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Neil Perkin


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July 16, 2012

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Stijn Debrouwere

But that's the crux, isn't it? For publishers, online advertising is the thing everyone hates but that we tolerate because it pays the bills. But with these low rates we're seeing, it doesn't pay for very much anymore (if it ever did) and so there will come a point when the revenue/annoyance ratio as well as total revenues will be so low that people will start to wonder, do I really want to pollute my website with this nonsense if it brings in less than six figures a year?

At the local media company I work for, for example, our (online) job listings and daily deals bring in more money than online advertising does. Daily deals may turn out to be a fad, and things are not yet so skewed that we can just dump online advertising, but who's to say that moment won't arrive five or ten years from now?

'Fcuz, you're right, it's a different game for Facebook and Google who can really play the scale game.

Maybe more importantly though, when I see people talking about the death of advertising, what I really hear is not a scientific argument but rather a plea: "advertising sucks, let's invent something new." I really hope we do.

matt dailey

Hi Neil, interesting development on this is the continued potential development of greater privacy protection rules that could impact all targeted online advertising and ironically only leave that which is booked on a scattergun approach. I have read that IE10 will require users to opt in to see targeted advertising, so this could have a massive impact on volume and even agency owned networks. This will benefit the other targeting types such as Contextual and will also mean that advertisers will have to rely on engagement and the spreading of the brand message through social channels.

neilperkin

@Matt yes, good point. Certainly an interesting added dynamic to it all

free advertising

At the local media company I work for, for example, our (online) job listings and daily deals bring in more money than online advertising does. Daily deals may turn out to be a fad, and things are not yet so skewed that we can just dump online advertising, but who's to say that moment won't arrive five or ten years from now?

Vail Website Design

Interesting development on this is the continued potential development of greater privacy protection rules that could impact all targeted online advertising and ironically only leave that which is booked on a scattergun approach.

advertising on web

The internet is about freedom, and I suspect that a truly free population will not be held captive and forced to watch ads. We always knew that freedom comes at a price perhaps the price of internet freedom and the failure of ads will be paying a fair price for the content and the experience and the recommendations that we value.

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