Tag Archives: Internet Advertising Bureau UK Ltd.

Why Pay For Ads That Don’t Work?

Businesses have long worked to take the guesswork out of advertising. And for a time, pay-per-click ads on the Internet seemed like a pretty good solution. Not only did pay per click let marketers better target their campaigns, it cost them money only when potential customers actually clicked on their ads. But for many businesses, pay per click has been a letdown. For one thing, between 20 and 50 percent of clicks are estimated to be made by people who have no intention of buying–and many are outright fraudulent. And the price of keywords is soaring; popular terms on Google cost an average of $1.95 per click. Now a host of technology entrepreneurs believe they have a better answer. They’re working toward a future in which online advertisers, instead of buying clicks of uncertain value, will pay only when an ad results in a phone inquiry–or, in some cases, an actual sale. Their services, which are just now becoming available, represent a kind of Holy Grail for marketers and could spark a revolution in the way businesses seek to reach customers. “Pay per click was just the beginning,” says Bill Gross, who helped pioneer Internet advertising in 1998 with GoTo.com, the Web’s first paid search engine, which he later sold to Yahoo. Gross has launched two new online advertising services, Snap and InsiderPages. “The real evolution is pay per action,” he says–in which advertisers pay only when a customer actually does something, like signing up for a newsletter or purchasing a product. The appeal of these new services is easy enough to understand. A phone call is far more likely to result in a sale. Some 30 percent of calls lead to sales compared with a mere 3 percent of clicks, according to Jupiter Research in San Francisco. “That kind of high close rate should put some pressure on the kind of fraud that happens over the Internet,” says Bill Leak, CEO of Leads Customers Sales, an online marketing firm in Austin. “Where I’d pay $1 for a click, I might pay $10 for a phone call.” Indeed, research by the Kelsey Group, a market research firm in Princeton, New Jersey, shows that 42 percent of advertisers would prefer paying for phone calls over clicks. Pay-per-call advertising was pioneered and trademarked in 1999 by a company out of San Francisco called Ingenio, which has since partnered with AOL and Smartpages.com to bring the technology to market. It’s similar to bidding for keywords on Google, except that when your company appears in the results of an AOL search, you’re charged only when a potential customer picks up the phone and calls you. (The average price per call is about $5.50, according to Ingenio.) Ingenio supplies a toll-free number, which allows it to automate the tracking of unique calls. “We only charge once per each unique customer, not for each phone call,” says Marc Barach, Ingenio’s chief marketing officer. That means you don’t have to pay over and over again to serve the same customer. Another pay-per-call start-up, Jambo, based in Agoura Hills, California, recently partnered with the search engine InfoSpace. When a potential customer makes a call through Jambo, a voice lets the advertiser know the call is coming from Jambo and gives the advertiser the option of whether or not to accept the call–and the charges. Like a collect call, “it gives the merchant the option to opt in” and avoid paying for inquiries that are likely dead ends, says John Melideo, founder of Jambo. Pay per call currently makes up only about 2 percent of the online advertising market, but it is expected to soar to some $4 billion, as much as 15 percent of the market, by 2009, according to the Kelsey Group. Despite its promise, it may not be the best fit for every business. So far at least, the technology is best suited to local merchants such as plumbers, electricians, and even mortgage brokers–many of them without websites of their own–that have traditionally relied on the printed yellow pages to reach customers. For businesses engaged in e-commerce, on the other hand, customers may not be interested in placing a phone call. Bill Gross’s Snap aims to have broader appeal. It’s the first search engine that enables so-called pay-per-action advertising. If, say, an airline places an ad on Snap, it would pay a fee only when a customer buys a ticket. Another business could arrange a deal in which it was charged only when a potential client logged on and requested additional information or registered for a sweepstakes. “This radically changes advertising,” says Gross. “It makes it much more accountable.” Google, Yahoo, and MSN are all expected to roll out their own versions of pay per action later this year. That’s good news for Missy Cohen-Fyffe, president of Babe Ease in Pelham, New Hampshire. Babe Ease sells about $2 million worth of quilted coverings for shopping carts and public highchairs each year under the Clean Shoppers brand name. Cohen-Fyffe says she has been advertising through Google for several years but has become frustrated by the constantly rising price of keywords. An even bigger problem, she says, is that she’s not seeing a corresponding increase in sales. A pay-per-sale program, on the other hand, would allow her to track the return on each and every advertising dollar spent. “If I’m getting orders routed to me, I’m more than happy to pay a commission,” she says. “I’ll pay for sales over clicks any day.” Resources To read more about pay-per-action advertising, go to Internet Advertising Bureau, a trade group that researches new marketing trends. If you think you’ve been the victim of click fraud, go to clickfraudindex.com to learn how to investigate.

