Yahoo! supports Flex Media with new Motion Ads

aycucmprd07807004406Yahoo! announced this week that it is now offering advertising support for Flex Media.  Yahoo! is providing brands the opportunity to combine beautiful images with elegant animation, creating a very powerful form of brand storytelling. And when brands have a flexible canvas to design beautiful ads, Yahoo! sees experiences that engage our readers more and ultimately drive higher results for advertisers.

New ad format combines beautiful imagery and subtle animation for brand storytelling.

The Cinegif platform is the perfect place to create and deploy Flex Media such as Motion Ads on Yahoo!.  Kraft is the first brand to take advantage of this new feature, showing off a steaming grilled cheese sandwich that is sure to awaken the taste buds.  The above image is a perfect example of the power of Flex Media; constant motion + emotion = attention.

Kraft Cheese is proud to partner with Yahoo on the brand new Kraft Singles Motion Ad. We are always looking for opportunities to engage our consumers in unique and innovative ways that deliver our news – Kraft Singles are now made with no artificial preservatives. Yahoo brought forward a great executional idea and we are excited to be the first brand to launch it,” said Brian Gelb, Senior Associate Brand Manager, Kraft Cheese.

Kudos to Yahoo! and Kraft for jumping on the Flex Media band wagon to improve the advertising experience for all of us.  We at Cinegif are bringing this technology to all brands regardless of size.  Starting at $29/mo. you can easily create your own Flex Media to deploy in motions ads, email campaigns, website design, e-commerce displays and social media.  Sign-up for a free trial today at www.cinegif.com.

The Space Between

Armani-Central-Park-6151

Copyright – Jamie Beck & Kevin Burg

Understanding where the world is going in digital imagery and visual communication can sometimes be a challenge.  You feel the direction and can see the vision but still struggle on how to describe it to others.  I have been finding myself using the term “Space Between” a still image and a video to describe the area that we are trying to liberate on behalf of advertisers and marketers.  This space represents a growing movement in digital content creation that is driven by simple yet engaging motion.

The still photo can be a small and easily usable image and that is what makes it a perfect piece of content for digital advertising creative.  Photos capture a moment in time and lets the audience complete the story. But the one image is often one dimensional, interpretative and approximate – not providing the clarity, energy and emotion of actual movement.

Video, on the other hand, tells a more complete story and its format is designed to allow the creator room to express an entire thought or idea worth sharing.  Video can be engaging and robust enough to get just about any message across, and sound provides an additional sensation to express emotion and feeling.  However, using video as content in digital advertising is often complicated.  Requiring the user to click to play creates an instant barrier that demotes the video to a still photo with an arrow on top.  And, large file sizes, limited media placement opportunities and hosting issues can add to the video’s inherent complexities.

The average online attention span in 2013 was eight seconds. Twitter has seen the research. This is why they decided on a maximum of six seconds for uploads to their popular Vine video app and standardized the original ‘Tweet’ on 140 characters or less to get a point across.   Less is more in today’s busy world.  If grabbing our attention in a digital environment in less than eight seconds is important, we need a new way to combine the simplicity of the still photo with the engaging nature of a video.  Can we convey emotion through motion simply and quickly?  Absolutely we can.  But what do we call it?

NIKE by Mr GIF

Copyright – Mr. GIF

Since the Dave Matthews Band already used “The Space Between” to title their 2001 hit song, it is our job (collectively) to come up with a name to describe this emerging space.  Some within the industry have begun using their own language to describe the content.  Jamie Beck and Kevin Burg, the duo credited with the artistic revival of the GIF format coined the name “Cinemagraph” to describe their moving photographs.  Other creative professionals use terms such as moving portraits, hybrid photography or looping video.  All are valid monikers given to a new art form that is simple, compact, engaging and provides just enough emotion to compel the viewer to take action.  But the medium deserves an artistic distinction that sets it apart, not as a technology but as a form of expression born from the evolution of technology.

We know what this “Space Between” is but need your help giving it a unique and defining name.  We have built a company around this new disruptive technology and are looking to provide smart solutions to creative professionals, digital marketers and ad agencies looking to convey emotion through motion quickly and easily in the form of digital content and creative for display banners, websites, email campaigns, landing pages and social media channels.

Send us a tweet at @Cinegif for your suggestions on naming the space between a still photo and a video, or post on our Facebook page.