Author Archives: david
Video Classifieds Could Be Huge
MediaPost’s Video Insider has an interesting post about the potential of online video classifieds. Having just survived apartment seeking in Berkeley, I can attest to the need for this (blurry, cherry-picked pictures of an apartment can be very misleading), and … Continue reading
The Video Landscape of the Subprime Crisis
We wrote in a previous post about the bevy of savvy real estate companies utilizing TubeMogul to distribute videos of home tours to boost their organic search rankings (so a search for homes for sale in a given city or … Continue reading
Politubing Recap; McCain’s Absence
Our politubing research is picking up momentum with press from The Washington Independent, Mashable, TechPresident and more. With all this love, I can’t help but feel for John McCain, whose video views are the lowest of the major presidential candidates, … Continue reading
New Research: Video Views Drive Campaign Contributions
Our latest industry analysis, in which we outline a correlation between online video views and campaign contributions for the presidential candidates, is hot off the proverbial presses! Check it out here.
South by Southwest – See You There
We will be at South by Southwest in Austin, Texas this weekend and would love to see you there. On the agenda: – We are co-sponsoring a party to celebrate the premieres of five independent movies: The Matador, Medicine for … Continue reading
Polls Are So 20th Century
Our friends at TechPresident were mentioned in Lee Gomes’ “Portals” column of The Wall Street Journal yesterday, specifically the graphs (powered by TubeMogul) of YouTube views by presidential candidate. For political junkies (myself included), Texas’ primary/caucus on Tuesday is too … Continue reading
Klieg Lights Shine the Way
According to a survey of viewers published by eMarketer, 44% of people who watched less TV in 2007 did so because they were watching video online instead (and only 9% were streaming TV shows). I am one of these people, … Continue reading