TubeMogul
A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject. (April 2016) |
Company type | Subsidiary |
---|---|
Nasdaq: TUBE | |
Industry | Marketing and Advertising Advertising Software |
Founded | March 2007 |
Founders | John Hughes and Brett Wilson |
Headquarters | , US[1] |
Number of locations | 16 (global offices)[2] |
Area served | 70+ Countries |
Revenue | $180.7 million (2015) |
Number of employees | 577 (2015)[3] |
Parent | Adobe Systems |
Website | www |
TubeMogul is an enterprise software company for brand advertising.[4]
TubeMogul is headquartered in Emeryville, California and has global offices located in Chengdu (China), Chicago, Detroit, Kyiv, New York, London, Los Angeles, Minneapolis, Paris, São Paulo, Singapore, Shanghai, Sydney, Toronto, and Tokyo.[2]
In November 2016, Adobe Systems Incorporated announced an agreement to acquire TubeMogul.[5][6]
Company history
2007–2009
TubeMogul was founded by Brett Wilson and John Hughes while enrolled as MBA students at the University of California Berkeley's Haas School of Business.[7] In 2007, the TubeMogul team led by Wilson and Hughes won the Haas Business Plan Competition, which provided seed money enabling the development and launch of the product. In its original conception, TubeMogul was a cross-platform online video analytics tool in 2007.[8] Video producers uploaded content through TubeMogul, which would then distribute and track performance across video sharing sites.[9]
2010–2013
In 2010, TubeMogul launched Playtime, an online video ad network, to help advertisers deliver ads to their target audience. Playtime differentiated itself from other online ad networks with its self-service features as well as the level of transparency it provided.[10] In 2011, TubeMogul combined the Playtime ad network with the video syndication platform to become a demand-side platform (DSP) for brand advertisers.[11] TubeMogul's DSP aggregates multiple inventory sources, including advertising exchanges, supply-side platforms, advertising networks as well as direct relationships with premium publishers, local and national broadcasters, cable networks and multichannel video programming distributors.
In 2012, TubeMogul introduced its BrandSafe technology, which ensured that advertisements did not appear alongside objectionable content or run in ineffectively-small video players.[12] In 2013, TubeMogul launched BrandPoint, which allows marketers to execute digital video buys on a gross rating point (GRP) basis, traditionally used by TV advertisers to measure a campaign's effectiveness.[13] In March 2016, TubeMogul partnered with Facebook to reach TV audiences via Nielsen data.[14][15]
2014
TubeMogul became a publicly traded company on July 18, 2014, and is listed with the NASDAQ Global Select Market using the ticker symbol "TUBE" (See § IPO).
In December 2014, TubeMogul released PTV, a Programmatic TV software solution that allows advertisers to plan and execute data-driven local, national, addressable and VOD television media buys.[16]
2015–present
In November 2015, TubeMogul launched technology enabling cross-screen advertising planning. The software helps marketers understand which media channels to invest in by deduplicating their target audience across traditional TV, social platforms and digital channels. This technique improved upon previous solutions that only allowed advertisers to control reach and frequency across digital-only desktop and mobile devices.[17]
Also in 2015, TubeMogul participated in a third-party assessment of Video Demand Side Platforms conducted by Forrester Research. In the Q4 2015 Wave Report, TubeMogul was named a leader among video advertising demand-side platforms and was also awarded the highest ranking in the "Current Offering" category. The results were based on three key categories: current offering, strategy and market presence. Out of ten companies evaluated, TubeMogul received the highest score in "Planning Capabilities," achieving 4.60 out of 5 possible points, and 5 out of 5 points in both "TV Campaign Extension" and "Client Satisfaction" categories.[18]
