Last chance to save

Prices rise for the Digiday Programmatic Marketing Summit after Mar. 24

REGISTER

Marc Andreessen: Ad tech has fueled a ‘race to the bottom’

It’s often publishers that are left claiming that the influx of venture capital-backed advertising technology companies is leading to a downward spiral of low-priced, low-quality ads that make it nearly impossible to be a content publisher. Now you can count at least one top VC as also in that camp: Marc Andreessen.

Earlier today and this evening, Andreesen engaged in a lively Twitter discussion on the fate of news as a business, taking a few detours to address the ills of Web advertising. After he complained about teeth whitening ads, I posed the question to him whether advertising technology had failed publishers, seeing as the ads he complained about weren’t direct sold but placed through the Web of intermediaries that’s arisen to comprise the ad system.

Screen Shot 2014-02-05 at 10.06.17 PM

That’s fairly damning coming from the founder of Netscape and the leader of one of the top VC firms, Andreessen Horowitz. Andreessen, whose firm invests in tech platforms rather than media, had several other interesting thoughts on the state of news businesses and advertising.

The news market will expand.

 

Alas, that’s not great for many incumbents.

And scale will matter — or expertise in an area.

 

Of the eight possible ways he sees to build a business off news, ads will remain No. 1.

Publishers need more self-respect

 

The banner ad has failed publishers and the industry.

Because the ads are really terrible.

 

And irrelevant.

Subscriptions will play a role.

And so will other avenues, like events.

Quality is still a viable strategy in a world of aggregation and clickbait.

In fact, the amount of noise increases the value of the signal.

 

And that will lead to a diversity of media companies, even if they’re not enormous businesses.

Image via Shutterstock

More in Media

Cloudflare’s compliant crawler highlights tension – and opportunity – in the emerging AI content market 

Cloudflare faces tension in its new role: sitting in the middle between publishers and AI companies while balancing trust, control and monetization. 

Media Briefing: What to expect at the Digiday Publishing Summit, March 2026 edition 

Execs from The Atlantic, Arena Group, Bloomberg, Business Insider, The Guardian, New York Post, People Inc., Washington Post, and more, will share their strategies on everything from zero-click audience strategy, to AI licensing deals and RAG readiness, to how they’re embracing creator strategies to help boost engagement with younger audiences.

Why one creator commerce platform is connecting brands and creators for ‘flat-fee’ campaigns

Quick Collabs is LTK’s latest attempt to make creator marketing campaigns faster and more scalable. for brands and creators alike.