Tag: Komli Media

  • Komli Media renews partnership with Twitter Inc. in India

    By A Correspondent

     

    Media technology brand Komli Media announced that it has renewed its partnership agreement with Twitter for India till March 2017. Komli signed this partnership for the first time with Twitter in 2012.

     

    Under the renewed agreement, Komli will continue to help Twitter expand its Promoted Products suite of advertising products and emphasise on the company’s monetisation efforts. Komli would be reaching out to the huge Indian mid-market segment and help them target potential customers on Twitter giving them high life time value per customer and eventual return on investment.

     

    Manish Vij, Founder & CEO, SVG Media, said “These are exciting times for us to be in the digital and mobile marketing industry. The Indian market is growing and fast emerging as a significant opportunity distinct from the developed markets in the U.S and other geographies. Komli has delivered amazing results in past few years and we are absolutely confident about our success in the coming year too”.

     

    Komli Media is driving Twitter advertisement campaigns for some of the biggest Indian brands including Levi’s, Cathay Pacific, Zoomcar, Swiggy and Adani  to count a few.

     

    Akshay Mathur

    Speaking about the development, Akshay Mathur, Senior Vice President, Komli Media said, “We are delighted to extend our partnership with Twitter, particularly at a time when social media usage in India is exploding and an unprecedented number of brands are investing in Twitter to reach out to their audiences. Through this partnership we are looking forward to delivering again on our commitment to create a long term value for Twitter in this region. This partnership also makes us the only player with a complete digital and mobile marketing portfolio and the partner of choice for marketers operating in this region.”

     

    Aliza Knox

    Aliza Knox, Vice President, Online Sales, Asia Pacific and Latin America, Twitter, said, “India is one of the fastest growing markets for Twitter worldwide and we are excited to announce the extension of our strategic business partnership with Komli locally. The partnership will provide additional on-ground support to Twitter’s clients and prospects in India, working in parallel with our direct sales team, to strengthen Twitter’s presence in the market.”

     

  • Komli Media expands in South-East Asia with an office in Indonesia

    By A Correspondent

     

    Komli Media announced that it is expanding operations in South-East Asia with the opening of an office in Jakarta, Indonesia. Komli Media has also partnered with Smartpipe, one of the leading real-time data broker for network operators, for its Indonesia operations.

     

    Direct integration to Smartpipe will allow Komli to deliver greater audience accuracy via Smartpipe’s unique and patent protected intelligent identification technology. Smartpipe will provide Komli with MNO (Mobile Network Operator) privacy compliant, deterministic behavioural data, allowing Komli’s in-app advertising clients to accurately target specific user segments aligned to their exact requirements.   “At a time when Indonesia is experiencing a significant increase in mobile advertising growth, we are excited by the opportunity to broker targetting advertising soutions for Komli with Smartpipe” said Chirag Shah, Business Head, Komli Media.

     

    Komli is a leading ad tech brand in South East Asia and has enjoyed a position of leadership in the regional markets for many years with strong equity among advertisers and publishers. Komli also appointed Udit Dave as head of its South East Asia operations based in Jakarta. The company further said that it will expand the team to 15 members in the next four months.

     

    The company will launch with two proprietary and successful ad tech products: appjacketTM PLUS and Product Listing Ads (PLA) in Indonesia, Singapore and Thailand in the first stage. Malaysia, Vietnam and Phillippines launches will follow in the second stage.

     

    Speaking about the expansion, Chirag Shah, Business Head, Komli Media, said, “We see tremendous business opportunity for Komli Media in South East Asia, building on the strong brand equity that Komli enjoys in the region. Our expansion in Indonesia marks the beginning of the next phase in SVG’s journey towards becoming South East Asia’s number one digital and mobile marketing platform.”

     

    “We are also pleased to have a leader of the caliber of Udit Dave spearheading the South East Asia operations. His rich local experience and unmatched understanding of local markets is going to be an asset for Komli as we strengthen our local relationships towards serving our customers better. Udit’s priority will be to strengthen our on-ground teams and hire the best people to address the unique needs of local advertisers,” Chirag Shah added.

     

    The company currently reaches out to more than 85 million consumers ascross South-East Asia and India. According to a recent report by eMarketer Indonesia is the fastest growing market in terms of mobile ad ecomomy.

