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In Defense of Facebook Advertising

by Linda Prodigy(March 13th) (rank 28th)
 
 
From a recent WebProNews article by Chris Crum called Curing Banner Blindness:

Many people think that banner advertising on the Internet is all but dead. They cite things like "banner blindness" and lack of conversions.

I'll say this: Poor and ineffective banner advertising is dead. And guess what. It was never alive to begin with. Banner advertising itself is alive and well. Why else do you think you still see it everywhere?

Yes, "banner blindness" exists, but your job as an advertiser is to cure it. This means coming up with an ad that people can't help but acknowledge.

Chris Crum goes on to explain that your ad must command attention, but doesn't have to be bells-and-whistles to be effective. Sometimes simple is better.

But I had a "can-I-get-an-Amen!?" moment at this paragraph:

It's Not Just About the Clicks

Of course, clicks and conversions aren't the only important factors in banner advertising. The branding that banner ads can provide can be much more valuable than an immediate conversion. And if you advertise in the right place, it can build your reputation in the subconcious of potential customers. "Advertising in a reputable network can be of great advantage to a small company. This leads to building credibility which will lead to sales in the long run," says Coppersmith. "You're often perceived to be as good as the company you keep."

Even if they ignore your ad as a result of "banner blindness", that doesn't mean that your company isn't leaving an impression in the back of their mind. Perhaps they don't have a need for you right then anyway. But should the need for what you provide arise in the future, they just might recall seeing your logo somewhere and associate you with that very need. Isn't that priceless?


Thank you!

How much does a magazine ad cost? Thousands of dollars or more, right? Can you click and convert immediately through a magazine, television or radio ad? How about a sporting event sponsorship or the side of a bus? No! The ad is there to build brand and influence a customer subconsciously.

Where are people spending a lot of time online? Social networks! And people spend a lot of time in Facebook - for some, even more than watching TV or reading the newspaper.

Even though on social networks a person is not actively looking for products and services like in a search engine, is that there are not a ton of ads competing for your attention. With organic search plus PPC ads, you're barraged with text-only results, up to 20 options per page. A Facebook ad competes with what you're doing, but it stands alone.

Facebook has the ability to deliver geo-targeted and demographically targeted ads. (Whether it executes this well is another story, I've seen US offers shown to me here in Canada, which could be poor set-up by the advertiser or a glitch in Facebook's system).

So if you're going to use Facebook for branding:
  • Select a Pay-Per-Click model - if nobody clicks that's GOOD, you still get free branding.
  • Do geo-target your ads, and target demographically and psychographically as much as you can.
  • Make your name, logo, web URL and/or physical address clear on your ad. Combine this brand messaging rather than a specific offer or call-to-action.
  • Ads in the newsfeed are more likely to be noticed, as they are slipped in with information about friends - but they are also likely to be despised as intrusive by Facebook users.
  • Ads on games like Scrabulous can be effective because they are large, but when someone is playing a Scrabulous move, he/she is not going to click your offer but will see your ad. Make it beautiful and memorable.
For many smaller companies, entrepreneurs, retailers and web 2.0 startups who can't afford traditional media, Facebook is still cheap branding!

 
 

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Re: In Defense of Facebook Advertising

silk-merchant
5.00 (Excellent) Vote: WOW! WOW! WOW! WOW! WOW!

March 14th

This is destined to be one of those perpetual arguments, so, stirrer that I am, I'll give the pot a big twirl.

Note: Place tongue in cheek now, and put down the red bull, before what I'm about to say busts a valve.

Thinking that anyone, as an advertiser, can cure "banner blindness" is incredibly naive.

It smacks of old school marketing (and ego) that believes that, as marketers and advertisers, we can control the online user.

People who believe this have completely missed the point of the online world and the online customer.

Online, it is the customers who are in control. They decide everything. What they do, what they look at etc.

So there is nothing to cure. There is nothing wrong with the customer.

They have chosen en masse to be blind to banners.

Respect their choice.

To think that there is something wrong with them that must be cured, is unbelievably patronising to customers.

Now where did I put my flak jacket?

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Re: In Defense of Facebook Advertising

RobTaylor
Vote:

March 21st

I think you bring up some good points here.

Sometimes, you dont REALLY care if people click on your ad.  You are much more interested in getting a name/brand to be recognized so that when the time comes that you do offer your service, they have heard of your company before, and a small amount of acceptance becomes the foundation upon which you can then make the sell.
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Re: In Defense of Facebook Advertising

angieh
Vote:

March 13th

Those are some really interesting ideas. I'm not sure how you would try to convince a client that their ad that hasn't been converting well is good because it helps with their branding though.
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