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IGN taps Carnegie Mellon startup Neon Labs for immediate 30 percent boost in video views

July 15th, 2014

Neon Labs, the Carnegie Mellon University startup that uses an image selection platform for monetizing digital content, today announced that IGN Entertainment has inked an agreement and is working closely with Neon to maximize its current video viewership of 48.7 million unique visitors per month.

This engagement with a premier media publisher was announced in conjunction with Neon's news of a Series A round of $4.1 million in funding. Led by Mohr Davidow Ventures, the round is supported by prior investors, True Ventures and technology executive Steve Blank. This new investment will enable Neon to scale to meet increasing customer demand and accelerate its partnership with online video platform provider Brightcove.

"It is very exciting that IGN has chosen to be one of Neon's first partners. Our collaboration with them has reinforced how ideally suited Neon's proprietary technology is to helping online video publishers increase user engagement through state-of-the-art brain science," said Michael J. Tarr, Neon co-founder and senior technical advisor and head of Carnegie Mellon University's Department of Psychology. "This is great for Neon and illustrates how basic research in human cognitive neuroscience can be successfully applied to solve technology problems."

Founded on research conducted in the Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition (CNBC), a joint program between CMU and the University of Pittsburgh, Neon is one of the first companies to use cognitive and brain science to increase audience engagement for online video publishers. Using research that shows how visual perception unconsciously affects preferences, the Neon team developed a Web-based software service that automatically selects the most visually appealing frame from a stream of video to be used as the thumbnail. Thumbnails—the entry point for a Web user to interact with a video—are becoming more important to video publishers as the number of online videos continues to increase.

"We have supported Neon Labs since day one, based on their compelling vision to use science to change the way consumers interact with images in the digital era. I think Neon Labs' technology has the potential to do for images what Dolby did for sound," said Bill Ericson, General Partner at Mohr Davidow Ventures. "With over a billion images loaded on the Internet each day, companies need new technologies to sift through and surface the best images at this massive scale. Selecting thumbnails for video is just the beginning for Neon."

Today, Neon leverages the scientific research compiled by nearly 10 years of research at Brown University, Carnegie Mellon University, and Massachusetts General Hospital on algorithms that can generate up to 100 percent more engagement than human-selected images. These algorithms are employed to help leading media and marketing companies find the images that drive clicks. Neon's mission is to better organize the world's images to find the ones that viewers and consumers care about most.

Substantial support for the company has come from the National Science Foundation's Innovation Corps (or I-Corps), which was formed by CMU President Subra Suresh when he was director of the NSF, and Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program.

"I was really keen to try Neon for Video, given it uses a scientific process to select thumbnails," said Jim Hall, VP of Technology, IGN, a Ziff Davis company. "Ziff Davis and IGN are deeply committed to using new technologies to improve content discovery on our sites. I was pleasantly surprised that not only did Neon for Video take a significant amount of work off of our hands, it also improved the clickability of our thumbnails by 30 percent on average. This is a huge win for us."

Neon's new IGN contract and funding crown several months of rapid growth. In addition to IGN, the company continues to expand its existing partnership with Brightcove.

"Neon has been a partner of Brightcove's since Neon launched its product. Together we have helped a number of leading media publishers and marketers get more views and more value from their video content," said Anil Jain, SVP and GM, Media Group at Brightcove. "We very much look forward to expanding our partnership in the future."

By optimizing the thumbnail for customers, Neon can help companies generate 5 to 30 percent more revenue from video without having to make additional videos or sell more ads.

"When I worked through the numbers with some of our big media publishers, it was amazing to see how many millions of dollars in ad revenue flow through a tiny 75x120 pixel image," said Sophie Lebrecht, CEO of Neon who did her postdoctoral work at CMU's CNBC and Tepper School of Business.

Provided by Carnegie Mellon University

Citation: IGN taps Carnegie Mellon startup Neon Labs for immediate 30 percent boost in video views (2014, July 15) retrieved 26 April 2024 from https://sciencex.com/wire-news/166887498/ign-taps-carnegie-mellon-startup-neon-labs-for-immediate-30-perc.html
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