     

  • Akshay Mathur appointed Senior VP of Komli Media

    By A Correspondent

     

    SVG Media has announced the appointment of Akshay Mathur as Senior Vice President of Komli Media, effective immediately. In his new role in Komli Media, Akshay will lead business operations as well as Sales & Marketing functions and will be responsible for its P&L. He was most recently the Senior Director of Sales at Komli Media, leading up to Komli’s merger with SVG Media last month.

     

    Akshay joined Komli in 2011 and has a total of 13-years of experience in both digital and print sales. Before joining Komli, Akshay was a part of the revenue monetization team and focused on the telecom industry in Yahoo Inc. He has earlier worked with The Times of India, The People Group and The Jaypee Group in various sales and marketing roles. He had also founded an e-commerce and web solutions company, Orion Technologies in the year 2000.

     

    Welcoming Akshay to SVG’s leadership team, Manish Vij, Founder and CEO, SVG Media said, “Akshay’s rich experience, client relationships and his deep understanding of Komli’s business and the internal environment make him the natural choice for leading Komli’s next phase of growth under the SVG umbrella.  We also welcome other senior leadership of Komli Media by retaining the team and culture of the organization.

     

  • Komli Media sells India business to Gurgaon-based SVG Media

    By Krithika Krishnamurthy

     

    A day after adtech firm Komli Media spun out a separate company RevX, it sold its India business to Gurgaon-based SVG Media for an undisclosed amount.

     

    Under the terms of the deal, Komli India will function independently alongside the existing businesses of SVG Media — Tyroo Technologies, DGM and SeventyNine. About 100 employees will join SVG as part of the deal. Komli India, SVG’s fourth acquisition, brings in 60 million unique users taking SVG’s reach to 150 million internet users in India.

     

    “Social was a very important piece for us as commerce today happens through mobile. Komli had the social piece, and so we acquired it,” said CEO Manish Vij of SVG, who said SVG was in talks with Komli for the past five months.

     

    SVG’s revenue from all businesses stand at over $50 million, which it claims is third only to Google and Facebook. The combined entity would reach 150 million Indian internet users across all devices, with 60 million coming in from Komli.

     

    “They are probably looking to streamline on a strategy that works best, instead of doing multiple things. That may be the rationale behind hiving off its business units,” said Neha Dharia, a senior analyst at UK-based research firm Ovum.

     

    Earlier this year, it sold its South East Asia operations to Malaysia’s Axiata group for $11.5 million, and just this week, it spun out its mobile remarketing platform RevX as an independent entity with $4 million in funding. “All companies go through various phases in their journey. We wanted to change approach, go more regional and invest more in technology,” said Amar Goel, founder and CEO of Komli Media.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2015, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

  • Hot, happenin’ and most wanted!

     

    By N Shivapriya

     

    Last week, early talks were reported between Google and ad tech firm Inmobi for a possible valuation of over Rs 12,000 crore. Inmobi founder Naveen Tewari later told employees that he was not looking for such a deal. The same day, it was also reported that e-commerce firm Snapdeal was looking to acquire Komli Media, another ad tech firm, for a potential valuation of over Rs 1,800 crore. Flipkart acquired Adiquity earlier this month.

     

    All this comes in the backdrop of a squeeze in the US. After an early flurry in 2013 and the first half of 2014, the number of ad tech initial public offerings have now dried up. But that hasn’t deterred new firms and existing ones from aiming for a slice for huge spends that are on stake as online ad spend continues to grow on the PC and mobile. It could also very soon enter the universe of wearables.

     

    inMobi: Going After Mobiles

    CEO: Naveen Tiwari, Employees: 900

     

    Last month, inMobi said it reached 1 billion unique mobile devices. This is precious real estate in the ad targeting world.

     

    inMobi connects those that want to sell ad space, like content sites, apps or game developers, with those that want to advertise on the mobile platform. Its technology helps to serve the right ad to the right user. For instance, when you are in your newspaper app you could be shown an ad for a bag you were planning to buy earlier on an e-commerce app. This is a simplistic scenario.

     

    inMobi builds audience personas and uses various targeting capabilities such as appographic targeting (based on a user’s app preferences) to determine the right user for the right ad.

