| Startup Cries Foul at Google?s New Radio Ads Product |
|
But Google isn’t stopping at the sale, placement and tracking of radio spots. They are also assisting customers in the process of creating the ads themselves. The overall product looks very similar to what Spot Runner (mentioned here) is doing in the television space. From a recent CNET article on Google Radio Ads:
It’s that last bit that has Ciccarelli up in arms. Voices.com has been helping to match advertisers with voice talent and ad production for the last couple of years. He claims the Google ad product is nearly identical, although he hasn’t seen it yet and has nothing to go on but the CNET quote above. But he also says that for the last couple of months traffic to the site from Mountain View (where Google is headquartered) has gone through the roof, accounting for about 5% of total voices.com traffic. He’s suggesting that Google has scoured the voices.com site to figure out what to copy in the Voices.com business model. Most people will tell Ciccarelli to suck it up and not complain about this. Copying is just flattery, after all, and there’s nothing he can do about it besides try and innovate faster than Google can (See YouTube). And something else that needs to be considered is the possibility that Google hasn’t bothered looking at Voices.com at all. The core product was developed by a company that Google acquired a year ago called dMarc, which is still located in Newport Beach, California, about 350 miles south of Mountain View. It’ll be interesting to see what people think about this in the comments. Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware. Read more at: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/60107169/. |
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|













