
How Blockchain Is Restoring Value And Transparency In Online Search
In today’s digital age, the timely retrieval of information
is critical to human functioning. This reality means millions, even billions, of users coalescing around internet search. Information dependency has created an impossibly rich online concentration of potential prospects. Businesses cannot ignore search engine marketing and digital advertising. They have to be where people are.
Now, the primary objective of a search engine is simple: deliver trustworthy, authoritative and timely information in response to a query. As searchers query, click and learn, they naturally interact with businesses. These interactions can be enriching to both sides. Consumers want answers to questions, while businesses want to provide solutions to problems they are positioned to solve. When working, it’s a virtuous cycle of meaningful digital engagement at scale. Unfortunately, because of the outsized influence had by search engine platforms and their advertising network intermediaries, the experience is rarely this idyllic.
For businesses -- even those with big budgets -- the situation is perhaps bleaker.
For every dollar of digital advertising spent last year, $0.40 went to Google and $0.37 went to Facebook. Literally, every other participant on the world’s most ubiquitous online social channels (think: Snapchat, Twitter, Amazon) battle for leftovers. The utter non-competitiveness does little to promote transparency and innovation or return control to advertisers and consumers. Jeremy Epstein, CEO of the blockchain marketing company Never Stop Marketing, recalls the conversation he had with Stacy Huggins, CMO of MadHive. According to her, for every $1 you invest in digital advertising, you only get $.44 of value.
For years, these advertisers’ efforts to secure authentic, valuable connections with consumers have been stymied. Opaque data, convoluted campaign terms and fuzzy metrics are inhibitors. Nineteenth-century retailer John Wanamaker’s iconic line, “Half the money I spend on advertising is wasted; the trouble is I don't know which half” represents a fundamental question about digital ads altogether. It represents the growing unease about dubious tactics and tepid returns offered by leading search engines.
At BitClave, we’re solving the problem from both the consumer and business side. We believe mutually incentivizing and establishing a direct connection between businesses and customers is the paradigm shift the search and advertising vertical needs. Principally, customers find what they are looking for and businesses provide the right offer to the right question from the right consumer. Within the ecosystem, these interactions are managed in a decentralized way, leveraging the security and immutability of blockchain. As user information is generated, businesses enjoy precise levels of user targeting, maximizing ROI on advertising spend, regaining campaign control and answering search queries. Customer and retail activity information gets stored on the decentralized ledger. This satisfies users’ desire for relevant search results while driving a safer, more efficient transactional experience.
In the U.S., digital ad spend is expected to be $83 billion in 2017. Of this, roughly $37 billion will be from search. As Google and Facebook’s stranglehold tightens, sub-optimal experiences for users and advertisers will continue. These middlemen have moved from simply owning the platforms for search and commerce to meddling in the actual engagements. They are dictating results and using this influence, in the form of ad placements and click-through rate performance, for exorbitant gain.
The too-big-to-fail search and advertising middle should be accountable. Their currency is data and dollars -- the very things that consumers and advertisers provide. Irritation is growing among consumers and advertisers alike. AdBlockers app downloads are surging. The vagaries of digital ad ROI have spurred blockchain-based companies bent on disrupting the vertical -- and conditions are changing.
Alongside BitClave, martech industry observers note some early leaders:
• AdChain
is an open protocol that uses blockchain technology to improve the digital ad supply chain and prevent ad fraud.
• NYIAX
is the world’s first exchange to trade advertising contracts. Developed in partnership with Nasdaq, NYIAX enables publishers and advertisers to buy, sell and re-trade high-quality advertising inventory with its financial matching engine.
• AdShares
offers programmatic advertising in a decentralized, peer-to-peer marketplace. The platform brings together publishers and advertisers by cutting out the middleman.
Our conviction is that mechanisms to deliver value to buyers and sellers, not middlemen, need to be at the center of search.For years, these advertisers’ efforts to secure authentic, valuable connections with consumers have been stymied. Opaque data, convoluted campaign terms and fuzzy metrics are inhibitors. Nineteenth-century retailer John Wanamaker’s iconic line, “Half the money I spend on advertising is wasted; the trouble is I don't know which half” represents a fundamental question about digital ads altogether. It represents the growing unease about dubious tactics and tepid returns offered by leading search engines.
At BitClave, we’re solving the problem from both the consumer and business side. We believe mutually incentivizing and establishing a direct connection between businesses and customers is the paradigm shift the search and advertising vertical needs.
Principally, customers find what they are looking for and businesses provide the right offer to the right question from the right consumer. Within the ecosystem, these interactions are managed in a decentralized way, leveraging the security and immutability of blockchain. As user information is generated, businesses enjoy precise levels of user targeting, maximizing ROI on advertising spend, regaining campaign control and answering search queries. Customer and retail activity information gets stored on the decentralized ledger. This satisfies users’ desire for relevant search results while driving a safer, more efficient transactional experience.
In the U.S., digital ad spend is expected to be $83 billion in 2017. Of this, roughly $37 billion will be from search. As Google and Facebook’s stranglehold tightens, sub-optimal experiences for users and advertisers will continue. These middlemen have moved from simply owning the platforms for search and commerce to meddling in the actual engagements. They are dictating results and using this influence, in the form of ad placements and click-through rate performance, for exorbitant gain.
The too-big-to-fail search and advertising middle should be accountable. Their currency is data and dollars -- the very things that consumers and advertisers provide. Irritation is growing among consumers and advertisers alike. AdBlockers app downloads are surging. The vagaries of digital ad ROI have spurred blockchain-based companies bent on disrupting the vertical -- and conditions are changing.
Chuck Reynolds
Marketing Dept
Contributor
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