One particular point stood out to me in last week's digital marketing class, and that was that display media is making a comeback. In 2008, I left Razorfish to go work for a small boutique web design agency, and at that time, paid search was "king". As an SEM manager, life was easy in the sense that budget was rarely an issue - it was hard to argue against devoting more $$ to paid search as it proved time and time again to the be the most efficient use of the advertising dollar. Sure, sometimes there was tension between display and search execs in this regard, but we just weren't at the point yet where we could leverage true synergies between the two forms of advertising. Clearly, since that time, things have changed as Professor Kagan explained during last week's class that display media has found ways to be highly efficient (primarily through more and more sophisticated targeting). What I find curious, however, is the willingness of companies to be "boxed in" to standardized IAB ad formats. I know I'm probably wrong, but I really don't believe I've ever clicked on a display ad unit. I don't even notice them. That is the downside of being a "pusher", and not a "puller". It is somewhat mind boggling to me that a group of marketers decided on some grid formats for the internet a while back and we're all subjected to these standard units now that are almost impossible to change due to the headaches created by attempted deviation. I worked on a project with Barry Diller and Tina Brown called theDailyBeast.com, a curated news aggregation site, and we tried to break the mold by refusing to partake in the standard ad unit model and instead created a production heavy, micro-site flavored ad serving structure where "engagement" was the primary metric. In theory, this approach was enticing, though in execution, it still couldn't compete with the CPM rates and efficiencies standardization brought. I leave the class with the question, how sustainable is it to force all display advertising to follow the IAB approach? Is advertising going to become really targeted, but really boring?
Read more...