dimecres, 19 de gener del 2011

IPad Users Prefer Advertising to Pay Model for Content - Advertising Age - Digital


Whopping 86% Said They Would Watch Ads in Order to Receive Free Content Such as TV Shows, Mags

NEW YORK (AdAge.com) -- Media companies everywhere gleefully glommed on to Apple's iPad when it launched in April, hoping to see better profit margins for their content that had been languishing online. Luxury publisher Condé Nast spent significant time and money developing hefty app versions of Wired and Vanity Fair early on, and, more recently, News Corp. CEO Rupert Murdoch poached journalists across Manhattan media to create an iPad-only news app called The Daily that launches this week with blue chip advertisers and a 99-cents-a-day download price.
But a new study shows that iPad owners are in fact less willing to pay for apps and are more willing to accept advertising in turn for free or lower-cost content.
In a survey conducted by online research company Knowledge Networks, 86% of iPad owners said they would be willing to "watch" ads to gain access to free content such as TV shows or magazine and newspaper articles. In practice, iPad users download an average of 24 apps, and of those, only six, or about a quarter of them are paid.

"That was part of what was surprising," said Knowledge CEO Simon Kooyman. "Not as many people are willing to pay for magazine or news content than we thought they would."
Only about 13% of those surveyed said they were willing to pay any fee to watch a TV program or read a magazine on the iPad to which they already have access, and they are only willing to pay an extra $2.60 on average for that content.
Interestingly, despite the hype around the emergence of apps both as a form of content and a business model, iPad users primarily use the device like a home computer. The most commonly used feature is search, with 97% of people saying they regularly use Google on the iPad, followed closely by web browsing and email at 91% of regular use. Media apps, however, are used at a much lower rate, with 70% of people saying they regularly read books on the iPad, 66% for music, 61% for reading magazines and newspapers and around 50% who regularly watch TV or movies.
With regard to magazines, which in many ways have flocked to the iPad more heartily than other media, the survey found that about 14% of users would be willing to pay to get a special iPad edition of a magazine they already receive in print. Condé Nast has taken this idea a step further, experimenting with iPad-only content, such as its Condé Nast Traveler "Best of Italy" app, which is in fact a collection of articles about travel in Italy from its extensive archives. About 12% said they would be willing to pay a small additional fee for a magazine they already get, while only 1% said they would pay the same as the cover price of a magazine they already have for the iPad version.
As for advertising, despite the fact that such a high proportion of users are willing to accept ads, almost as many, about 78% say that advertising "takes away from their enjoyment of their iPad."
Still, Mr. Kooyman said, "My feeling is although it's early in the game, the willingness to accept advertising is good news, I think."

Una enfermera crea una genuina red social, ‘tekuidamos 2.0’


  • Ella es Olga Navarro y se define como una 'adicta a twitter y a las herramientas sociales en general'. Ella es la autora del proyecto 'de Postgrado' que trata de enseñar la gran variedad de herramientas y recursos 2.0 en elsector sanitario. Pero para poder entrar a formar parte de la comunidad virtual antes debes recibir unainvitación personal.

tekuidamos2.0Tekuidamos 2.0 nace con la esencia de ser una auténtica 'comunidad de práctica' y virtual. El fundamento de esta iniciativa se basa en aspectos tanreales y diversos como la primacía enauge de Internet, la demanda de los pacientes a recibir una atención más personalizada, la necesidad de los profesionales de la salud que necesitan apoyo institucional para poner en marcha proyectos de integración de las Nuevas Tecnologías en la asistencia... Pero ante todo porque las redes sociales 'ya forman parte de la sociedad actual, por lo tanto, hay que estar en las redes' y como consecuencia 'los profesionales sanitarios necesitan espacios de comunicación en la Red'.
olga-tekuidamosUna de las mayores reivindicaciones en los diferentes colectivos, en el sanitario también, es la falta de formación en el mundo de la comunicación 2.0. Para tratar de mitigar este vacio ha dado origen a esta 'red de intercambio, formación y colaboración entre profesionales sanitarios y personas interesadas no sanitarias. Actualmente cuenta con más de 120 miembros, varias discusiones activas, un repositorio de tutoriales y videos formativos, blogs, canal podcast, enlaces, encuestas' según relata Olga Navarro en su propio blog.
Quien reciba la invitación necesaria para unirse a esta familia virtual, cadamartes a partir de las 10 de la noche, podrá asistir a una sesión formativa e informativa. Hoy la temática se basa en la creación de 'podcast' con Pilar Soro y, también, el Doctor Rafael Pardo abordará las ventajas e inconvenientes de los dispositivos móviles y telemedicina."

fuente prsalud

Sanofi-Aventis gets social with Facebook and diabetes


There are some pharma companies that “get it” and a lot that don’t but once again the marketing people at Sanofi-Aventis have hit a home run with two new initiatives aimed at diabetics.
The first is their new Facebook page for diabetics.  What I really like about this Facebook page is that it has a wealth of tools for diabetics including a link to a Diabetes Costar featuring Paul Sorvino.  In addition at the bottom of the page Sanofi-Aventis is embracing transparency with an introduction to the Sanofi employees who are the administrators of the page.  This is a must have since the research that I led over and over continually showed that people who engage pharma want to know “who they will be talking with”.
Diabetes Costars is a great site rich in content and tools for diabetics.  There are videos from Paul and Mira Sorvino as well as links to support and lifestyle information.  Users can also chose to follow this site on Facebook or Twitter for updates.
Why is this such a great effort ?
I have found during my research and work with Medtronic Diabetes that diabetics are a very close community especially online.   The tools and content that they asked for are on these Sanofi-Aventis sites and I believe they are going to be a huge success for SA once the word gets out just how much great information they have provided.
Obviously someone at Sanofi-Aventis has done an amazing job convincing their legal, regulatory and management people that patients are actually using the Internet for health and that we need to take ‘some managed risk” to make a difference.   Congrats to the people at Sanofi-Aventis for showing us what great marketing initiatives can be developed when you put patients first.