Adap.tv was bought by AOL: who could be next?

Steven Loeb · August 7, 2013 · Short URL: https://vator.tv/n/3136

AOL spent $405 million on the video advertising platform, one of its largest acquisitions ever

(Updated to reflect an updated description of TubeMogul)

Earlier today it was announced that AOL had purchased Web video company Adap.tv for $405 million. It is one of AOL's largest acquisition ever, even more than the $315 million it paid for the Huffington Post in 2011. 

Adap.tv is a video advertising platform. It provides publishers and advertisers with automated tools to plan, buy and measure across linear TV and online video. Its flagship product is Adap.tv OneSource, which provides a single point of control to serve and manage ads, both from in-house and third party sources, in all major video formats, using the existing display ad server.

Adap.tv supported over 26,000 global ad campaigns last year, which ran on roughly 9,500 websites and was used by many of the top brand advertisers.

So, as we like to do here at Vator when there is a big acquisition or funding round, we are going to take a look at the space and see what other companies are out there that might be affected by this news.

And the acquisition by AOL, will have an overall positive effect on the space in general, said David Burch, Director of Communications at TubeMogul, a rival video ad platform.

"We view this as broadly good for us. It means that companies that are focused on technology are valued higher than some of the ad networks that are more media arbitragers," he said. 

What he meant by that was that companies like Adap.tv and TubeMogul are more focus on technology than the traditional ad networks, which buy inventory en mass, bundle it and sell it to advertisers. They bundle good stuff with the bad, and the advertisers do not have as much control.

Those companies in the programmatic space, where buying and delivery of ad space is automated, act more like a software as a service, he said. With these companies the advertisers can use technology provided by these companies to buy advertisements using real-time bidding.

"We are focused on adding value to that technology rather than packaging media together," said Burch, noting that the automated buying and delivery of ads has attracted more attention in terms of investment recently than the traditional ad companies. 

"This is a hot space with tons happening  and it feels like ive never been busier. It's a great time for the market."

So who will benefit?

Here are some companies that might see the benefit from today's acquisition:

 

  • TubeMogul is a programmatic video advertising platform focused exclusively on the buyside of the digital media industry. Unlike ad networks, TubeMogul does not work directly with publishers and does not buy inventory and resell it. Instead, they provide a SaaSbased platform that brands and agencies use to buy media from both public and private exchanges. The platform automates the execution and optimization of video campaigns and generates analytics in real-time that are used to improve the brand impact of each campaign. The company has two revenue channels: 1) transaction revenue based on spending levels from clients who adopt TubeMogul's software platform 2) media revenue from selling campaigns at a fixed price that TubeMogul fulfills using exchange inventory bought in real-time. The company has raised $53 million, most recently a $10 million Series C from SingTel Innov8, Cross Creek Capital, Digital Advertising Consortium, Foundation Capital and Trinity Ventures.
  • BrightRoll is a video ad network and a provider of digital video advertising services. It offers the BrightRoll Exchange (BRX), an online video advertising marketplace with thousands of sites and more than 100 million monthly unique viewers. BRX offers buyers access to pools of audited inventory, transparent site-lists and audience targeting. BRX provides publishers a way to maximize monetization of their available inventory. The company has raised $46 million, most recently taking in a $30 million Series C round funding, fromTrident Capital, Scale Venture Partners, Adam Street Partners, and Comerica Bank. 
  • YuMe is a provider of digital video brand advertising solutions. It drives inventory monetization and enables advertisers to reach targeted, brand receptive audiences across a wide range of Internet-connected devices. It has raised $65 million, including a $25 million round from Menlo Ventures, Accel Partners, BV Capital, DAG Ventures and Khosla Ventures in February 2010.
  • SAY Media enables advertisers to engage social consumers through rich content experiences while helping creators monetize their work and grow their audience. The company provides ways for top brands to engage with their audiences, at scale, with a reach of more than 500 million people around the world. It has raised $60.9 million, most recently raising $27 million from New Enterprise Associates (NEA), Shea Ventures Correlation Ventures and existing investors. 
  • HIRO Media provides service and technology for content owners to maximize profits from online video. Founded in 2004, the Israeli company raised a $5 million round in April of 2012.
  • LiveRail is an online video distribution and ad-platform that provides premium publishers with the technology to sell their video inventory across all devices. Founded in 2007, the company has raised $6 million.
  • SpotXchange is an online video advertising network allows advertisers and publishers to buy and sell online video advertising in an auction marketplace. The company raised $12 million from H.I.G. Growth Partners in December 2010.

