Entries Tagged as 'Advertising'

February 13th, 2008

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Revisiting Online Advertising

We’ve long established that online ads suck. More often than not, they are ugly and get in the way of what we’re trying to accomplish. But it’s time to look a bit past that part, and start focusing on the context in which ads are being displayed. There is still seems to be quite a bit to learn about the online population and how they interact with advertisements. In other words, when and where is the best time to place ads?

Joshua Porter wrote a great post about why social ads don’t work, and he raises great points further think about.

Social ads don’t work as well because people are being social, not searching for something.

This is spot on. Think of one time you were browsing your social network of choice and thought about clicking an ad? For me it’s extremely rare, and I’d imagine that a large percentage of other people feel the same. Ads seems to work much better on sites where your attention span isn’t required for long. Social sites don’t support this model. You can spend hours browsing profiles and interacting with the site, so force feeding ads won’t work because they are not within context of the users habits on the site. It’s like invading personal space. Have you ever had someone knock on your door trying to sell something, while you’re watching tv?

Search sites (like Yahoo, Google, etc.) are a little different, which seems to be why their ads are more effective. People are looking for something specific. When the results are displayed, they are either seeing relevant ads, or relevant search results. It’s within context. The user clicks the ad or result, then leaves.

News portals might fall between social sites and search sites, however, I’d say with user habits, they’re closer to social networking sites. I would imagine your average user goes to a news site to read news and/or just browse headlines.

But certainly search sites aren’t the only types of places where online advertising can work, so where else does this online advertising model fit in? How can more companies get a ROI on the millions of dollars being spent for online ads and stay within context of users habits per site? I don’t really have an answer for that one, but as the web is still new, there is lots to learn for advertisers, as well as those displaying ads on their sites.

Tags: Advertising

March 9th, 2007

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Online Advertising

You can’t escape advertising online. It’s everywhere you look, whether you like it or not. The more that I see this online advertising, the more I notice the lack of innovation and creativity, but more of an abundance of crappy ideas that only distract my online experience, instead of me thinking, “wow, that is a cool ad” which would make be curious about the company behind this creativity.

It seems that there is still a huge market, and tons of money to be spent to make online more effective and useful than it has already been. But how can online advertising get bigger with more innovation? Well, it certainly won’t come from the likes of Google, Microsoft, and others. They can only set up the platform to be spread out across a vast amount of people. Innovation will have to come from creative agencies. It takes more than a crappy ad and a company logo.

Consumers may not be creative, but they’re not stupid. Via

With using platforms like Google it is becoming easier to target niche audiences, which should make the job a little easier for agencies to be more innovative to grab the attention of it’s users. It will be interesting to see how online advertising continues to perform, because it seems that there is tons of room for growth.

I came across this site which showcases some very forward-thinking online advertisements, that have made me curious about the company behind them. This site also made me want to write this post.

There are plenty of examples of great innovation and creativity, that don’t seem like they would disrupt the user experience, but rather add to it, granted the niche is very focused.

Tags: Advertising

February 20th, 2007

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Getting Your Point Across

As of the past few months, I have been seeing lots of these Chase billboards, that I think are great examples of communicating a message. As for this particular billboard, the message is very clear: Get money faster… Keep reading →

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