In 2016, TubeMogul announced partnerships and integrations with the social media platforms Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and SnapChat. [19][20][21] TubeMogul received the distinction of being the first video advertising platform awarded a Partner Marketing badge from Facebook [19] and was one of eight advertising partners chosen by Snapchat in their initial monetization release strategy.[21]
Financing
TubeMogul received its initial funding after winning the Lester Center's Business Plan Competition while co-founders John Hughes and Brett Wilson were studying at UC Berkeley’s Haas School of Business in 2007.[22] The company received seed funding from NetService Ventures later that same year.[23][24]
In February 2008, TubeMogul raised $3 million in Series A funding led by Trinity Ventures.[25] In October 2008, they acquired Illuminex, a video analytics company founded by Jason Lopatecki and Adam Rose, for an undisclosed amount.[26][27]
They raised a combined $10 million in their Series B round in March 2009, led by Foundation Capital.[28] In December 2012 the company raised $28 million in the first tranche of its Series C, led by Northgate Capital. The second tranche of the Series C was led by SingTel Innov8, corporate venture capital arm of the SingTel Group, along with Cross Creek Capital, for $10 million in May 2013.[29]
IPO
TubeMogul filed its S-1 form with the SEC on March 26, 2014.[30][31][32] On July 18, 2014 TubeMogul became a publicly traded company. They made 6.3 million shares available to investors at $7 per share to raise a total of $43.8 million in their initial offering.[33][34]
Adobe acquisition
In November 2016, Adobe Systems Incorporated announced an agreement to acquire TubeMogul for $14 per share, or approximately $540 million, in cash.[5][6] The deal is expected to close in Adobe's first quarter of 2017.[35]
Industry initiatives
Non-Human Traffic Credit Program
In February 2016, TubeMogul announced the development of a new anti-ad fraud initiative called the Non-Human Traffic Credit Program. Effective April 2016, the company will automatically refund clients whose ads were served to non-human traffic, also known as bots. TubeMogul partnered with ad fraud detection company White Ops, which will apply its verification technology across every video ad bought through TubeMogul's Open RTB platform. The service is available to all clients who have a master service agreement with TubeMogul.[36][37]
Independence Matters
In March 2016, TubeMogul launched an advertising campaign alleging Google's dual position as both media owner as well as buying platform creates inherent conflicts of interests for marketers. [38][39] TubeMogul claims that "Google has made a conscious decision to wall itself off from the rest of the industry." The campaign hints at Google's move to restrict third-party companies from buying YouTube ads via the DoubleClick Ad Exchange.[40]
Open Video Viewability (OpenVV)
In May 2013, TubeMogul and several other advertising technology vendors formed the Open Video View (OpenVV) consortium to help facilitate the adoption of a viewability standard for online video advertising.[41] OpenVV is an open-source code that provides marketers verification that their ad was actually seen by human eyes and reasons for non-viewability.[42] TubeMogul founded the initiative along with video technology vendors BrightRoll, Innovid, SpotXChange, and LiveRail; current members include Nielsen, comScore, TrustE, and VivaKi.[41]
In June 2015, the IAB Tech Lab took over management of the OpenVV initiative as they continued to ramp up efforts in creating a common, scalable and interoperable technical solution to effectively measure viewability for video. The transfer of management for OpenVV marked the first industry initiative to be on-boarded into the IAB Tech Lab, a nonprofit research and development organization charged with producing and helping companies implement global industry technical standards and solutions.[43]
Fraud/Fake Pre-Roll
In 2012, TubeMogul launched fakepreroll.com to raise awareness about video ads that were shown in inventory normally reserved for display advertisements, oftentimes without the marketer's knowledge.[44] The site was taken down after several companies sent TubeMogul cease-and-desist orders.
