Eastern Promises
By: Eric Reyes
Online marketing in Japan is growing, as leading companies try to go global and turn ad models on their heads.
Japan's had it hard. After nearly a decade
of stock market doldrums and an
economy on the brink of disaster – just
as the rest of Asia struggled too – Japan
bounced back. Growth happened. Its
economy is still a tad slow, but there are
many industries looking way up. Online
marketing is one of them.
Of Japan's 130 million people, about
88 million are online. That's about 68
percent of the population, according to
Internet World Stats (Asia), compared
with 210 million of the U.S.'s 300 million
and 137 million of China's 1.4 billion
residents. Japan's may seem like small
numbers, but the momentum of online
marketing and the ever-growing popularity
of affiliate marketing in Japan make it
a region everyone's talking about.
Blogging, for example, in Japan is a
popular way of getting products in front
of the masses. Technorati Japan says that
more than 85 percent of Japan's bloggers
write about companies and their products
– and that over half of these bloggers have
been contacted by companies to extol
their wares. Japan's Ministry of Internal
Affairs and Communications says that
bloggers totaled about 8 million in that
country, making for an in-blog ad market
of about $60 million last year.
Expansion on the way
In the 1990s, the Japanese did not use
credit cards much for online purchases,
as bank transfers and postal transfers
made e-commerce slow and a waiting
game. But by 1999, a tech-hungry culture
emerged and online spending came
with it. Pay-per-performance business
models were not far behind.
A leader in this space is online retailer
Rakuten and its affiliates – managed
through LinkShare Japan, a U.S.-led affiliate
company acquired by Rakuten in 2005.
Rakuten is the leader in online shopping
destinations in Japan, so their penetration
made them a default major player. In
fact, Rakuten plans to be in about 27 more
markets by 2012, according to Atsushi
Kunishige, a vice president at Rakuten. He
says they will use LinkShare, for example,
as a way to "expand our business into the
international market. We want to open a
full-fledged Internet mall [abroad]."
Rakuten's 20,000-plus online stores
and merchants did about $66 million
in operating profit in the second quarter
of 2007. With the company traded
publicly on the Japanese stock market,
that's a market capitalization of more
than $5 billion.
LinkShare Japan has about 68 percent
of the top-selling merchants in Japan
and is the leader in customer satisfaction,
according to a survey by Japan's
Affiliate Marketing Association. Atsuko
Umemura, director, corporate planning,
of LinkShare Japan, says that their focus
on per-sales kinds of merchants has
helped make them a leader. "Affiliate
marketing has proven to have the best
ROI for us," she says.
Late bloomers
While the U.S. affiliate industry
can trace its beginnings to the
mid-1990s, the first affiliate providers
in Japan didn't start up until 1999.
The U.S. market has had a few years
to evolve and grow, whereas the Japanese
affiliate space is still considered
a "juvenile." There are more than 80
affiliate networks in Japan that cover
both Web and mobile platforms. Some
of the more high-profile affiliate networks
include Adways, Access Trade,
LinkShare Japan, Fan Communications
(A8), TrafficGate, ValueCommerce and
Zanox Japan.
Anthony Torres, president of affiliate
marketing program management company
MetaFlo Marketing, which is based in
Japan, points out that the key difference
between the U.S. market and the Japanese
market is that the "Japanese affiliate networks
can service only Japanese sites. U.S.
networks such as Commission Junction
operate worldwide due to English being
the most popular language for Web content.
So, no matter how large the Japanese
affiliate industry gets, it will never be as
big as the English-speaking networks,"
Torres says.
He also notes that Japan is still behind
the curve in tracking technology and
commission sophistication. For example,
U.S. advertisers have more choices
in how they reward affiliates. Generally,
U.S. affiliate networks allow merchants
to pay affiliates based on subscription
status of digital content and, of course,
future sales even if buyer clicks go directly
to a merchant store. The U.S. networks
also have more payout choices. A
small CPA, plus a larger percentage of
future sales generated by the lead is a
method that hasn't made it to Japanese
network platforms.
Torres notes that the cost of acquisition
of a typical online customer is high
in Japan. "When you add in customer
service and all of the accumulated costs
in the sale cycle, you are left with a lower
margin per sale," he says. Merchants in
Japan are just not used to paying high
commissions or lifetime commissions
on a customer, he adds. "As the industry
matures here and the ability to attract
online buyers becomes more challenging,
we may see online merchants less
reluctant to try more aggressive commission
terms." Unique to the Japanese
market seems to be the cross-investment
of media sites and affiliate networks. In
order to increase media coverage, many
networks invest in or make their own inhouse
media sites.
Considered the real pioneer in Japanese
affiliate marketing is ValueCommerce
(Yahoo Japan took a sizable stake
in the company in 2005), started by a
New Zealander named Tim Williams.
ValueCommerce has more than 50,000
websites and blogs in its network, with
about 2,000 advertisers. The company
has about $43 million in annual revenue
and trades on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.
Goldman Sachs veteran Brian Nelson is
now CEO, having come on in 2000 as
COO. Nelson says that "we focused on
our strengths, continued to hire great
people, and launched new products and
services that kept new customers, especially
large brand name customers, coming
in to work with us."
Consolidation is coming
Nelson says that a large product database
for shopping and their Web
2.0 applications have kept them in the
No. 1 spot. It also doesn't hurt that there
is some consolidation going on in the Japan
online marketing space now. "I have
been telling people in the market for a
long time that consolidation is coming …
and it is in full swing now," Nelson says.
LinkShare's Umemura says, "It is a very
saturated market right now. There is not
enough room for everyone to survive."
Online marketing observers in Japan
note that there are just too many networks
trying to service the same advertisers.
With about 1.3 million affiliates registered
with the major networks and the majority
of transactions driven by a group of search
affiliates and "incentive media sites," there
are not enough "quality" affiliates to take
on all the offers out there. This means the
networks are starting to look at new channels
for ads.
One of those new channels is mobile,
a platform that has performed very well
for Japan. Because the Japanese adopted
3G standards fairly early, more than threequarters
of all cell phones in Japan have
smooth Internet access. This means delivery
of interactive content and ads to about
86 million cell phones (compared with 31
million in the U.S.). There are more than
48 mobile affiliate networks in Japan, with
names such as Moba8, Pocket Affiliate
and Smart-C. In 2005, the Japanese spent
more than $3.8 billion on purchases over
cell phones – 57 percent over the previous
year. In addition, the CPA-based mobile affiliate
provider model does much better in
Japan than in the U.S., where CPC or CPM
models prevail. It's been said the culture
in Japan plays a role in this since there are
so many more commuters in Japan – leaving
more travel time for the Japanese to
experiment with their cell phones.
And with greater mobile traffic comes
the opportunity to serve more Internet
phone search advertising. Local search
engines like Goo, Nifty and BigGlobe get
a share of those eyeballs, but the leaders
are Yahoo Japan (with about 63 percent
of searches), Google Japan at 23 percent
and about 14 percent left to split between
MSN and the regional engines. Continued on Page 2...
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