Reflections & analysis about innovation, technology, startups, investing, healthcare, and more .... with a focus on Minnesota, Land of 10,000 Lakes. Blogging continuously since 2005.

Tag: Google AdSense

Widgets…Gadgets…Wadgets?

Could another Web 2.0 technology fusion be on the horizon? As in, widget meets advertising, new love affair blossoms? That would seem to be the gist of the latest online advertising development, with Google now saying it will do a full launch this summer of its Gadget Ads. Wadgetgraphic It didn’t take the 800-pound gorilla long to figure out that advertisers were coveting all the space that content publishers have been devoting to widgets. Many of these advertisers would naturally like to push their wares inside little embedded, interactive pieces of web real estate, too. It’s not just about getting a click-through; these things offer great branding possibilities as well.

Steve Rubel reported yesterday about this latest move on his Micropersuasion blog under the headline, Google Widgetsense Is a Reality. He based his post on a piece Niall Kennedy did a bit earlier, called Google Gadgets Are Now an AdSense Unit. That, in turn, was based on news broken at an event by Tameka Kee of Online Media Daily: Google Tests ‘Gadget Ads’. And it was all later breathlessly reported by Pete Cashmore at Mashable thusly: Gadget Ads!. Got all that? Such is the blogosphere — and all that reporting happened in a matter of a few hours!

Just a few weeks ago, in a guest post I did on Read/Write Web from the Web 2.0 Expo in SF, entitled Widgetsphere: New Playground For Marketers, I raised this question of where does a widget stop and an ad begin? Well, it appears the line is growing fuzzier as we speak. Capitalism marches on!

UPDATE: To accurately label Google as an 800-pound gorilla, not an 80-pound one. 🙂

Screw AdSense – Bloggers Deserve a Buck a Word!

That’s the new mantra for bloggers seeking decent ad revenue according to online marketing guru Mike May, writing for MediaPost’s “Online Publishing Insider”. In his rabble-rousing piece, which went online today — “Compensate Citizen Publishers Like People, Not Web Sites” — he makes an interesting case. How did he arrive at a buck a word? That’s the going rate for freeelancer writers. And Mike’s proposal is based on this key notion: “The value of citizen publisher content to advertisers or sponsors should be no less than the value of freelance writing contributions to publishers.” Hey, I like it, Mikey likes it…what’s not to like?

‘How to Suck Up to a Blogger’ and ‘How to Almost Live on Blogging’

Two great posts I discovered on the state of blogging, and a killer article link at the end. The first I referred to earlier, but it’s worth a repeat mention: it’s Guy Kawasaki talking about who controls the buzz these days. Guess who that might be?

And the second is a Wired interview of Harold Davis, who writes the Googleplex blog. He also has a new book, “Google Advertising Tools” from O’Reilly [riveting title], which I’m reading right now and which you should buy — from my blog, of course! (It’s there in the righthand column.) That way, you can contribute to my “almost making a living” with this thing….in your own little, micropayment sorta way. 🙂

But I must say that Harold is a bit less rosy about bloggers supporting themselves than the picture painted by this excellent feature article just out in New York Magazine: Blogs to Riches: The Haves and Have-Nots of the Blogging Boom. Haven’t seen anything that gets into blogs making money quite like this piece…