Discusses t he brief
history of online advertising through specific
ad strageis and discusses where online
advertising is headed.
Is there such a thing as “traditional” online
advertising? If there is, it started with
banners, moved to FFAs, took a step backwards
with SPAM, a hard right with classified
advertising and then shot forward with pay per
click search engine. So how do you know where
to spend your advertising budget in the current
market? If you’ve been responsible for your
company’s web advertising efforts over the
years you might agree that the traditional
means of advertising worked; as least for a
little while. So as new types of advertising
penetrate the market with increasing frequency,
what do you do with those proven stand-by
methods of generating links and traffic? Throw
them out? Keep them around for posterity? Maybe
give them a facelift? Let’s review those
traditional ad models then look at some
experimental models. TRADITIONAL ONLINE
ADVERTISING MODELS
Banners
Banner ads in the form of animated gifs are the
most common and widely used form of online
advertising today. Banner ads reach the widest
possible audience because practically 100% of
Internet users can view them without any
special plugins. Web marketers, advertisers and
promoters have quickly realized that banners
under 12k in file size puts the ad in front of
the visitor as quickly as possible, increasing
the chance of click-through even though surfers
are growing increasingly immune. New styles and
shapes of banners (such as skyscraper ads) have
grown in popularity recently, which is
addressed in the “Experimental Advertising”
section below. SPAM
What does SPAM stand for? It’s not “Stupid
Pointless Annoying Message” (which in some
cases it could be) but rather “Sending and
Posting Advertising Messages.” It’s hard to
believe SPAM is effective, but unarguably, it
is. While click-through rates continue to fall
and legislation begins to rise, it is a savvy
advertiser’s best bet to stay away from it,
unless of course you’re selling Pasta Pots or
Viagra. Rich mail – “Fancy SPAM”
Most likely, the e-mail messages you receive on
a daily basis are text only. Rich mail, on the
other hand, allows graphics, video and audio to
be included in the e-mail message. When you
open up a rich e-mail your e-mail client
automatically calls up your Internet connection
and launches an html page in your browser.
E-mail clients that are offline will invite you
to click on the link when you have your
Internet connection open again. If your e-mail
client does not support graphics you will
receive the e-mail in text only. While SPAM is
still SPAM, rich mail has proven to be much
more effective than standard text messages.
Pop-Ups/Pop-Unders:
This creative, yet completely obtrusive and
annoying means of advertising was once
celebrated in some circles as the most
innovative ad concept since banners. It only
took a short time before many users, sick of
being trapped in a never-ending onslaught of
such ads, voiced their rejection. One can only
wonder when advertisers will recognize the
public dissatisfaction and move on to another
more effective means to promote their
companies. Institutional Advertising:
While institutional or “in-house” advertising
has been available since the inception of the
Internet, few companies have made an effort to
utilize the many different aspects of online
advertising in one format as has 7Search.com
with its Direct Pay-Per-Text advertising.
7Search, a leader in the pay per click search
engine arena, has recently introduced this
program which enables its advertisers to
advertise outside of its search return lists
using the same titles and descriptions seen on
its search engine. The pay-per-click model
enables interested advertisers to leave behind
the CPM impression model and focus on the click
conversions. Direct Pay-Per-Text is a
patent-pending concept from 7Search which will
be released to the general public in the coming
months. Pay-Per-Click Search Engines
It’s hard to think of PPC search engines as a
“traditional” means to advertise online, but
the ratio of those advertisers who do versus
those who don’t is staggering; in fact the
majority have at least tried their hand at
leasing traffic. In a PPC agreement, the
advertiser only pays for qualifying clicks to
the destination site based on a prearranged
per-click rate. The response on ads with
well-written titles and descriptions targeted
to the users query pull response rates unseen
in the ad industry previously. The greatest
advantage arguably is the ability to measure
precisely the rate of return versus your
investment. Some of the most popular PPC search
engines are FindWhat.com, 7Search.com,
Ah-ha.com and the industry leader Overture.
EXPERIMENTAL ONLINE ADVERTISING MODELS Traffic
Exchange Advertising:
Hit exchanges, actually a form of banner
exchange, are a recent phenomenon on the
Internet. You will visit the site of a member
of an exchange, and in exchange, another member
of the exchange will visit your site. The
recent explosion of hit exchanges on the web
has diluted the effectiveness of such a method
of advertising. There have also been many
instances of cheating, in which a script is
used to generate visits to a site. However, if
you have a product that is of interest to
webmasters, and is low cost or has a free
version, there is no harm in giving hit
exchanges a try. Shockwave ads
Shockwave is best suited for campaigns that
want to utilize out-of-banner real estate, such
as applets, trading cards, and games. Director
and Flash provide the ability to embed
interaction, video, and audio within the file,
making Shockwave files some of the richest ad
units on the Web. Viral marketing and strong
brand interaction are two of the key strengths
of Shockwave ads. As these ads are typically
“bandwidth monsters” the adoption has been slow
and will most likely remain that way. Other
downsides include development costs and the
fact that it just won’t work without the
Shockwave plug-in, which (though downloaded by
millions of users) is far from being a
mainstay. Interstitial ads
Interstitials are ads that play between pages
on a website, much like television ads play
between sections of a program. There are
several variations on the interstitial model:
some play in the main browser window, while
some play in new, smaller windows; some are
pre-cached, while some stream ad content as it
plays; some provide the ability to create very
rich ads, while some focus on smaller,
faster-loading ads. Whatever the format, nearly
all interstitial ads perform very well if
measured by both click-through rates and brand
recall. Floating ads and DHTML
Types of floating ads include DHTML
sponsorships, in which advertising objects
"fly" across the page on a preset course;
cursor sponsorships, in which the cursor turns
into an advertising image; and scrolling ads,
in which an advertisement moves up and down the
edge of a page as the user scrolls up and down.
Floating ads give the advertiser and publisher
the flexibility to achieve nearly any effect.
However, as this is one of the more daring
types of online advertising, advertising and
content must be balanced on any given page.
Floating ads (especially DHTML and cursors) are
best run for short periods to create brand
awareness—running them for longer periods can
bring negative user feedback. It is important
to understand that online advertising is only
effective if it generates significant response
and this applies to both traditional and
experimental ads. Unfortunately, the only way
to discover the efficiency of your campaign is
to test in every format at least once with as
many ads as you are able.
About the
Author
Pete Prestipino is the
founder and CEO of SCG - Swirling Circle Group,
a consortium of online marketers, promoters,
SEO's, web designers, and Internet consultants.
For more information visit: www.SwirlingCircle.com
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