my world for just a bag of crap
16 Oct
Two things caught my eye in the news today:
1) Yahoo is reporting that man has eaten a 15 pound hamburger:
A related search turned up some interesting facts. A regular 100 gram hamburger patty has 259 calories and 16.3 grams of fat. Now, I’m no math expert, but it seems to me that 15 pounds of the stuff contains roughly 17,612 calories and 1,108 grams of fat. That’s more than a large movie theater popcorn.
2) Google has launched a new WYSIWYG Display Ad Builder:
Yes, this is far more on topic for this blog. But, come on, that hamburger was pretty impressive, wasn’t it?
The new Display Ad Builder comes at an interesting time when the perceived value of online display inventory is on a huge upswing. Typically a branding move with expected low rates of directly resulting conversions, banner ads are nevertheless coming back into vogue.
In my opinion, this is only further evidence of the declining value of vanity websites for commerce. Let’s face it, most internet users are past falling for a fancy web design, a flashy animation, or a sparkling logo. They want information. For small businesses in particular, the more concise that information is displayed the better. Look at Google/Yahoo to see that this is true. Up to 50% of a search results page for most every local business search is occupied by local business ads. That’s because this is primo inventory. It gets clicked (makes the search engines money) and converts (makes the advertiser money, too). That’s partially because it is so local in nature, and specific to the search query. But, it is also because the resulting pages are well formatted for conversion— prominently featuring the phone number, email address, etc. Vanity websites typically aren’t so well formatted for conversion, that’s for sure.
So, with less emphasis being put on developing fancy websites, more budget is becoming available for other marketing. There are only so many explicit searches happening for “Seattle Electrician”, but there are literally thousands of contextually relevant sites where a banner ad might display to get some extra eyes on your business. It may not convert all that well, but it may have long term benefits including driving up your CTR and conversion rates from other media.
And, don’t forget, Google has long been looking for ways to better utilize all of this available inventory. Content match has had a terrible reputation— mostly because advertisers failed to understand the idea of it being “CPC-priced CPM inventory” rather than more typical click-to-conversion trackable traffic.
So, what do you think? Would you use it? Google’s betting on it and will do everything in their power to help you get around any roadblocks preventing you from trying. Too cheap to pay a graphic designer? Try the banner builder. I did, and it is pretty cool.
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