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Mom Bloggers May Get the Brunt of the Slumping Online Ad Market

As 2009 starts to unfold, I’m already seeing some of my 2009 women’s trend predictions take place. This morning it was announced that the Glam Media ad network acquired AdaptiveAds, a Mumbai, India based banner and text ad network.

While I don’t have intimate knowledge of either company’s inner workings, I got to thinking about this move – its both smart and confusing:

Smart because:

  • Glam knows that it is a buyer’s market right now, and they can take advantage of that fact while the economy is wobbly.
  • AdaptiveAds has some useful ad-serving technology that comes with the transaction, including a self-serve purchase system for ad agencies (which media buyers love).
  • It is likely that AdaptiveAds has penetration in different markets overseas that Glam wants to penetrate. A very smart move to diversify their revenue base.

But even though I predicted this would start happening, I’m surprised that it’s Glam, and I’m surprised that it’s now:

So What Does All of This Have to do With Mommy Bloggers?

Right now, the online ad industry has a ratio problem – not enough ad inventory vs. too much publisher inventory. Glam, being one of the leaders in the women’s ad space, is doing everything they can to compensate for the fact that they don’t have enough ad inventory. They’ve cut costs in their operations, and are taking longer to pay their accounts payables.

But only thing they can do to compensate on the publisher inventory side of things is cut under-performing publishers from their programs. It’s much easier and cost effective to cut hundreds of mommy blogs from the network than it is to cut one high-performing site. Escalate Media’s DiaperSwappers mom community can deliver the same amount of impressions as 336 mom blogs, and that’s if they have a generously estimated 25K page views a month. Most mom blogs have far less than that.

Glam isn’t the only network working with mom bloggers. I suspect this fear is a non-issue with the BlogHerAds network, as mom blogs are their bread and butter. But BlogHer also has some pretty strict content restrictions that are getting harder for publishers to accept as brands start reaching out to bloggers directly. And who knows what’s going on elsewhere in the already-too-saturated mom’s ad network space.

I truly believe that the online advertising market, while seeing a slump right now, will be the first to recover from the economic mess we are in. And I also believe that ads targeting moms is a realtively-speaking strong market that is here to stay. More advertising budgets are moving online every day, and outdoor, newspaper and TV are getting hit hard.

But it’s anyone’s guess as to when a true advertising recovery is going to happen, and I worry about what the casualties will be in the mom blogging community until then.

5 Responses to “Mom Bloggers May Get the Brunt of the Slumping Online Ad Market”

  1. Lee Dodd says:

    Very interesting read Wendy…thanks for sharing!

  2. This is very interesting. My perspective as a person in the mom-blog world (I am the grandmother voice on a blog that I own with my 2 daughters) is that many companies and “brands” have not begun to understand or comprehend the reach, significance, influence and quiet power of the mom-blog world. Just this afternoon, my daughter had a conference call with a representative from a rather large corporation, and “mom-blog” was not even on the radar. I know this sounds almost impossible to believe, but I think that online advertising budgets have not truly begun to tap into the greatest voice – moms!

    Excellent post! Very thought-provoking!

  3. Ah – Hi Sharon! I know you and MomGenerations!

    You bring up a really important point that I didn’t make clear in my post. I’ve seen and even created some extremely successful campaigns connecting moms with brands. I fully believe that the value the mom blogging community can deliver to companies cannot be underestimated.

    Some companies really ‘get it’. But the very large advertisers who fuel large ad networks are more interested in impressions, clicks and conversions. When a brand takes the time to do something customized and really engage in social media conversations, that’s where the real value and ROI become very apparent.

    Thanks for your comment! :)

  4. It looks like 2009 is going to be a rough year for small publishers. It will be a scramble to find new ways to monetize. Nothing like a crisis to force change.

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