Benjamin Li
May 10, 2013

How to build a healthy online advertising market: FAME 2013

SHANGHAI - A China-focused panel at the FAME 2013 conference has concluded that to build a healthy online advertising market it's critical and essential to have mutual benefits, education and openness.

How to build a healthy online advertising market: FAME 2013

The panel moderator, Wei Zhu, chief executive officer, Miaozhen Systems, asked panel members about their level of confidence regarding the development of the internet industry in China and whether there were any obstacles that needed to be removed to improve the industry.

Members of the panel were: Alan Hellawell, MD and head of Asia for TMT Research, Deutsche Bank; Lei Li, senior media manager, Mars China; Elaine Wang, VP of commercial operations for Sina; and Claire Zhang, associate media director with Yum Brands China.

While the panelists generally expressed confidence with the bullish development in the internet sector in China, they were, however, concerned with the reliability, accuracy and transparency surrounding the measurement of their internet campaigns. This, they said, is a common obstacle facing clients, media agencies and third-party monitoring companies.

Hellawell said that while overseas investors were also excited about the bullish development of the internet industry in China, which has developed rapidly in the past decade, they were concerned about the reliability of data coverage when it came to long-term investments. Unlike the market in the West, where internet players like Facebook are more open in sharing information with their competitors—as they believe that 1+1=3—overseas investors don't feel their Chinese counterparts are open about exchanging information.

Li of Mars China agreed that because campaign effectiveness is a key factor in brand media strategies, "We need more data openness and reliable assessment of the internet campaign to see how it helps our business."

Sina's Wang said the high popularity of his company's portal and weibo platform reflected consumer confidence. With better legal requirements in China relating to the internet industry, it would be a win win solution for all, she added.

Source:
Campaign Asia

Follow us

Top news, insights and analysis every weekday

Sign up for Campaign Bulletins

Related Articles

Just Published

13 hours ago

Assembly brings on board former Publicis exec to ...

Shivaprasad Nair leaves Publicis after more than five years and will lead Assembly new practice, based in Bangalore.

14 hours ago

How agencies are safeguarding from being edged out ...

With in-housing, automation, and tech platforms getting closer to clients, Campaign explores how ad agencies are protecting themselves for the future amid a wave of disruption.

15 hours ago

Agency Report Cards 2023: We grade 31 APAC networks

Campaign Asia-Pacific presents its 21st annual evaluation of APAC agency networks based on their 2023 business performance, innovation, creative output, awards, action on DEI and sustainability, and leadership.

15 hours ago

Sri Lanka’s marketing industry needs ethics and ...

The nation's industry leaders dedicate substantial time and resources to crafting top-notch ideas and campaigns, yet they often overlook the social and behavioural effects these efforts have on the public, says Mark and Comm's Thanzyl Thajudeen.