All content provided by Adrants and MarketingVOX
ad:tech blog ARCHIVES

Maybe You Can Be too Rich (Media) and too Thin

Posted by Steve Hall · Tuesday November 04, 2003

Session: Rich media- Cost Justifying, Implementing and Tracking Across Flash, Pops and Overlays

I just got out of the Rich media: Cost Justifying, Implementing and Tracking Across Flash, Pops and Overlays. At first I wasn’t sure if this session would draw a crowd, as it was scheduled against Michael Tchong’s and Geoff Ramsey’s Interactive Outlook, but an enthusiastic crowd of about 60 assembled before the session began.

Rob Graham, author and founder of LearningCraft and Roy DeSouza, president of Zedo, kept the room engaged. When I asked Rob what the key to success in rich media was, he told me it was back to the basics: “You have to develop the right message to the right customer.” He went on to say, “The beauty of it is human behavior. You can track and measure like never before.”

Some topline stats they shared:
            Seconds     % Who View   Consumer Attention
Banner gif       0.6           48%          0.3
Flash Popunder   2.6           87%          2.3
Overlay         10             90%          9.0

No matter the stats, we have to take Rob’s comment on targeting to heart. As a media person, I always look at the lowest common denominator when planning. The “duh” factor here is don’t interrupt of intrude. Roy and Rob commented on those advertisers who miss the boat on this.

The audience tended to ask very detailed questions in relation to the speakers viewpoint of Flash technology, as well as Flash usage. It’s funny, but it seems like each session I attended had groups of people slamming Flash.

Roy commented on the use of microsites. He compared an interactive ad to that of a microsite. But he warned that marketers have to first ask themselves why they are trying driving someone to a microsite in the first place. It will sometimes serve only as a distraction from real campaign objectives. It can certainly be an undesirable distraction to the user.

The bottom line them for the session was that making an “impact” is not the same as intruding into the normal course of the viewer’s Internet experience.  And yes, you certainly can be too “rich.”

Related topics: SF 04, Track 2: Advertising and Promotion
MarketingVOX Sponsor

Add Comment






Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Email this Story to a Friend







ad:tech home
ad:tech schedule
ad:tech speakers
contact ad:tech

twitter_160x150.gif

ad:tech on Twitter


    Archives

    new york 08 conference info
    new york 08 sessions
    new york 08 keynotes
    new york 08 exhibit hall
    new york 08 parties

    chicago 08 conference info
    chicago 08 sessions
    chicago 08 keynotes
    chicago 08 exhibit hall
    chicago 08 parties

    miami 08 conference info
    miami 08 sessions
    miami 08 keynotes
    miami 08 exhibit hall
    miami 08 parties

    sf 08 conference info
    sf 08 sessions
    sf 08 keynotes
    sf 08 exhibit hall
    sf 08 parties

    new york 07 conference info
    new york 07 sessions
    new york 07 keynotes
    new york 07 exhibit hall
    new york 07 parties

    chicago 07 conference info
    chicago 07 sessions
    chicago 07 keynotes
    chicago 07 exhibit hall
    chicago 07 parties

    miami 07 conference info
    miami 07 sessions
    miami 07 keynotes
    miami 07 exhibit hall
    miami 07 parties

    sf 07 conference info
    sf 07 sessions
    sf 07 speakers
    sf 07 exhibit hall
    sf 07 parties

    ny 06 conference info
    ny 06 sessions
    ny 06 keynotes
    ny 06 exhibit hall
    ny 06 parties


    ch 06 conference info
    ch 06 sessions
    ch 06 keynotes
    ch 06 exhibit hall
    ch 06 parties


    sf 06 conference info
    sf 06 sessions
    sf 06 keynotes
    sf 06 exhibit hall
    sf 06 parties

    impact series

    ad:tech rss feed


    about this site

    dmg world media owns ad:techblog and has contracted MarketingVOX and Adrants to produce the content. MarketingVOX and Adrants maintain complete editorial independence and assume full responsibility for editorial and advertising content.