The way of Internet advertising
is changing rapidly. We are moving from websites once cluttered
with blinking banners that populated Internet real estate
into a cyber-generation of positioning. Marketers are realizing
very quickly that the Internet customer is much different
than a buyer in the physical world. The typical Internet
shopper has developed the following manifesto which motivates
him or her to resort to cyberspace:
1. Privacy - The ability
to shop from home without anyone else knowing what you are
doing.
2. Convenience - The list
of products available on the Internet is more extensive
than the famed Mall of America in Minnesota
3. Speed - When's the last
time you waited on a pimple-faced teenager working a cash
register when checking out on the Internet?
Traditional Internet marketing has not coincided with the
Internet surfer's manifesto. However, no means of marketing
have come as close as pay per click search engine marketing.
In this article we will discuss the drawbacks to traditional
banner advertising, new rich media advertising, and e-mail
advertising. We will follow this up with benefits of pay
per click search engine advertising.
1. Traditional Banner Advertising
We've all seen them, and then we've all ignored them. The
annoying "Punch the Monkey and Win!" flashing
468x60 banner at the top of the website you are visiting.
Although in its day this was a highly effective ad, for
its novelty and at the same time the fascination at the
novelty of the Internet on the part of those who visited
the Internet, today we are looking at the stark reality
that banner ads just are not effective.
Traditional banner advertising violates all the motivations
of the Internet shopper. It intrudes on the shoppers privacy,
it creates an inconvenience, and it slows the shoppers ability
to find exactly what they are looking for (if they are even
paying attention to the ad).
As a shopper on the Internet surfs from site to site, or
page to page within a site to find what they are looking
for, the goal is to find their product or service, learn
more about this product or service, and learn about other
options which will hopefully lead to an informed purchase.
Introducing banner advertisements often becomes a distraction,
or an annoyance, the exact opposite of what any good marketer
would like to create. By distracting the shopper from their
intended goal the advertiser succeeds in slowing down their
ability to make informed decisions while at the same time
inconveniencing the shopper with information that they cannot
use.
In rare instances, a banner advertisement succeeds in aiding
a buyer. In fact, industry experts estimate that only 8
people out of 1000 people who are exposed to a banner ad
will pursue what that ad has to offer. This does not mean
that they will buy...the number of people who buy compared
to the number of people who visits is an entirely different
percentage that does not work in our favor.
All in all, unless banner advertising is done with extreme
precision, it will only succeed to further encourage potential
buyers to ignore those common place ads.
2. Rich Media Advertising
Youu get to the website you want, you just start to surf
the site, and then its there. Before you can do what you
came to this site to do, you are presented with a floating
image, maybe with some music, maybe with something moving
all the way across your screen, or a movie. You are given
the option to cut this out prematurely with a small 'x'
in the upper-right hand corner, but be careful not to miss
it, otherwise you will lose the site you initially inteded
to visit.
Rich media is very much like most new graphical ads and
new technologies on the Internet. It is enjoying the highs
of a novelty. People are clicking on these ads...but for
all the wrong reasons. Most people do not click on rich
media ads because they genuinely are interested in the product
or service that they are offering, but rather they click
on them because they are "cool". There are no
arguments from our camp that these ads are amazing, but
they are also one of the greatest intrusions to the Internet
surfer's life on the Internet.
The typical Internet user is selfish: he/she wants what
they want when they want it. To block the screen and prevent
them from reading the site, or clicking a link, or viewing
a picture will cause more people to become greatly annoyed
than to cultivate genuine feelings of interest in the advertised
website.
Again, we have succeeded in teaching Internet users to
ignore ads, not to pay attention to them.
Rich media, even moreso than traditional banner advertising,
violates the Internet surfer. And although this medium is
currently enjoying the highs of a technological novelty,
look for it to quickly drop off in its effectiveness.
3. E-Mail Advertising
Once a very strong way to advertise, e-mail advertising
has quickly risen to the #1 annoyance of those who spend
a fair amount of their time with the Internet. This is not
to say that there is not a place for e-mail advertising
any more, but navigating these grounds is extremely difficult
-- and dangerous. The backlash from a poorly executed campaign
could cause irreperable harm to the company doing the marketing.
The first and most important problem with e-mail advertising
is SPAM. You have certainly heard of it and probably know
what it is. E-mail that is sent to a group of people that
did not "opt-in" to receive that message. True
opt-in e-mail can be quite effective (although not as effective
as pay per click advertising). The trick is finding the
true opt-in email lists. Many vendors claim to offer opt-in
lists, but many of these advertisers also have varying standards
as to what "opt-in" really means. In addition,
rarely do you have the guarantee of good targeting.
Even if you do get a true opt-in list, many times the users
forget they are on this list and complain of spam mail.
Get enough complaints to your hosting provider and you could
quickly be looking for a new Cyberspace home.
Newsletters have become a favorite of many marketers. This
is truly a less intrusive means of e-mail marketing, although
it still offers the problems of being an inconvenience to
the reader. Most readers are interested in the articles
provided by a newsletter, not the advertisements.
And again, we are training Internet users to ignore these
ads (or delete them as I do).
4. Pay Per Click Advertising
There is a strong, viable answer to Internet marketers
who are struggling with finding a friendly, effective means
of bringing qualified traffic to their piece of Internet
real estate. The answer: pay per click search engines (PPCSE).
Unlike the other forms of advertising that we discussed,
well managed PPCSE's do not bring the intrusive, distracting
elements that the other forms of advertising brings.
The key difference between pay per click search engine
marketing and other forms of marketing is simple: who initiates
the advertisement. In traditional advertising methods, the
advertiser is forcing their message upon the Internet surfer.
With a pay per click search engine, the user initiates the
information flow.
They are open to receiving information from marketers.
By actively searching on a subject, the surfer is presented
with a list of options that should meet or come close to
meeting his or her need. The results are obvious: a more
highly targeted visitor to your site, a visitor with a higher
inclination to partake in the service your site is offering
(as they were actively seeking it in the first place), and
the ability to pay for only the interested visitor.
Pay Per Click advertising brings obvious benefits to the
marketer. Because the advertiser only needs to pay for the
traffic received, and because that traffic is qualified
much more than an intrusive banner ad or e-mail, the resulting
ROI is much higher. In addition, the marketer does not suffer
from as many instances of a passive visitor. This is not
to say that there will be no passive visitor, but the instances
will be greatly reduced.
One stat that we like to point out in regards to pay per
click search engine marketing is this: a clickthrough rate
of 100%. Think about it: you know immediately how many visitors
you are going to receive as a result of your listing. No
worrying about eeking out that extra 0.02% in visitors.
If you are familiar with running banner ad campaigns, you
will quickly know how frustrating it is to see thousands
of impressions go by without anyone paying attention.
But most of all, pay per click marketing compliments the
Internet surfer's manifesto of privacy, speed, and convenience.
Again, by being a user initiated advertisement, the user
is welcoming the information. Because marketers bid on specific
keywords and phrases, a well managed pay per click search
engine will greatly increase the relevancy of a search initiated
by a user. Also, a well-managed pay per click search engine
will eliminate the needless distractions of a company trying
to call attention to an unrelated product or service.
If you have not yet tried pay per click advertising, you
need to begin doing so. It is certainly the future direction
of marketing. As other marketing forms struggle to find
ways to compliment the Internet surfer's manifesto, pay
per click advertising will be a solution to draw in new
clients and customers at a fraction of the cost. |