Some competitors have already seen exits:

  • Broadband Enterprises (BBE) was an online video network with over 2,000 publisher websites and more than 150 premium brand advertisers.  BBE syndicated content across the network from media companies such as Comcast, iVillage, MSNBC, WashingtonPost-Newsweek Interactive and others, sharing revenue with content owners and publishers. BBE also created originally produced branded programming. The company raised $10 million in funding before it was purchased by Specific Media in October 2010.
  • Delve Networks was an online video platform that had acquired over 280 customers including the NFL, Cleveland Clinic, Prudential, Pokemon, Lego, Fidelity, Kansas City Chief and delivered 200 million streams per month. It raised nearly $10 million, before it was acquired by Limelight Networks in 2010 and it became a business unit within that company.
  •  Kiptronic offered a platform for inserting video and audio ads into digital media for consumption on any device, including web pages, iPods, smartphones and laptops, online or offline. The company worked with rich media content publishers to help them manage, measure and monetize their content. It raised $7.3 million before being scooped up by Limelight Networks in May of 2009.
  • Brightcove is a provider of cloud content services and products, which are used to publish and distribute professional digital media, including both videos and apps. Brightcove offers secure content, advertising and analytics to professional publishers. The company went public in February 2012, after raising roughly $150 million from a combination of venture capital and its IPO, including a $12 million Series E round of funding led by original Series A investors Accel Partners and General Catalyst partners in April 2010.

(Image source: https://vimeo.com)

Related Companies, Investors, and Entrepreneurs

BrightRoll, Inc.

Startup/Business

Joined Vator on

Led by a team of Internet advertising veterans and engineers, BrightRoll has served billions of advertisements since we got started. We achieved this growth by enabling agencies and brand advertisers to execute smart video ad campaigns across the industry’s leading publishers, including over half of the top 250 websites in the United States.

Dozens of advertising agencies work with BrightRoll to execute campaigns for their premier brands. By offering full site disclosure, detailed performance reports and flexible targeting, we provide advertisers with the reach, frequency, scalability, and transparency needed to achieve their goals.

Hundreds of branded publishers work with BrightRoll to maximize the value of their online inventory. We are fortunate to work with many of the Internet’s leading branded publishers, including multiple television properties, and most of the leading high-volume video sites.

BrightRoll is headquartered in San Francisco, CA, and has sales offices throughout the United States.

Adap.tv

Startup/Business

Joined Vator on

Adap.tv: Leadership and Innovation for the New World of Online Video Advertising

Adap.tv helps publishers capitalize on the soaring popularity of online video among viewers and advertisers. Our flagship offering, Adap.tv OneSource, provides a single point of control to serve and manage ads from in-house and third party sources, in all major video formats, using your existing display ad server. OneSource streamlines ad operations, supporting efficient scalability for any online video business, from startups to major media companies.

As the first open and universal video ad sourcing and management platform, the powerful yet simple to use OneSource system has already gained broad industry support. More than 300 publishers in 71 countries use OneSource to monetize hundreds of millions of video streams each month. Whether an already established leader in video publishing—or a publisher determined to become one—Adap.tv provides the tools they need to achieve their online video goals.

Kiptronic

Startup/Business

Joined Vator on

Kiptronic offers a platform for dynamically inserting video and audio ads into digital media for consumption on any device (web pages, iPods, smartphones and laptops) online or offline. The company works with rich media content publishers to help them manage, measure and monetize their content.

Major media companies and independent publishers no longer have to manually insert ads into their content – With Kiptronic, it happens on-the-fly, without altering existing publishing processes. Key partnerships with rich media content delivery networks enable content publishers to turn on Kiptronic ad insertion as a simple add-on service to manage large ad campaigns through a robust ad operations tool.

Kiptronic was recently named to the AlwaysOn Media 100 list of top media and advertising-related start-up companies for 2008. The company is backed by leading venture capital investors Blueprint Ventures (www.blueprintventures.com) and Prism VentureWorks (www.prismventure.com). For more information, visit kiptronic.com.

SAY Media

Startup/Business

Joined Vator on

SAY Media is a modern media company designed for a social age. The company enables advertisers to engage today’s social consumer through rich content experiences while helping creators monetize their work and grow their audience. Through a powerful collection of influential creators, passion-based communities and engaging sites, SAY Media delivers brand messages to an online audience of 345 million across display and mobile.

 

Broadband Enterprises

Startup/Business

Joined Vator on

Broadband Enterprises is an online video network with over 2,000 publisher websites and more than 150 premium brand advertisers. The video network is BBE’s core business, on which three additional businesses have been established since April 2004, when BBE was born. BBE syndicates content across the network from media companies such as Comcast, iVillage, MSNBC, WashingtonPost-Newsweek Interactive and others, sharing revenue with content owners and publishers. BBE creates originally produced branded programming, such as office makeover show "Cube Fabulous,” which was launched in May 2006, and “Fantastic Two,” which offers a comedic look at the underground world of fantasy football. Brand marketers such as Honda, McDonald’s, Milk and P&G have enjoyed the benefits of sponsorship within BBE’s original programming lineup.