     

    When the user engages with the ad by clicking on it, inMobi gets paid. Cost per click or cost per mille (mille referring to a thousand ad impressions) are some commonly used metrics.

     

    In addition to guaranteed engagement, there could other payment metrics such as guaranteed outcomes. For a game ad, the outcome could be a download, for an auto ad, it could a test drive query.

     

    A game developer who is an advertiser can also specify the goal of the campaign to be a certain number of high lifetime value users, who download the game and play it frequently by purchasing features such as lives and coins.

     

    “So as our ad network gets bigger, our knowledge about user behaviour gets better,” says Richard Sullivan, vice president and general manager, who attributes this and analytics and data sciences to better ad targeting and performance.

     

    To improve engagement, inMobi also innovates on how the ad is delivered. Native ads, where the ad looks and feels like the rest of the content on the page, although it is called out as an ad or sponsored content, is one such innovation that’s been found to increase user engagement.

     

    Komli Media: Helping marketers squeeze more value

    CEO: Amar Goel, Employees: 300

     

    It started as an ad network bringing together ad supply and demand for India and South East Asia. Today, Goel says part of its business is a demand-side platform and part of it is an ad network. The company is mostly about helping advertisers and marketers drive value through its offerings, such as the re-marketing demand-side platform, RevX, that is has developed.

     

    RevX is programmatically driven and is used by almost all the leading e-commerce firms in India and South East Asia, Goel says. The platform also integrates with customer relationship management data.

     

    The programmatic capabilities it is building are becoming a larger share of its business. It also executes rich-media campaigns and crossdevice campaigns, which are hard to do programmatically.

     

    Media.net: Money in Targeting at Scale

    CEO: Divyank Turakhia, Employees: 500+

     

    It is positioned as a contextual targeting specialist. Contextual targeting serves ads relevant to the context of the page as opposed to what the user was doing a while ago or a few days back. For instance, a user may have been on makemytrip.com to check out some flights. But if the user is currently reading an article on used cars, then contextual targeting will analyse the content of the page real-time to show ads relevant to it – an ad for a second-hand cars website, for example.

     

    “As of now the user may not be interested in seeing an ad about flights because he is researching cars,” says Turakhia. Most ad tech firms start with one niche and then expand to other areas, he adds.

     

    Media.Net gets a cut from what the advertiser pays the publisher. “Publishers will come to us only if we are able to offer them good rates and advertisers will pay more only if they get the desired results. So our targeting has to be really good,” says Turakhia.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2015, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd.

    All Rights Reserved, Licensed to republish

     

    Future of Ad Tech Firms

    Globally, companies spent about $140 billion on digital advertising last year. One or more ad tech firms have a role to play in every one of these dollars spent. Going forward, ad tech will continue to play a crucial role in targeting ad spends precisely at the right consumers.

     

    “The key shift we are seeing is in making marketing personal again,” says Kirthiga Reddy, MD, Facebook India. She compares it to the convenience of a kirana store that can predict what you will buy and also suggest something new you may like, but with the scale of mass media.

     

    Facebook along with Google is leading the charge of ad tech with precise targeting and measurement capabilities in ways that weren’t possible earlier with a number of their products. They are the giants in the field. Every ad tech firm competes with them in some way but also collaborates with them because the size of the pie is so big.

     

    Of the $ 50 billion US digital ad spend, for instance, over 35% is with companies that are not household names like Google, Facebook, Microsoft and AOL, points out Divyank Turakhia, CEO of Media.net, an ad tech firm that runs the contextual ad programme for the Yahoo-Bing network. His firm serves ads on websites that are part of the Yahoo-Bing network.

     

    Ad tech firms – both big and small – are re-writing the rules of advertising, changing how online campaigns are created and priced and setting goals so precise that shopping for customers is no different from say, drawing up a grocery list.

     

    For instance, an advertiser may want to target, say, only South Korean men between the ages of 25 and 40 years and who have a taste for Indian food. The advertiser can also specify the purse: $100,000. After the campaign, the ad tech firm will return measurable results and any remaining dollars as well.

