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Understanding Web Advertising
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| Guest post by: Jerry Bader |
Article Overview: More money is wasted on advertising then any other business function. That is not to say businesses shouldn’t advertise but rather people should understand how advertising works. There are many ways to characterize ads but for our purposes let’s make it simple and separate advertising into two distinct approaches: saturation and emotional.
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Understanding Web Advertising
More money is
wasted on advertising then any other business function. That is not to say
businesses shouldn’t advertise but rather people should understand how
advertising works. There are many ways to characterize ads but for our purposes
let’s make it simple and separate advertising into two distinct approaches:
saturation and emotional.
One of the
things I’ve learned over a long career is that business folk invariably take
their lead from the wrong sources. Small and medium size businesses look to the
mega corporations to learn their tricks and adopt their attitudes when they
have little in common – advertising being no exception. Since our clients are
mostly medium or small size companies we try to help put some of these issues
into perspective.
If you’re big
enough and have the money available there are all kinds of marketing
initiatives you can invest in, but if you have a limited marketing budget you
need to be smart about how and on what you spend your advertising dollars. And
the most effective and cost efficient place to spend those dollars is on your
website. Yes you need to attract people to your site but if once they arrive they
find it lacks intriguing, engaging content then you’ve wasted your money. So
what tactical approach should you take to deliver your marketing message?
Saturation Advertising
The first approach
is saturation advertising like you see on television. Anyone who has spent an
evening sitting in front of the TV set is familiar with what I am talking
about: the constant repetition of the same commercials over and over until the
ads become an unwelcome irritation. The fact is no matter what you do to avoid
commercials they eventually seep into your head. Even fast forwarding through
commercials on a recorded program has an effect. Saturation advertising depends
on repetition not quality, which is why some of the worst and/or stupidest
commercials can still be effective.
There are some
great commercials on television that do engage the audience with an
entertaining, memorable, marketing message that enhances the brand and
generates leads, but when push comes to shove, television advertising is all
about repetition not quality.
Does Saturation Advertising Work?
Does
saturation advertising work? The short answer is yes it does, at least for a
television audience it does. Most people believe that it works on others but not
on them, a phenomenon, psychologists call the Third Party Effect. The fact is,
repeating something automatically makes it appear more believable.
The majority
of people will respond that they don’t pay attention to commercials, but
inattention does not protect you from the influence of repeated messaging. In
fact bad commercials work better if the audience isn’t really paying attention,
and fail when the audience is actually listening carefully. Careful attention
brings to light all a message’s conceptual, technical and performance issues.
Will Saturation Advertising Work For
You?
But saturation
advertising is expensive because it relies on huge media buys in order to get
the required number of repetitions needed to worm its way into an audience’s
collective consciousness. It’s a messaging tactic that depends on deep pockets
and that rules it out for most companies. Advertising that depends on constant
repetition just won’t work on the Web unless it’s merely to supplement an existing
extensive integrated television and print campaign.
Just as an
aside, the music industry uses the same tactic. The constant repetition of a
song even of inferior quality but with minimum rhythmic value and a repetitive
catchy chorus can become a hit if heard often enough on the radio or on
television in a music video. And like most saturation advertising it’s
controlled by whoever has the most money available to purchase audience access.
The same holds true for political advertising. Politicians can get away with the
most incredible nonsense if they raised enough money to drown-out their
opposition.
The Web is a
different communication environment compared to television. Where television
and the Web converge is with programming: your website is not an advertisement,
or at least it shouldn’t be if you want it to be effective; your website is the
equivalent of the program not the commercial, and that is why the key to
success is the ability to turn advertising into content, and content into a
memorable experience. You need to engage your audience with the same kind of
techniques and messaging that is used in the programs you watch and not in the
commercials you try to ignore.
