People Are So Startled
By A New Type Of Mobile Ad, It Makes Them Actually Say 'Huh?'
XAPP Media
Called XAPP (pronounced "Zap"), Raines
and Higbie's product allows listeners to talk back to radio ads when they come
up on Pandora, Spotify, NPR, and other mobile apps. It uses an iPhone or
Android device's microphone to let users actively participate in the ads, rather
than passively listen — or tune them out.
For
example: Ourisman Toyota ran a 20% off promotion on NPR for listeners who
booked appointments through the radio ad. “Want to learn more?” The voiceover
said. “After the beep, just say 'XAPP Me!'" The listener then heard a beep
and was given two seconds to repeat the words into their mobile microphones.
"We give the
listener a specific word or phrase to say," says Higbie. "That’s the
simplicity we believe is necessary. What Siri and other things are doing is
impressive, but their results are not reliable enough to get every consumer to
use them." Higbie says his team has made the technology so good, it can
separate specific responses from background noise.
NPR is XAPP's
first publishing partner. Since April, they've run a handful of the
voice-enabled ads for local advertisers. NPR is selling the spots for a CPM
north of $20.
"We have
been demoing this for agencies and brands and the reaction has been roundly
positive,” NPR's VP of Digital Strategy, Bryan Moffett, told Advertising
Age in March. "When our test group heard [the call to
action] ‘say download now’ or ‘say learn more,’ we universally heard them respond
with ‘huh,’ sounding pleasantly surprised."
"When our test group heard
[the call to action] ‘say download now’ or ‘say learn more,’ we universally
heard them respond with ‘huh,’ sounding pleasantly surprised."
Raines and Higbie
raised a $3 million seed round to get their startup launched. XAPP spent 17
months in stealth mode, perfecting its technology, researching the mobile
advertising space, and getting feedback from marketers and publishers.
The pair
co-invested in a voice assistant company, XTone, which led them to the idea for
XAPP. "Frank and I were looking for something that could be really big
using the base technology, and we wanted to build an end-to-end service,"
says Higbie. "We started looking at the media space, specifically in
mobile, and the ability to personalize content whether it was music or spoken
word. So we thought about how to use voice technology to monetize personalized
mobile content."
Neither had ever
worked in the radio or advertising industries before, so they met with a lot of
agencies to gauge interest. They were surprised to learn that there weren't
many known competitors, and that advertisers seemed eager to try a product like
XAPP.
"Early on,
we'd go in and talk to [advertisers] and we'd always expect to hear, 'Oh, we saw
technology like that last month,'" says Higbie. "But every time we'd
get a reaction that was more like, 'Wow, this is pretty interesting.'"
XAPP's team says
they're building the "voice-click" for mobile ads, like a physical
click on a website. While Higbie wouldn't give exact metrics, he says
NPR's advertisers are seeing "dramatically higher" response rates
when they use XAPP. For the first time, their ads can measure by a user's
actions.
Currently, 14
people are working for the DC-based startup. Their team isn't interested in
building a mobile advertising agency. Instead, it wants to build standardized,
voice-activated units publishers can monetize, advertisers can measure, and
consumers have a say in. Literally.
"The best
way to think about XAPP is the introduction of the Voice Click to audio
advertising," says CMO Bret Kinsella. "In 1994, the first clickable
banner ad ran in Hotwired. Now, twenty years later, the first voice click
advertisement was served by NPR for Lumber Liquidators through XAPP. It was
about conversion then, and it is today for a mobile audio environment."
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