Not Applicable
Not Applicable
Not Applicable
This invention relates generally to the field of advertising and more specifically to a method of dynamic advertising in prerecorded audio and video. Several methods currently exist for advertising in prerecorded audio and video, namely playing commercials, utilizing product placement, implementing chroma keying methods, and incorporating methods from various patents. This section gives an overview of the current state of the art in audio and video advertising and explains how the existing methods are deficient in some way.
Commercials have always been a huge source of revenue for media companies, however, they are frequently an annoyance to audiences that would prefer to listen to the radio program or watch the rest of the television show or movie. In modern days, with the frequent use of digital recorders, the audience can easily skip over commercials to enjoy the rest of the show.
As an alternative to commercials, the entertainment industry often employs product placement to advertise within the show as a noninvasive method to generate revenue through advertisements without detracting from the audience's experience. This common advertising method is used to lower the cost of production when making movies, television shows or audio recordings. Product placement has a benefit over conventional advertising because with product placement, the advertisement is embedded into the original production in a seamless manner that does not disturb the viewer or listener. For example, in a movie an actor may drive a specific car or eat a bowl of a prominently displayed box of cereal. After many years, though, the advertisement in the original recording becomes old and fails to generate revenue for the creators of the program.
Another common and very successful advertising technique is emerging today on the Internet: contextual advertising. Contextual advertising involves directing advertisement content based on information that the user is exploring on a web page, the user's email content or past purchasing habits. Contextual advertising is successful because it targets advertisements based on the interests of the user. However, contextual advertising is generally text-based and does not apply to audio or video data unless it is shown as a commercial, interrupting the original audio or video data stream.
A fourth way to display advertisements in live programs is through the use of chroma keying techniques which seek a predetermined color or shape in the data and then map new data on top of it. For example, many televised baseball programs include a computer generated banner behind the home plate such that the banner looks as if it is an advertisement that exists in the stadium itself.
U.S. Pat. No. 20060265725 describes an advertisement method where an electronic device is used to merge video advertisement data with a video broadcast signal. This way a viewer can watch a show and also see advertisements in a particular section of the screen where the advertisements can be defined locally.
U.S. Pat. No. 20060253323 describes a method for targeting advertisements to television viewers in a way that allows the advertisements to change based on the current advertising bids.
U.S. Pat. No. 20070074243 describes a method of inserting commercials in time-shifted broadcast content.
While there exist many methods to advertise products, these methods have disadvantages. A disadvantage of commercials is that they detract from the original video or audio content, and thus annoy the audience. Also, commercials can be skipped. Product placement has the disadvantage of being immutable. Once the original recording is released, it cannot be changed. This results in advertisements becoming out of date and not generating revenue over time. Current contextual advertising methods are inadequate for video and audio data because they involve interrupting the video or audio with a commercial. Chroma keying techniques can be somewhat dynamic, however this method is often very contrived to work in specific instances where the information to be replaced with advertisement is easy to determine. It also has the problem of not being changeable once a recording has been made. U.S. Pat. No. 20060265725 is deficient because the advertisement takes up screen space and detracts from the original program. Also, it does not allow for generating continual advertisement revenue from a DVD or movie file. U.S. Pat. No. 20060253323 is deficient because while commercials can be dynamically selected, the advertisement is still a commercial and can be skipped when recorded, or interrupt the program and annoy the audience when viewed. U.S. Pat. No. 2007074243 is deficient because it is specific to live broadcast content and also because this patent still involves the display of commercials, which interrupt the program. Furthermore, none of these methods enable the content creator to generate revenue from pirated copies of the audio or video data.
In accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention, there is disclosed a method of advertising in prerecorded video or audio comprising of: a means of deciding when advertisements should occur in the video or audio, a means of determining the content of an advertisement in a section of video or audio, a means of altering sections of video or audio data such that the new data includes information relating to the advertisements, and a player which utilizes these means to generate altered streamed video or audio data with relevant product placement.
The primary object of the invention is to provide a new revenue source for video and audio recordings, where product placement can be altered after the original recording has been made.
Another object of the invention is to provide a method where new product placement can be added into a previously recorded data stream.
A further object of the invention is to provide a method where product placement can be tailored to individuals based on the viewer's or listener's demographic or geographic location.
Yet another object of the invention is to provide a method where revenue can still be generated from pirated media.
One additional advantage is with the advent of digital video recorders, many viewers and listeners will not be able to skip the dynamic product placement without missing critical parts of their program.
Further objects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following descriptions, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, wherein, by way of illustration and example, an embodiment of the present invention is disclosed.
Detailed descriptions of the preferred embodiment are provided herein. While the invention has been described in connection with a preferred embodiment, it is not intended to limit the scope of the invention to the particular form set forth, but on the contrary, it is intended to cover such alternatives, modifications, and equivalents as may be included within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims. Therefore, specific details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but rather as a basis for the claims and as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to employ the present invention in virtually any appropriately detailed system, structure or manner.
A preferred embodiment of the dynamic product placement system is illustrated in
In order for a player 5 to know when to play alternative clips, the player requires information 3 regarding when clips should be played and where to find the replacement clips. 3 can take the form of a simple spreadsheet, be interleaved in the original data stream 1, or take other forms.
With data 1, 2, and 3, the player now enough information to determine when product placement should happen. 5 also has the potential to show different product placement during the segment that the original product placement took place. In order for the player 5 to determine which product placement to use, it needs information 4 about who the current advertiser should be for this segment. The current advertiser could be determined in many different ways. One example is to simply auction off the product placements for a period of time. Another example is to base the product placement on the geographic location of the viewer or listener so that the advertisements are more relevant to the user. 4 can be based on other aspects of the viewer or listener as well, such as the viewer's age, or personal preferences. In any event, once the current advertiser 4 is determined, the player 5 now has enough information to replace the product placement in the original stream of data 1 with new data from the pool of product placement options 2. The result is the ability to show the viewer a modified version 6 of the original data containing different product placement from 1. This structure solves many of the problems with current advertising methods. First of all, the advertisement is embedded into the original media as product placement, so it is noninvasive. Secondly, because the player checks for substitute product placement while playing the data stream, the product placement advertising can be changed over time. Third, because a special player 5 is involved, even if the media is pirated, the player still checks for product placement and thus generates revenue for the owners of the media stream. Finally, because the data are product placements, viewers are discouraged from fast forwarding to skip the advertising because it is tied with the original program such that fast forwarding through the advertising would result in missing some of the original program as well.
In
In contrast to