If You Don’t Establish Your Brand, You
Won’t Have a Meaningful, Memorable Message
If you can’t
saturate the market with your brand then you have to find a better, more cost
effective way to influence your audience. I use the word brand instead of
product or service because that is where you have to start – you have to think ‘brand’
not product/service. What we’re talking about here is advertising intended to
promote and grow your company within the context of a long term marketing
strategy rather than a promotional ad intended to let your audience know about
a particular sale or promotional event. Companies that stick exclusively to a
promotional format are basically teaching their customers to only purchase
goods and services when there’s a sale, and that’s a tough way to make money on
a long-term basis.
We all know
how popular the Google AdWords program is and we all know how expensive it can
get in order to gain access to the keywords that trigger your ad placement. The
Google system is basically relying on the same principle as television
advertising: big audiences and lots of placements equals lots of leads.
The problem in
addition to the continual expense is that even if you attract a large initial audience,
that audience will not stick around long enough to get your brand story if that
story is not at least as interesting and entertaining as the television
programs they watch. And even if that audience manages to stick around a while,
if your site isn’t interesting enough, they will never come back and that
reduces your chances of being remembered. Unlike television where the audience
is captive to the commercials, a Web audience is not. Unlike television where
the experience is generally a compromised group decision, Web viewing is not.
For most Web-based
businesses their website is their best and potentially most effective
advertising venue, but people only go to websites that interest them, and they
will leave in an instant if a website doesn’t engage, inform, and entertain
them.
Emotional Advertising
“People forget
what you say, but they remember how you made them feel.”
-
Warren
Beatty
Everyone likes
to think of him or herself as a rational, intelligent human being, but in
truth, we are all motivated by the same hardwired emotional triggers. Our
brains are marvelous, malleable organs that absorb information without us even
knowing it; they process information, massage it, and produce instinctive
responses to external stimuli. Our survival and dominance as a species depends
on this ability. Our brains are not cameras that just record input; they are
interpretive instruments that produce gut-instinct. As a consequence,
successful long-term marketing strategies depend on an emotional brand
association with basic Maslowian needs.
No matter who
you are or what you do your competitors will undercut your price, add new and
better features, or come up with superior alternative solutions. The business world
is littered with the corpses of once proud companies that owned their market
until someone came along with something better, or cheaper, or just different.
No one wants a Polaroid camera when digital cameras are all the rage. Once
proud Kodak has been humbled and downsized considerably because they saw
themselves as a film company and cameras as merely a way to sell more film
rather than tools of human creativity. Products and services come and go, but
brands are forever, and brands are defined by their emotional appeal.
Coming up with
the right brand message can be tricky. We know the motivational triggers that
people respond to, so the objective is to find the right trigger for your
company’s strategic vision and to frame it in terms that your target audience
will accept. Knowing that your audience sees itself as rationally motivated is
not an impediment to emotional motivational triggering. It is all a matter of
framing the brand and providing the right context and subtext in your
advertising and messaging initiatives, and most importantly on your website.
A Final Word
A company
without emotional subtext is a company without soul, and it’s one that will
eventually be superseded by those who understand the importance of brand and
how emotional advertising works.
Article Tags: commercials, emotional branding, marketing, saturation advertising, television, Web videos, websites
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About the Author: Jerry Bader RSS for Jerry's articles - Visit Jerry's website Jerry Bader is Senior Partner at MRPwebmedia, a website design firm that specializes in Web-audio and Web-video. Visit http://www.mrpwebmedia.com/ads, http://www.sonicpersonality.com, and http://www.136words.com. Contact at info@mrpwebmedia.com or telephone (905) 764-1246. About MRPwebmedia People ask, "What do you do?" You could say we inform, enlighten, innovate, and create; you could also say we deliver our clients' marketing messages in memorable ways using video, audio, webmedia campaigns and websites; all created in-house from concept to implementation, from graphic and motion design to Web-design, from script writing to video-production to post-production, from music composition to signature sound design. What do we do? We motivate action by speaking to your audience's real needs. We tell your story so your brand, your message, embeds in the minds of your clients. We are corporate storytellers. Click here to visit Jerry's website How Much FaceTime Does Your Website Need 8 Things That Motivate WebAudience Response Web Marketing Ideas You Can Actually Use The Brand Story Web Marketing Process Video Microsites The Brand Story Campaign Solution |
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