Botnet detection
In 2014, TubeMogul reported the existence of three botnets, responsible for defrauding advertisers for a potential $10 million each month.[45][46]
IPG internship
In March 2014, IPG Mediabrands and TubeMogul announced the "Ad-Tech Apprenticeship," a one-year intensive training program designed to give college graduates a holistic view of the digital advertising industry.[47][48]
Awards
- 2009 South by Southwest (SXSW) Best Online Video-Related Technology Winner[49][50][51]
- 2009 AlwaysOn OnMedia 100 Award Winner[52]
- 2012 AlwaysOn Global 250 Winner[53]
- 2013 Inc. Top 100 Advertising and Marketing Companies #29[54]
- 2013 Inc. Hire Power Award Top 10 Advertising and Marketing Companies #9[54]
- 2013 Lead 411 Tech200 #14[55]
- 2013 Deloitte Fast 500 #35[56]
- 2013 iMedia Connection ASPY Awards – Winner Best Customer Service Award[57]
- 2014 San Francisco Business Times Best Places to Work #35[58]
- 2014 The Drum Digital Trading Awards – Winner Advertiser's Choice of Ad technology[59]
- 2014 AIMA Awards – Winner Outstanding Technical Achievement for Viewability Reporting and Audit[60]
- 2015 Glassdoor – Winner "Best Places to Work" People's Choice Awards, TubeMogul was ranked 5th for companies with less than 1,000 employees.[61]
- 2015 iMedia ASPY Awards – Best Video Partner[62]
- 2015 The Drum Digital Trading Awards – Winner Most Effective Programmatic Media Partnership.[63]
- 2016 iMedia ASPY Awards – Best Video Partner[64]
- 2016 The Drum Digital Trading Awards – Winner Most Effective Programmatic Media Partnership.[65]
- 2016 Fortune Great Places to Work – Winner "Top 100 Places to Work for Millennials"[66]
- 2016 Digiday Video Awards – Winner Best Video Advertising Partners.[67]
Open source contributions
TubeMogul is both a consumer of and contributor to free and open source software.[68] TubeMogul's contributions include a list of Puppet Modules released on the Puppet Forge,[69][70][71] and OpenVV.[72][73]
TubeMogul also contributes to an Engineering Blog, other open source projects on GitHub,[74] meetup,[75][76] and public talk at conferences like Velocity,[77] USENIX LISA,[78][79] SRECon,[80] SuiteWorld,[81] Puppet Camp,[82] OpenStack Summit,[83] Nagios World.[84][85]
TubeMogul has adopted successfully a private cloud strategy while going through hyper-growth and leveraging the open source project OpenStack. The solution is now providing the base of the Adobe Advertising Cloud.[86]
See also
References
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- ^ David Burch (6 November 2015). "TubeMogul Launches Industry's First Automated Cross-Screen Planning Software" (Press release). Global Newswire.
- ^ James Nail (30 November 2015). "The Forrester Wave(TM): Video Advertising Demand Side Platforms, Q4 2015". Forrester Research.
- ^ a b Marty Swant (31 March 2016). "TubeMogul Partners With Facebook to Help Brands Extend TV Audience Reach to Digital". AdWeek.
- ^ Tim Peterson (2 June 2016). "Twitter's throwing the doors to its pre-roll video ad biz wide open". Marketing Land.
- ^ a b Christopher Heine (13 June 2016). "Snapchat Launches a Colossal Expansion of Its Advertising, Ushering in a New Era for the App". AdWeek.
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{{cite web}}
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- ^ TubeMogul Inc. (15 October 2007). "TubeMogul Secures Seed Investment from NetService Ventures". PRWeb.
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- ^ Tate Papworth (1 March 2016). "TubeMogul will refund clients for traffic identified as fraudulent". Marketing Mag.
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- ^ a b David Kaplan (23 May 2013). "Video Ad Rivals Collaborate On Open-Source Viewability". Ad Exchanger.
- ^ Vincent Flood (27 February 2014). "VivaKi Becomes First Agency Member to Sign Up to OpenVV Viewability". Video Ad News.
- ^ Laura Goldberg (8 June 2015). "IAB Tech Lab Takes Over Management of 'Open Video Viewability' Initiative, Originally Founded by TubeMogul, Brightroll, Innovid, Liverail & SpotXChange". iab.