     

    The simplest kind is search targeting, where a person searches for a particular term. Here, the intent of the person and what he or she is looking for is clear. So the ads that come up are related to the search keywords. But a person searching for pizza delivery in Mumbai wouldn’t want to see an ad for a pizza delivery place in New York. This is where geo-targeting comes in, explains Turakhia.

     

    “Similarly, there is demographic targeting based on what your age group is or whether you are male or female. These are conventional ways of targeting that advertisers used for their campaigns. But today there are multiple mechanisms of ad targeting in so many complex forms, which combines all the data signals that are available,” he adds.

     

    A pizza delivery chain based only in New York can set a goal of 20 pizza deliveries for every $100 spent and the ad tech firm will try to get the results by optimising the ads to a suitable audience.

     

    Sophisticated ad buyers such as eBay India place several millions of ad bids a day based on multiple variables and parameters to get the best bang for its advertising buck. “On a daily basis, we place about 40-50 million bids. When you’re working with such large numbers there is no way it can be done manually,” says Shivani Dhanda, head – marketing, eBay India.

     

    It uses a bid management system that evaluates how much to bid for a particular user and if eBay wins the ad impression, the appropriate ad is dynamically put together. For instance, if the user is searching for a keyword ‘mobile phones’, the bid management system will consider various parameters such as if the user visited eBay, which phones he searched for and how likely he is convert before deciding how much to bid. The entire process from placing the bid in a realtime auction to when the ad is dynamically put together takes about 100-150 milliseconds and happens even as the user is entering a url.

     

    The tools that help advertisers do this are also supplied by ad tech firms. eBay, for instance, uses software from Pune-based firm Sokrati, founded by former Amazon executives, to manage its bids, along with an in-house bid management system.

     

    “Display (advertising) has risen from the ashes. Programmatic (real-time bidding) technology allows bidding for each of display unit on a one-to-one basis, recognising who the user trying to access the website is, what the context of the page is, and what the size of the ad unit is,” says Subra Krishnan, vice-president (products) at Vizury, a Bengaluru-headquartered ad tech firm, which has raised $27 million so far from multiple investors and has a presence in China, Japan, Korea and emerging markets such as India.

     

    Players are Evolving

    The industry has become so complex that most firms are reluctant to label themselves as anything more specific than ad tech players as they venture into areas that can add more intelligence and help in more relevant targeting of customers.

     

    Vizury, for instance, is known in India for its ad re-targeting products on the mobile and desktop. But it is now venturing into proprietary data and the kind of work that large software companies typically do with business intelligence software. Its newest offering integrates multiple customer data such as call centre and loyalty programmes to provide better market segmentation and targeting of the customer.

     

    “There are probably 100 different types of ad tech companies. It’s a kind of battlefield where various entities are trying to optimise various parts of the business and yet ultimately, there is the consumer who takes the final call,” says Tamara Gaffney, principal analyst, Adobe Digital Index, which provides research and insights on digital marketing.

     

    Adobe also has offerings in ad tech, which integrate a number of technologies.

     

    “It’s hard to explain but there would be players around targeting, optimisation, analytics… a good analogy would be the financial services industry where are buyers and sellers but many intermediaries,” says Amar Goel, CEO, Komli Media, which started off as an ad network bringing buyers and sellers together but is now building a lot of programmatic (realtime-bidding) technology and leveraging data.

     

    He declined to comment on reports of Snapdeal acquiring Komli. The driver for such ad tech deals, says Anupam Mittal, CEO of People Group and angel investor, is the access that large e-commerce firms like Flipkart and Snapdeal have to customer shopping patterns and behaviour. “These ecommerce firms have billions of page views. They know people’s shopping habits and what they are looking for, so they have some level of context just like Facebook and Google. They also want to acquire good teams that can help to build their own ad proposition to customers,” he says.

     

    Still, many listed ad tech firms have seen their market value fall on Wall Street. “Ultimately, there are two kinds of ad tech: one captures the intent of the user, and Google does that.

     

    The second is when you know so much about the user that you can present the relevant ads. Facebook does that. Everything in between is a promise of something that will be built. Margins are wafer-thin if at all they are there.

     

    Google and Facebook own their audience so their margins are much better because they are not sharing the outgo with the publisher,” adds Mittal (see table).