Additionally, BBE’s technology platform, VINDICO™, provides advertisers, content suppliers and website publishers with a variety of dynamic services, including digital ad-serving, tracking, reporting, contextual and behavioral content distribution.

Brightcove

Startup/Business

Joined Vator on

Brightcove is an Internet TV platform.

We're dedicated to harnessing the inherent power of the Internet to transform the distribution and consumption of media.

Brightcove empowers content owners—from independent producers to major broadcast networks—to reach their audiences directly through the Internet. At the same time, we help web publishers enrich their sites with syndicated video programming, and we give marketers more ways to communicate and engage with their consumers.

Most importantly, we give people the freedom to easily find, watch and participate in a broad range of video content—when and where they choose.

delve-networks

Startup/Business

Joined Vator on

Delve Networks is leading the next generation of development for Video Platform, allowing them to engage users through our "Search Inside" technology, where they can pin point content "inside the video". 

 

Our unique business model also allows companies to reduce operational costs or recognize savings over thier existing service.

 

We offer a Free Trial and here is a look at the Obama Inauguration usring our technology.

http://blog.delvenetworks.com/2009/01/20/search-inside-obama%E2%80%99s-inaugural-speech/

YuMe

Startup/Business

Joined Vator on

 

As viewing audiences fragment and consumption of video content across multiple devices continues to grow, YuMe’s goal is to be there with video advertising technology solutions that provide maximum inventory monetization for publishers and optimal ad campaign performance and ROI for advertisers.

 

YuMe pioneered video ad delivery across all devices (PC, Mobile, IPTV) with ACE, the industry’s first video advertising platform launched in 2007.  With 500+ publishers, more than 1 billion video streams and 63 million unique viewers per month, YuMe provides both audience scale and quality reach for advertisers.  The YuMe ad management platform, ACE, gives publishers and advertisers the unprecedented ability to identify, classify, and track content to ensure brand safety, contextual relevance, controlled syndication, and consistent delivery across all devices.  Key YuMe innovations include the first cross–platform ad solution and the ability to serve multiple ad formats and placements through a single, unified system.  YuMe is a privately held company headquartered in Redwood City, CA and backed by Khosla Ventures, Accel Partners, BV Capital and DAG Ventures.

 

For more information, visit YuMe’s website at www.yume.com and the take2video blog at www.yume.com/blog.

As viewing audiences fragment and consumption of video content across multiple devices continues to grow, YuMe’s goal is to be there with video advertising technology solutions that provide maximum inventory monetization for publishers and optimal ad campaign performance and ROI for advertisers.

 

 

YuMe pioneered video ad delivery across all devices (PC, Mobile, IPTV) with ACE, the industry’s first video advertising platform launched in 2007.  With 500+ publishers, more than 1 billion video streams and 63 million unique viewers per month, YuMe provides both audience scale and quality reach for advertisers.  The YuMe ad management platform, ACE, gives publishers and advertisers the unprecedented ability to identify, classify, and track content to ensure brand safety, contextual relevance, controlled syndication, and consistent delivery across all devices.  Key YuMe innovations include the first cross–platform ad solution and the ability to serve multiple ad formats and placements through a single, unified system.  YuMe is a privately held company headquartered in Redwood City, CA and backed by Khosla Ventures, Accel Partners, BV Capital and DAG Ventures.

 

For more information, visit YuMe’s website at www.yume.com and the take2video blog at www.yume.com/blog.

LiveRail

Startup/Business

Joined Vator on

LiveRail is a unique online video distribution and ad-platform that will revolutionize the way people think about video advertising. Founded in January 2007, LiveRail aims to be the global leader in this exciting new medium.
LiveRail’s takes a ground-breaking approach to video advertising online.
With LiveRail, ads are optional, and advertisers only pay when someone actually chooses to watch their advert.
Whenever someone watches a publisher’s video, LiveRail serve up a series of highly targeted, relevant ad-previews underneath their main content. If at any point a viewer sees an ad the interests them, they can click it, watch the video and return to their main content when finished. This means advertisers only pay when somebody actually chooses to watch their ad, giving more measurable, more effective and more controllable results.

TubeMogul, Inc.

Startup/Business

Joined Vator on

Founded in 2006 by online video buffs who met while in graduate school and won the UC Berkeley Business Plan Competition, TubeMogul's objective from the start has been to empower online video producers, advertisers and the online video industry by providing publishing tools and insightful, easy to interpret analytics.

With TubeMogul, users upload videos once and TubeMogul deploys them to as many of the top video sharing sites the producer chooses. TubeMogul's integrated analytics then provide a single source of metrics on where, when, and how often the videos are viewed. TubeMogul's free beta service has been live since November of 2006. In January 2008, TubeMogul announced the launch of its Premium Products, which include a host of new professional features.