SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Enterprise Infrastructure >> Systems Management

Ads ad nauseum

Ads ad nauseum

By:  Mark Gibbbs  On: 26 Feb 2004 For: Channelworld India 
 

There's been a lot of discussion recently about pop-up ads on Web pages -- you know, those browser windows that spring up (or under -- yes, yes, I know they are pop-unders, but work with me people) when you go to certain sites.

However you look at them, these things are amazingly annoying. They always seem to come in waves and killing one usually generates another, and yet another.

For some time there have been pop-ups that spawn browser windows that try to stay hidden (pop-outs?). These pop-outs generate new visible pop-ups when you kill off a visible pop-up in an attempt to stay "in your face." This tactic seems to have started with pornography sites but has been filtering out into mainstream advertising.

Whether you are for or against pop-ups depends on where you sit in the Internet food chain -- advertisers and advertising executives seem to be "for" while the rest of the world would vote "against."

Now some of you advertising people out there might bristle at my characterization of the rest of the world being against pop-ups, but there is evidence to back this up: A GartnerG2, a division of Gartner Inc., consumer survey of 2,667 Internet users conducted in July 2002 found that 78.3 per cent of respondents called pop-up ads "very annoying" and 12 per cent use ad-blocking software.

So, why are pop-ups still being used if a significant number of people hate them? Simple. It's because they work. On average, the click-through rates for pop-ups are almost twice that of banner ads (although I have seen it theorized that this is because users don't know how to get rid of them and click in the pop-up window by accident causing a click-through to be registered). People who sell advertising also like pop-up ads because they cost at least twice as much as banner ads.

What has really stimulated the discussion on the future of pop-ups is the forthcoming release of Microsoft Corp.'s Internet Explorer with built-in pop-up suppression. No matter that you can do the same thing with any number of add-on utilities, that the feature is built into the Opera Web browser and that the Google tool bar kills 'em off very nicely and for free. Nope, with Microsoft showing that it is willing to go to bat on behalf of consumers, the death knell for pop-ups can be heard in the distance.

Of course, that leaves a vacuum, a thing that nature and advertisers abhor. So with the alacrity that can only be achieved when large amounts of money are at stake, coming soon to a Web browser on your desktop will be television-style advertising videos. This will mean that, should you happen to visit MSN, ESPN, Lycos or iVillage in the near future, you can expect to see these kinds of ads from PepsiCo Inc., Honda Motor Co. Ltd., Vonage Holdings Corp. and Warner Brothers Entertainment Inc.

The video ads are provided by technology from a company called Unicast Communications Corp. The commercials are loaded in the background and then displayed when the user tries to move to a new page. The display is claimed to be television quality even for dial-up users, and Unicast says the system is immune to pop-up blockers.


Sign up for our Newsletters

 












Print |  Views: 826   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Mark Gibbbs Mark Gibbbs is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

Recent Canadian IT Jobs




Related Content

Mozilla enlisted in antitrust suit against Microsoft
Mozilla enlisted in antitrust suit against MicrosoftThe European Commission has given the maker of Firefox an 'interested third party' status in the antitrust suit against Microsoft
Andreessen: Microsoft to make IE more competitive
Andreessen: Microsoft to make IE more competitiveThe success of alternative browsers such as Mozilla Foundation's Firefox may ultimately have an unexpected side effect, causing Microsoft Corp. to be more aggressive in leveraging its dominance of Internet client software, said Marc Andreessen.
What is wrong with this?
What is wrong with this?Microsoft Corp. is in the news again for living up to the image that too many people have of the company.
Microsoft Convergence Day 4
microsoft opened the door ever so slightly on its research. much of the technology such as speech recognition, image enhancement and visioning has been around. gis companies such as esri have been working on visual mapping for a long time. googleearth has a brought this to the consumer, however if you read between the lines the microsoft technology behind the demos goes beyond what we as consumer
Microsoft lures Canadian ID management expert to Redmond
microsoft has managed to hire a canadian entrepreneur whose pioneering work in identity management may lead a lot more people to find out wh
Kevin Johnson's soft landing
kevin johnson -- whether he jumped or was pushed from his perch at microsoft -- must be breathing easier today, and not because he's landed the ceo gig at network gear manufacturer juniper netwoks effective september.joh
blog comments powered by Disqus