     

    However, it’s equally true that there are smaller firms building smart capabilities that the likes of Google, Facebook and Twitter are interested in. “The very fact that Google buys companies nearly every year shows that they are getting beaten at their own game,” points out the CEO of an ad tech firm, requesting anonymity.

     

    Google’s mobile ad platform, AdMob, was through an acquisition in 2009. Similarly, Twitter bought MoPub, a startup helping mobile publishers manage their inventory

     

    Consumer is The Sweet Spot

    Fashion e-tailer Myntra, which uses both Vizury and Komli, says it has translated to higher revenues. “Our pain point as an e-commerce player is we create the intent but the average conversion rate (people who buy after visiting the site) is only two out of 100,” says Priyanshu Kumar, digital marketing manager, Myntra.

     

    On January 3, when Myntra held its ‘End of Reason’ sale, it notched up a record Rs 100 crore in eight hours. At least 3% of that revenue could be attributed to the re-marketing campaigns run by Komli and Vizury on that day as they brought back potential customers who had visited the site but dropped off, says Kumar. “They were very aggressive going after the users who had visited our site but not converted,” he says. Myntra saw a conversion rate of 6% on that day as compared to the e-commerce industry average of 0.8% – 2.5%.

     

    The most reliable data about users online is first-party data, which is collected by the site you are browsing, says Gaffney. Second-party data is obtained from exchanges which, in turn, get the information from participating sites that sell their information to the exchange for a fee.

     

    Such success stories are also helping ad tech win new following among companies in manufacturing, consumer and other industries in India. “Three years back, only internet companies were the most visible users of our ad offerings. But since then we have seen traditional industries like auto, FMCG and the government take it up signficantly,” says Nitin Bawankule, industry director (Ecommerce, Local, Technology), Google India.

     

    Ford India has hiked its digital ad spends from 5% of its ad budget to 15%-20% in less than four years, says Anurag Mehrotra, director (marketing, sales and service). Tushar Vyas, head digital (South Asia) at advertising agency, GroupM, says digital ad spends are growing three times faster than the overall ad growth.

     

    The mobile is the next frontier in advertising with its ability to identify the user location as well as predict user behaviour based on the device being used.

     

    This could be the next level of evolution for ad tech firms. With the mobile, for instance, advertising technology can even find out if the user is standing or sitting, says an ad tech executive.

     

    “If the advertising landscape is complex, the mobile landscape will make it more so. When you combine the advertising technology landscape with the mobile technology landscape, you could end up with this almost supernova of advertising targeting and data collection opportunity,” says Gaffney. The launch of Apple’s smartwatch and other smartwatches could take that to another level. Ad tech is here to stay and grow.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2015, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd.

    All Rights Reserved, Licensed to republish

     

  • After Flipkart’s Adiquity deal, Snapdeal eyes Komli for $300m

    By Pankaj Mishra & Jayadevan PK

     

    Online retailer Snapdeal is in advanced talks to acquire Komli Media in a deal that values the ad technology company at about $300 million, the same as when it raised funds from investors last year.

     

    The deal will give Snapdeal engineering capabilities in Bengaluru as it battles Flipkart, as well as help it notch up advertising revenues by selling space on the ecommerce site, according to a person familiar with the deal. “These guys have so much traffic, it makes sense to monetise it,” said another person. According to audience measurement platform SimilarWeb, Snapdeal had an estimated 79.8 monthly visitors in February and Flipkart, 110.5 million.

     

    Flipkart recently made clear its plans to sell advertising on its platform. The ecommerce firm also acquired ad technology company Adiquity. “This is incorrect, we are not acquiring Komli media,” a spokesperson for Snapdeal said. An e-mail to Snapdeal co-founder Kunal Bahl was unanswered at the time of going to press.

     

    Amar Goyal, CEO & Chairman of Komli Media, declined to comment on the deal. Komli, founded in 2006, has raised $97 million in five rounds from investors including Nexus Venture Partners and Peepul Capital. It employs nearly 300 people across India and started as a digital advertising network – buying and selling advertising inventory online in Asia Pacific.

     

    Goel also set up Pubmatic, focused on technology for online advertising in the US in 2008. Inmobi, another ad-network based in Bengaluru, was founded a year later and went on to raise $200 million from Japan’s Softbank.

