How ComplexLand gave advertisers a space to play in the metaverse

By Kayleigh Barber

Complex Networks’ ComplexLand was born out of necessity to replace some of the revenue lost when the pandemic shut down the publisher’s largest shopping and entertainment event of the year: ComplexCon.

But from that first virtual event in the metaverse in December 2020 came a franchise that the publisher now sees as a permanent addition to its events business.

And it’s a potentially lucrative addition at that, given the fact that some media buyers are saying CPMs for metaverse events tend to exceed those of in-person events.

The third iteration of the metaverse event, called ComplexLand 3.0, ran from May 25 – 27 and had eight sponsors on board, all of whom were focused on establishing themselves with a Web3-native audience and create interactive brand awareness campaigns, said Jeff Mazzacano, svp of brand partnerships at Complex Networks, which was acquired by BuzzFeed last year. And despite the fact that shopping is the core of ComplexLand, the sponsors of this year’s event weren’t overly focused on getting people to purchase their products when outlining their campaign goals, he added.

“It’s kind of counterintuitive, but we don’t see ComplexLand – as much as it is a lower-funnel tactic [because] you’re literally there to shop – that wasn’t really the focus from a brand partnership perspective,” said Mazzacano.

Instead, the eight sponsors wanted to meet audiences in this new Web3-based environment to establish themselves as brands that are willing to experiment in this new digital space. Two of the advertisers – Pizza Hut and Lexus – featured NFT (non-fungible token) projects as part of their campaigns and another advertiser, Fidelity, advertised its exchange-traded fund (ETF) for NFTs while sponsoring the map of the ComplexLand metaverse.

For clients that Trey Dickert, vp of media and strategy at media buying agency Media Two Interactive, has worked with, metaverse experiences are really out of reach from their budgets, despite early interest in the high levels of engagement with attendees that these events typically boast.

“The price tag [of an in-person event] is going to be much lower because there are many other sponsors that are a part of it at different tiers that are much lower [in cost] than the main sponsor. For metaverse events, we typically have not seen different sponsorship tiers,” Dickert said, which keeps campaign costs at a premium and expects sponsors will splash out on a highly intricate or custom campaign that’s representative of the Web3 technology the event is built into.

A Complex spokesperson declined to share how much sponsorship revenue increased year over year as well as how much revenue ComplexLand 3.0 generated overall. From the inaugural ComplexLand (which took place in December 2020) to the 2.0 version, sponsorship revenue increased by 60% and the number of advertisers increased from seven to eight, the spokesperson said.

This year, ComplexLand 3.0 also had eight advertisers, but Mazzacano said that the rates increased year over …read more

Source:: Digiday

      

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