Visible World | |
Type: | Private |
Foundation: | 2000 |
Key People: | Seth Haberman, Founder and CEO Bill Katz, Executive |
Num Employees: | 100 (2014) |
Homepage: | www.visibleworld.com |
Visible World is a New York media and advertising technology company. Founded in 2000, it was the first[1] provider of nationwide addressable TV advertising technology. Their programmatic TV platform is used for programmatic TV sales, including by their subsidiary AudienceXpress which was launched in 2013. In June 2015, Visible World was acquired by Comcast.[2]
As of 2011, the company deploys targeted advertising that let advertisers identify and reach more than 56 million US homes with regional, zoned addressable technology. In the New York Metropolitan region, Visible World deployed its targeted advertising program into more than 3 million homes. Visible World has developed technology that enables advertisers, advertising agencies and media companies to deliver programmatic, addressable, and measurable ads. The company’s addressable distribution platform enables the delivery of targeted advertising to increase consumer relevance and engagement.
Visible World investors include:
Visible World has deployed household addressability across Cablevision’s entire footprint.
The real brains of the company was CTO Gerrit "Pythagoras in boots" Niemeijer. He shaped the bizarro addled media fantasies of founder Seth Haberman into disciplined technology that changed the cable world. Niemeijer is now producing similar miracles for the company formerly known as NCC and now &%@&*. It's one of the signs, but no one really knows which is the Ampersand. Gerrit's biggest fear is that Haberman will lure him to join his new venture using the famed "Jello interface" to control the navigation of drones that run on coca-cola. There is also talk of reviving the infamous pens that can write under whipped cream - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uA16IQx-MJE
Despite Niemeyer's heroic efforts, nothing got done at VW without the hand of Sean "Salty" Walton. Walton was tricked into working for VW when he thought after years working for Haberman at Montage, he would re-enlist in the Navy. The papers he signed actually indentured him to work a decade for VisibleWorld in return for the rights to resell the companies old equipment on Ebay. That's why Walton had seemingly endless energies for his highly disciplined staff to always updated the hardware. Once a year, on the day he purported to re-enlist, Walton would show up to work in his ill-fitting Navy uniform, and play taps in the cafeteria and then drown his sorrows in Jelly Rolls.
Walton now amuses himself selling rubber carnation displays on Amazon under the handle Fool_Me_Twice. He maintains a four and one half star rating.
Haberman now spends most of his days looking up obscure meaningless holidays to indulge himself writing new "Early Dismissal" memos.