     

    Driven by increased spending by ecommerce companies, India’s online advertising market is set to grow by 30% this financial year to reach a total size of Rs 3,575 crore, according to the Digital Advertising India report by the Internet and Mobile Association of India.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2015, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd.

    All Rights Reserved, Licensed to republish

     

  • Komli unveils CRM Remarketing Platform – RevX

    By A Correspondent

     

    Komli Media has announced the launch of RevX, a new integrated cross-channel CRM remarketing platform. RevX moves beyond first generation remarketing solutions by enabling marketers to leverage the full spectrum of consumer insights across web, mobile and CRM to reach users across devices. Marketers have complete transparency and control to integrate their customer data with RevX and run highly personalized campaigns across multiple channels including display, mobile and Facebook.

     

    “Customer interaction with a brand is not limited to websites anymore. With the evolution of multiple channels like mobile apps, social pages , support channels, etc., customers are engaging with brands from multiple sources and are leaving rich data about their preferences,” said Amar Goel, Founder and CEO, Komli Media. “The next wave of personalized marketing involves leveraging these customer interactions and processing them intelligently to run targeted cross-channel campaigns. With RevX, we are offering this with our hallmarks of transparency and control.”

     

    Although Komli has operated as a remarketing DSP since February 2014, with RevX, comes the introduction of CRM remarketing and Facebook’s Custom Audiences and Website Custom Audiences capabilities. This allows marketers to leverage their CRM data like email ids and phone numbers to run cross-device campaigns on Facebook. Additionally, marketers can also run display and mobile remarketing campaigns to achieve their end goals of driving transactions, user engagement or app installs. Komli’s existing remarketing clients can seamlessly onboard their CRM data to RevX and immediately extend their campaigns to Facebook.

     

    “Marketing complexity is continuously increasing as users are engaging with us via multiple devices from multiple locations across multiple properties. The challenge lies in tying these customer interactions to build complete user profiles and then leveraging this information for personalized messaging. RevX’s early move in the CRM remarketing space and their integrated approach to display, mobile and social is a very exciting proposition and we are working closely with them to scale our business across channels.” said Gagan Arora, Chief Marketing Officer, Printvenue.com, India’s leading printing and personalization portal.

     

  • Online ad platform Komli Media raises $39 million

    By Radhika P Nair

     

    Komli Media, India’s biggest online media technology platform for advertising, has raised $39 million, or Rs214 crore, in the biggest round of fundraising by an internet company in the country this year.

     

    Norwest Venture Partners led the latest round with participation from existing investors- Nexus Venture Partners, Helion Venture Partners and Draper Fisher Jurvetson- along with one new investor, Western Technology Investment.

     

    Komli’s CEO Prashant Mehta declined to disclose the valuation of the Mumbai-based company in a deal which takes the total private equity capital raised by it to $62 million. Industry experts said that internet companies in India are typically valued at up to five times their revenue. Komli, which is targetting revenue of $100 million in 2013, can therefore be inferred to have a value of up to $500 million.

     

    “Considering that advertising spends are the first to get affected in a downturn, this investment has greater significance than just the amount invested,” said Mayank Rastogi, a partner who specialises in private equity at consultancy Ernst & Young.

     

    The month of May saw the lowest amount of private equity investment in the past year, with just $385 million in funding for 32 deals. In contrast, in May 2011, there were 44 deals, in which close to $1.3 billion was invested. Mr Mehta, whose company counts Facebook as an exclusive partner in India and expects a Nasdaq listing within 18 months, was of the opinion that even though the overall environment is gloomy, it is not so for the digital media industry.

     

    “We are at a tipping point. Komli thinks the digital medium is far more accountable and provides greater return on investment,” he said The online advertising market in India is estimated to be worth Rs1,850 crore, which is just 7 per cent of the overall advertising pie, according to an Avendus Report. However, the sector is expected to grow rapidly to Rs7,000 crore by 2015. Google and Facebook collectively account for about 29 per cent of direct advertising spends.”

     

    Founded in 2006 by Amar Goel, who is also the chairman, Komli has been aggressively buying companies overseas to speed up growth. In February, it made its sixth acquisition in two years, buying Singapore-based online advertising network Admax.

