January 11, 2006 5:41 PM PST
TV ads made quick and cheap on the Net
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A Los Angeles-based start-up launched a service Wednesday that allows companies to create television ad campaigns over the Internet for as little as $500 and as quickly as within one week. Spot Runner lets advertisers select a generic commercial from its library, personalize the ads and target customers by demographics, networks and neighborhoods.
Advertisers can buy air time on major networks, including local broadcast and cable channels like CNN and ESPN. The company was formed by Nick Grouf and David Waxman who previously founded Firefly Network and PeoplePC.
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- Bunk and Junk
- by theCorpCOO July 17, 2006 5:26 PM PDT
- I tested their system. Spot runner rates seem 25-percent to <br />500-percent more than Cheap TV Spots available elsewhere. <br />They also don't let you air your own commercial or post it on <br />your web site. They keep it, which forces you to pay their <br />inflated price for air time. Not a good deal at all once you talk <br />with them to get the real details, which costs an extra 100 <br />dollars. They're not experienced media people, but actually <br />computer people with no real-life TV advertising background <br />(retail, product branding, etc.). The scatter TV schedules they <br />promote are too thin to be effective. I think their system could <br />bankrupt a small company, before Mom and Pop knew what <br />happened. I don't think their generic ads will function either, as <br />a competitor can rent the exact ad, nullifying branding attempts. <br />My opinion, anyway.
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