Thanks Netflix major advertising revolution begun: Read Newsmax: Thanks to Netflix, the biggest advertising revolution has begun | Newsmax.com
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Let me tell you a secret about the most powerful actions in the world ... those that made the first investors very, very rich.

Alphabet (GOOGL) ... one of the world's most influential technology companies ... has delivered more than 2,000% of earnings to investors.

Thanks Netflix major advertising revolution begun

Facebook (FB) ... a social media dominator and the sixth largest company in the world ... has delivered more than 400% of earnings to investors.

Amazon (AMZN) ... the king of online shopping ... has delivered more than 10,000% profit to investors.

These three actions have a secret trait that brought their prices to the moon.

Not that they are tech companies. It's that they are advertising companies in disguise.

When you think of Facebook, Google and Amazon ... you see a social network, a search engine and an online store.

But in truth, all three are in the business of accumulating millions of eyeballs ... which they can then sell to advertisers for hundreds of millions of dollars.

While it's too late to step in for quick triple-digit earnings, there is a promising advertising giant, thanks to Netflix.

There is a good chance you have your technology in your living room ... but you may not know that it is silently infiltrating the advertising industry.

In fact, this action has set out to invest the most expensive advertising industry and generate billions in the process.

Television is not dead, it is simply different

Do you remember sitting down to watch Everybody Loves Raymond on prime time on a Monday night?

For half a century, this was television as we know it ...

But in 2007, Netflix introduced a new concept to television: video streaming. Fast forward to today, and dozens of streaming services have emerged.

Apple launched Apple TV ... Disney launched Disney + ... HBO launched HBO Now ... just to name a few.

More and more people are getting rid of cable television for video streaming services. Last year, 69% of homes in the U.S. subscribed to a video streaming service, according to Leichtman Research Group.

But make no mistake, television did not die. It simply changed its format.

According to Vox, more than 70% of people watch Netflix on television. Instead of tuning in to cable channels, people tune in to Apple TV, Hulu, Netflix, or other streams.

What you may not know is that these people need more than a subscription to watch your streaming services on TV.

The king of modern television

One month ago, I told you about Roku, an invisible company that drives the entire streaming industry. 'Since then, 40% + has shot up!

Read Newsmax: Thanks to Netflix, the biggest advertising revolution has begun | Newsmax.com
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Most people don't know it, but Roku is no longer just a company that sells small boxes outside of television.

Today, it develops software that makes televisions "smart" and licenses them to TV manufacturers. In fact, it turns your TV into a computer ... which allows you to connect to the Internet to access streaming services like Netflix.

Without Roku, most TVs would not be able to broadcast streaming services.

Roku is now on 31 million TVs and continues to grow. One in three smart TVs sold in the US UU Contains Roku technology. Which means one in three people watching Netflix or other streams do so via Roku.

But TV maker licensing software is not where Roku's real money maker is. Roku aims to disrupt television advertising ... which will be a billionaire opportunity.

The most expensive advertising industry ... and useless ...

A 30-second Super Bowl TV ad cost an obscene $ 5,250,000 ...

Or $ 175,000 per second.

The Super Bowl is the most expensive in terms of airtime, but television, in general, is a ridiculously expensive way to advertise.

And most of that money ends up going down the drain.

While it can reach millions of people in seconds, it has little control over who sees your ad. It's like throwing spaghetti against the wall to see what sticks.

This is the opposite of what digital advertisers offer, such as Facebook, Google or Amazon.

They allow advertisers to identify a very specific group of people to advertise to, based on what they are searching for on the internet ... which Facebook groups they like ... which web browsers

This is the opposite of what digital advertisers offer, such as Facebook, Google or Amazon.

For example, advertisers can identify 40-year-old women who bought cat-related products in the last six months.

It's so accurate it's scary.

That's why, for the first time in history, this year, companies will spend more on accurate internet advertising than "spaghetti on the wall" ads on television or in print.

Television advertising encounters digital

With 31 million viewers in his possession, Roku has now set out to "digitize" television advertising and take it to a whole new level.

On the one hand, you have television. Television still has the incredible ability to reach millions of engaged people.