Design within Standard Banner Ad Specifications

Banner ad design is evolving. As with anything else related to the Web, there are few hard-and-fast rules. However, Web advertising “pioneers” have discovered a few best practices, largely through trial and error. So why not benefit from their experience by following these guidelines in your own banner ad design? Dimension Guidelines Currently, size standards for banner ads are really just recommendations. Two professional associations, the Internet Advertising Bureau (IAB) and the Coalition for Advertising-Supported Information and Entertainment (CASIE), have compiled a list of the most popular and most effective banner ad sizes. According to IAB’s Web site, a joint committee of IAB and CASIE members has identified the following as the most commonly accepted: Type Dimensions (in pixels) Full Banner 468 x 60 Full Banner with Vertical Navigation Bar 392 x 72 Half Banner 234 x 60 Square Button 125 x 125 Button 1 120 x 90 Button 2 120 x 60 Micro Button 88 x 31 Vertical Banner 120 x 240 The IAB’s Web site also includes graphical representations of banner sizes, and the following note: “Use of any of these sizes as a model or standard is strictly voluntary. The IAB and CASIE recognize and intend that the advertising community remain free to experiment with, use, adopt, and propose other sizes and types of banners.” File Size Guidelines So now you know how big to make your banner ad in terms of pixels. But what about in terms of bytes? File size guidelines haven’t been standardized by the IAB as have dimension guidelines (see above). So for guidance, look to one of the cardinal rules of Web usability, which is that smaller files mean faster-loading pages, and faster pages mean happier viewers. And happier viewers are more likely to respond positively to an ad, as has been demonstrated in a study of how download times affect click-through rates. How do you create the coolest, most exciting ad while also conserving bytes? First of all, don’t use technology that doesn’t serve the purpose of the banner ad campaign. For example, use animated graphics only if they’re more effective than static graphics, use graphics only if they’re more effective than text, etc. If you do incorporate large, complex files into your ad, make sure they’re “optimized” (streamlined to take up the fewest bytes possible). There are numerous free online resources that can help you with this; a guide to some of these is available on the Adbility Web site, under Banner Ad Creation/Image Compression. Animation Looping Animated graphics – usually in the Graphics Interchange Format specified as GIF89a – contain within a single file a set of images in a specified order. The series can be presented, or can “loop,” endlessly – or it can loop just once or a few times and then stop. When you define looping parameters during the design of your animated banner ad, remember that certain choices might increase file size. For example, faster animation requires more bytes, as does continual looping. For this reason, some sites that sell advertising space have restrictions on looping. Make sure you know the policies of your banner’s potential home, and be prepared to make some concessions regarding the complexity of animated GIFs. Rich Media Limitations Before you set out to create a state-of-the-art banner ad by using rich media such as streaming audio or video and Java applets, consider the cost: frustrated and impatient users. Rich media files are by far the largest and will therefore slow your banner ad considerably. They are also the most “elitist,” since a significant number of browsers don’t handle streaming or Java very well, if at all. Many sellers of ad space severely restrict the use of rich media in banner ads. So before you put time and money into developing a media-rich banner ad, determine whether it really makes sense given your campaign goals and target market. Do some extensive testing on users that represent your intended audience. Run the ad on older browser versions and slower connections for a true “reality check.” Copyright © 1995-2000 Pinnacle WebWorkz Inc. All rights reserved. Do notduplicate or redistribute in any form.