{{cite web}}
: Missing or empty|url=
(help) - ^ "Fake Pre Roll". www.FakePreRoll.com. 7 May 2012.
- ^ Garett Sloane (8 April 2014). "Fraud Alert: Millions of Video Views Faked in Sophisticated New Bot Scam – TubeMogul outs dozens of suspect sites". ADWeek.
- ^ Andy Plesser (20 May 2014). "TubeMogul's Brett Wilson is Battling Bots, Non-Human Video Views and Low Ad Rates". Huffington Post.
- ^ Erik Oster (6 March 2014). "IPG Mediabrands, TubeMogul Collaborate on Ad-Tech Apprenticeship". Media Bistro.
- ^ Tyler Loechner (6 March 2014). "IPG, TubeMogul Team To Offer One-Year Ad Tech Internship". Media Post.
- ^ "SXSW Accelerator Alums: Over $587 Million in Funding". SXSW. Retrieved 14 July 2014.
- ^ Christina Lavingia (6 March 2014). "How SXSW Made These 5 Struggling Entrepreneurs Into Millionaires". Go Banking Rates. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
- ^ "The nominees for the SXSW Accelerator 2014 [infographic]". www.Surfly.com. 28 February 2014.
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- ^ Tyler Loechner (12 July 2012). "TubeMogul Recognized as an AlwaysOn Global 250 Winner". Media Post.
- ^ a b Inc. "TubeMogul Company Profile". Inc.
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Deloitte. "Fast 500 Award Winners" (PDF). Deloitte.
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- ^ The Drum (24 April 2014). "The Drum Digital Trading Awards 2014". The Drum.
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- ^ iMEDIA (3 May 2016). "Presenting the 2016 iMedia ASPY award winners". iMEDIA.
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- ^ "TubeMogul on Puppet Forge".
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- ^ Nicolas Brousse (25 February 2016). "TubeMogul Open Sources its Aerospike Puppet Module". TubeMogul. Archived from the original on 19 October 2016.
- ^ "TubeMogul, BrightRoll, Innovid, LiveRail and SpotXchange are the first participants in an industry-wide effort to develop open source tools for measurement of online video viewability". 23 May 2013.
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- ^ Nicolas Brousse (8 December 2011). "Scaling on EC2 in a Fast-Paced Environment" (PDF). TubeMogul. Archived (PDF) from the original on 18 October 2016.
- ^ Nicolas Brousse (7 April 2016). "Moving Large Workload from a Public Cloud to an OpenStack Private Cloud: Is It Really Worth It?". TubeMogul.
- ^ Nicolas Brousse (22 June 2016). "Mega Volume: How TubeMogul Leverages NetSuite". TubeMogul. Archived from the original on 18 October 2016.
- ^ Nicolas Brousse, Julien Fabre (26 May 2015). "How TubeMogul Reached 10,000 Puppet Deployment in One Year". TubeMogul.
- ^ Nicolas Brousse (25 January 2016). "Building a Private Cloud to Efficiently Handle 40 Billion Requests a Day". TubeMogul. Archived from the original on 19 October 2016.
- ^ Nicolas Brousse (29 September 2011). "Monitoring a Cloud Infrastructure in a Multi-Region Topology". TubeMogul.
- ^ Nicolas Brousse (28 September 2012). "Optimizing your Monitoring and Trending tools for the Cloud" (PDF). TubeMogul. Archived (PDF) from the original on 16 January 2013.
- ^ Nicolas Brousse (25 September 2017). "The Five Steps to Building a Successful Private Cloud". InfoQ. Archived from the original on 25 September 2017.
- 2007 establishments in California
- Online advertising
- Big data companies
- American companies established in 2007
- Software companies established in 2007
- Software companies based in California
- Companies based in Emeryville, California
- Companies formerly listed on the Nasdaq
- 2014 initial public offerings
- 2017 mergers and acquisitions
- Defunct software companies of the United States
- Adobe Inc.