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Internet display advertising

Display advertising is brand advertising?

by drm on October 14, 2009

Remember the old adage from John Wannamaker? “Half my advertising is wasted, I just don’t know which half?”

Looking at Comscore’s recent analysis of the click-through and impact of internet display advertising, it turns out Wannamaker might have been overstating the productivity of his advertising.

This week, Comscore released an update to the “Natural Born Clickers” research that it conducted two years ago. That survey showed that 32% of Internet users clicked on web display ads.

Guess what? The number has gone down, precipitously. Comscore’s update shows that only 16% of internet users clicked on a display ad in March 2009. Only 8% of all users account for 85% of all clicks.

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Don’t judge display advertising by the number of click-throughs, though, Comscore argues.

“A click means nothing, earns no revenue and creates no brand equity. Your online advertising has some goal – and it’s certainly not to generate clicks,” said Starcom USA SVP/Director, Research & Analytics John Lowell. “You want people to visit your website, seek more information, purchase a product, become a lead, keep your brand top of mind, learn something new, feel differently – the list goes on. Regardless of whether the consumer clicked on an ad or not, the key is to determine how that ad unit influenced them to think, feel or do something they wouldn’t have done otherwise.”

This June in the Journal of Advertising Research, Comscore shared data that showed advertisers experience a 46% lift in business activity following a month of web display advertising.

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Three empirical generalisations are proposed: 1) even with low click rate, display ads can generate substantial lift in site visitation, trademark queries and online plus offline sales; 2) search ads are more effective than display ads, but the higher reach of display ads means that they can generate larger sales increases overall; 3) synergy with search advertising produces higher effects than either type of advertising separately.

The premise of total advertising transparency in a digital age is clearly flawed. Marketing succeeds from a combination of product positioning and brand awareness; sales are driven when brand awareness and product needs are closely aligned with distribution channels.

One way of thinking about your marketing mix is to consider search marketing to be like in-store merchandising. When a consumer comes to Google to search for product, they are already in the store and in a buying frame of mind. You can influence them at the point of purchase with a commercial offer.

But you can also drive that consumer directly to your own distribution channel and not give up any margin to third-parties. Comscore argues that by using display advertising on the web, a brand can significantly increase its business activity.

Of course, other media does that as well….like magazines, and radio and TV. The ultimate decision about which media to use should be driven by the cost of customer acquisition across all channels and incorporating all media expense.

That’s not a popular concept. But it’s the core of marketing effectiveness.

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What happens when Gross Domestic Product drops more than 6% in a quarter?

Advertising expenditures decline 14%.

Put the last quarter of 2008 and the first quarter of 2009 together and GDP jumped from a 4% to a 6% drop, while advertising spending went from a 4% to a 14% drop.  The holiday push to clear inventory was followed by a moribund winter.

Take a close look at the figures released by TNS Media Intelligence and you see how reduced spending in key product categories has devestated certain media categories.

The outlook for the quarters ahead isn’t much better, according to the TNS experts.

The ad market declined significantly in the first quarter, overtaken by a collapsing economy which prompted consumers and marketers alike to shut their wallets and conserve,” said Jon Swallen, SVP Research at TNS Media Intelligence. “While there are hopeful signs of general economic indicators bottoming out, the advertising sector still appears to be lagging behind. Available data from second quarter shows ad expenditures tracking on a comparable plane to recent months.

The biggest declines in spending among the top 10 categories came in automotive dealers, down 49%, Retail, down 18%, direct response down 17% and financial services, down 18%.

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These declines were reflected in precipitous declines in certain key media categories.  Print advertising was down across the board:  Magazines were off 21% versus prior year and Newspapers were off 26%.

Television was down 10%, with significant declines in spot buys and spanish language buys.

Internet display advertising was up 8% according to TNS.

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What can you conclude?  The drop in consumer spending has hit discretionary spending and durable goods spending the hardest.  Things like home furnishing, automotive, upscale clothing and hard goods all posted big declines in the quarter.  Further, local businesses across the board cut back on their marketing spend.  These categories of advertising are most focused on local, in specialty media such as print and in Internet search.

Take a trillion dollars out of the economy and you’ll see advertising levels get adjusted quickly and aggressively.

I’ll reiterate my three big conclusions, which I’ve stated before and which remain consistent with the data reported:

  • The current declines are resets in advertising volume, and while the media will recover with the economy, it won’t rebound to former levels;
  • The declines in local, and in print, aren’t absolute referendums on the value of the product;
  • But, with shifts in advertiser behavior, the categories that have been hardest hit by this slump will need to create new pricing structures and new content strategies to align their business model profitably with the new level of the economy.
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