     

    Last year, Komli took over the India business of video advertising venture Jivox and in July 2011, it acquired mobile advertising and publishing network Zestadz. The Zestadz acquisition marked Komli’s entry into the fast-growing mobile advertising segment.

     

    “It is in the mobile advertising space that Komli competes directly with Google’s AdMob, which is the market leader globally and in India, and with InMobi,” said Srinivas Chari, cofounder and chief marketing officer of Xerago, a digital and interactive marketing company.

     

    Source: The Economic Times
    Copyright © 2012, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

     

  • Komli Media acquires Singapore-based online advertising network Admax

    By Radhika P Nair

     

    Online media network platform Komli Media has acquired Singapore-based online advertising network, Admax, in a cash-and-equity deal, said Komli’s CEO, Prashant Mehta. Mehta declined to reveal the deal size.

     

    With this buyout, Komli intends to expand its reach in South East Asia, which Mehta termed as a billion-dollar opportunity. “We will be able to leverage Admax’s team, expertise and relationships in all the South East Asian markets,” said Mr Mehta.

     

    Admax, launched in 2006, claims to be the largest online advertising network in the region, with a presence in Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. Admax will give Komli access to a publisher network of over 4,000 local and international websites.

     

    Komli estimates the online advertising market in the region to be worth approximately $250 – 300 million, and growing at 30-40 per cent per year. “Our target is to become the leaders in the rapidly growing Asia-Pacific market as that will add tremendous value to our global operations,” Mr Mehta revealed.

     

    Komli, founded in 2006, has followed the acquisition path to speed up growth in different geographies. The Admax deal is its sixth acquisition in two years and the second in the region. In mid-2011, the company had bought out Singapore-based online media sales venture Aktiv Digital. Komli had earlier acquired Australian website representation firm, Post Click, and UK-based online ethnic marketing company Indoor Media

     

    The company has favoured the inorganic route for acquiring technology as well. In late-2011, the company took over the India business of video advertising venture, Jivox, and in July 2011 acquired mobile advertising and publishing network, Zestadz.

     

    Admax will be rebranded and the 100-strong team will join the existing Komli team in the region. Komli is targeting to reach $100 million in revenue in the next 12 to 24 months, said Mehta.

     

    Source: The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2012, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

     

  • Komli Media launches Komli Labs to research digital advtg (and hence offer innovations)

    By A Correspondent

     

    Komli Media, Asia Pacific’s leading media technology company, has announced the launch of Komli Labs, a centre for research in advertising sciences. Srinivasan H Sengamedu (SHS) has been appointed as the Vice President and Head of Komli Analytics and Labs. SHS, former Director of Research at Yahoo Labs, is a world class researcher in the field of machine learning and data mining.

     

    Komli Labs will be primarily focused on driving innovation in digital advertising through applied research and big data analytics, in the areas of real time bidding, audience measurement and targeting, ad verification and traffic quality management. This, in turn, will help create innovative solutions to deliver more relevant ads to users, maximizing value for all: users, advertisers and publishers.

     

    The Labs team will be deeply integrated with various teams at Komli, and complement product, engineering and business functions.

     

    “Komli Media is committed to bringing scientific and technological innovation to the digital advertising ecosystem for the benefit of our customers”, said Prashant Mehta, CEO Komli Media.

     

    “With SHS’s leadership, I am confident Komli Labs will help create huge differentiation for us,” he added.

     

    “There are three aspects to what we do: developing best-in-class technology to power Komli products, creating long-standing IP, and authoring high-impact research papers. The Labs team is armed with deep technical knowledge and data expertise.  At the same time we are passionate about solving practical problems and fearless about being hands-on,’ said SHS, on his role.

     

    “SHS is a top notch applied researcher who is driven by creation of economic value and real business impact. Under his leadership at Komli Labs, we are confident that Komli Media will fortify its position as an innovative media technology company,” said Satish Kadu, VP and Business Head – ATOM, Komli Media.

     

    SHS has a PhD in Computer Science from the Indian Institute of Science and has several years of experience in research, technology leadership and entrepreneurship with over 100 research papers published, 30+ patents filed and 3 patents granted.

     

    Komli Media is APAC’s leading media technology platform, one of the few companies in the world offering 360 degree digital media solution across real-time display, mobile, video, social and search.