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Advertisers have tried many approaches on the Web. When one approach bombed, advertisers
tried a new one. The latest is "contextual advertising." Sounds sophisticated.
But it will die like all the others. Why? Because none of these fanciful techniques
take into account the new online reality: The visitor is boss.
A new approach, Informative Advertising, does.
The Advertising Cemetery
Since inception of the commercial Web, advertisers have been busy trying innumerable
techniques. I look briefly at the major ones:
1 - PUSH - Early in the game they decided to send news together with advertising
directly to the Net user. Did not get off the ground
2 - BANNERS - At first banners seemed to work. But after awhile they faded
away. The cemetery is full of them.
3 - ANIMATION - You still see animation, though not as much as was prevalent
at first. It will die soon
4 - FLASH - This seems to be the time for Flash. But it is so irritating it
will die soon too
5 - POP-UPS - You try to visit a site and up pops a window with an ad. Annoying.
I don't give it much time to live
6 - POP-UNDERS - Instead of the window popping up in front of the window you
want you see the popped window afterwards. This too will die
The Latest Approach: Contextual Advertising
Now advertisers have gotten the brilliant idea of grabbing the visitor's attention
while he or she is in a related situation. They say that if a person is at a
search engine entering a keyword, this is a good place to advertise a product
or service that fits under this keyword. This particular approach, it seems
to me, is an excellent form of advertising. It has been done successfully by
Google and other search engines. Some call this "contextual advertising."
But I have a better name for it, as I will show below.
Here is an example of "contextual advertising." An outfit called
EZula sells keywords. But instead of supplying a search engine EZula distributes
a program called TOPtext. When a user of TOPtext visits a site, he sees highlighted
words, which enable him to jump to sites that have purchased ads for these keywords.
These words are not highlighted by the website owner. They are highlighted
by TOPtext. The jumps take the visitor, not to a site chosen by the website
owner, but to a competitor site. Do you think competitors will put up with this?
More important, do you think the visitor, when he finds out about this "contextual
stealing," will trust the advertiser for anything? This is the most outrageous
form of advertising invented so far.
Wells Fargo Bank, I hear, is one such "contextual advertiser." Does
this increase your trust in Wells Fargo?
The Big Blunder
Why do advertisers, who were so effective offline, not know what to do online?
Because the tricks they developed over the years to ensnare the consumer do
not work online. They do not work because the environment has changed drastically.
Before the vendor was in control; today, online, the consumer is in control.
Before the vendor could play on the emotions of the more or less "captive"
consumer; todcay the consumer has an infinite number of choices. Before ads
were effective by themselves; today you must get the consumer to do something
- click.
In other words, the consumer is boss. Advertising, like everything else on
the Net must be helpful to the consumer. Using wile to catch the consumer will
not work. Annoying the consumer with spam messages, or even with opt-out messages,
will not work. Stealing "context" from competitor sites decreases
consumer trust, and will not work.
Informative Advertising
Let us get back to advertising that works. What Google and other search engines
do is sell ads related to keywords. When your chosen keyword is picked by a
user, your website message appears on the right side of the results page under
Sponsored Links. Other search engines list them under Preferred Sites or similar
headings.
These successful ads are characterized as follows:
> They do not try to ensnare you
> They do not try to interrupt you
> They do not try to hurt others
> They are obviously ads
> They are related to your current interest
> They are INFORMATIVE
The last item is key:
> THEY ARE INFORMATIVE!
Good online advertising is INFORMATIVE ADVERTISING. It does not try to manipulate
the visitor in any way. It earnestly tries to be helpful. It earnestly tries
to build trust. It earnestly tries to steer the consumer to a site, but only
if the advertiser feels the site may be helpful to the consumer.
Of course context is important. Context is one way the advertiser knows he
may be helpful to the visitor. But context is not enough. The important consideration
is how you use context: to exploit or to help.
Everyone agrees that newsletter advertising works. Why? Not merely because
the context is right, although this is important. Newsletter advertising works
because, for the most part, it is Informative Advertising.
Summary
The old-fashioned advertising, which culminates today with "contextual
advertising," or as I call it "contextual stealing," is dying.
The best type of advertising - today on the Net, but tomorrow off the Net, as
well - is informative Advertising. Informative Advertising is part of an integrated
marketing strategy called Helpfulness Marketing.
About the Author:
Paul -the soarING- Siegel is a provocative Internet speaker and author of HELPFULNESS
MARKETNG, a book stressing learning, cooperation and community. Learn about
it at http://www.learningfountain.com/helpfulnessmarketing.htm Subscribe to
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