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Friday, April 9, 2010 by Julie
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What movie should I see tonight? Just ask the Internet!
So, your co-worker coaxes you to watch the trailer for Twilight when you came in for work this morning and it convinced you to be Team Edward all the way. Well, you’ll probably see the preview again in the theater a couple of times and wonder all along why you weren’t Team Jacob in the first place? Regardless, you’ve seen the trailer twice as many times as you would’ve seen it ten years ago and you’ve invited all your friends to the midnight showing – now that’s how advertising works!
It’s almost impossible to go about your day online and not see an advertisement for an upcoming feature film. The ad may be a banner across your e-mail server, or a pop up ad on your favorite news page. It may even be free ticket dancing across your screen or a contest that entices you to check out the trailer. What ever it is – online advertising for movies has become more and more aggressive since the first preview showed up on our laptops.
Take the movie Paranormal Activity. This film was made for a dime in 2007 and sat on the shelves at Paramount for two years. Needing to close out its fiscal year with a bang, Paramount dusted off a copy and brought in the ad wizards. With few dollars for marketing, a specific approach was taken: the movie would NOT carry a wide release unless 1 million votes were received on their official website, trailer included of course. And even though the indie hit was slowly making money already, the online approach to getting this film out and about was simply genius. Once people heard about the scary flick on sites like Twitter who aggressively helped pushed the outcome by telling folks to “tweet the scream.” People everywhere logged on to the site, watched the preview and made their choice. When someone tells me I can’t watch a film – you better believe I will see it. And for online ad companies, this was a unique way to track what sites people were surfing, what advertisements linked them to the film’s website, how many people participated and how financially effective the campaign was. To date, Paranormal Activity has grossed $183 million worldwide so, you tell me.
Wikipedia claims that ten billion online videos including movie trailers are watched annually; while previews at movie theaters trail this number by thousands. Over 15 million people viewed the trailer for Paranormal Activity on YouTube, and that’s how online advertising has proved to be changing the film industry one click at a time.

[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by RMM Online. RMM Online said: How is online advertising changing the film industry? Check out Julie's answer on the RMM blog: http://bit.ly/bJKle8 [...]
Thanks Cherrie! Be on the look out for our blog being posted today entitled “Advertising and Corporate Sponsorships.”