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Spin writers are on a pop-up kick. In the last week or so, one of
the most popular topics of Spin Board conversation was Jim
Meskauskas' "Mommy, Where Do Pop-ups Come From?"
The Spin Board member responses ranged from, "I don't care where
they came from, just send them back to where they were before
ruining my enjoyment of the Internet..." to "Obviously any
interstitial media that runs has a greater value. That's why banners
and skyscrapers are cheaper. If pop-ups or Eyeblasters or
Superstitials run, and create a more distracting environment... so
be it. The advertiser has paid a lower CPM on any media running
in-site or on the page with the content. Also, a responsibly managed
site will limit the number of interstitial units that run so there's
only something between the user and the content on 1 in 15 pages or
so."
Where do you stand on the issue? Join the debate on the Spin
Board. | |
Monday, September 9, 2002 Pop-ups
Are Here to Stay By David L.
Smith
Nielsen//NetRatings
reported last week that less than 10% of marketers use pop-ups. The
trade press, including MediaPost, iMedia and others seemed to jump on
the slant that inferred that pop-ups are turning out to be a smaller
factor than initially thought. We disagree with that conclusion.
In the first place, 10% is a significant number. For example, as of
last spring, only 10% of online ads were branding oriented. According to
eMarketer, an April 2001 Nielsen//NetRatings study reported that only
11% of online ads were branding oriented. Again, according to eMarketer,
DoubleClick reported that only 10% of online ads were branding oriented.
This does not mean that branding on the Internet won't have a
significant future.
Only one ad size has more than 10% of the market, according to
NetRatings. That's the 468x60 weighing in at 35% of all banners as of
spring 2002. The next is the 120x60 at 6% and the 475x89, 120x600 and
120x90 at 4%. Pop-ups on this measure would be 2%. This certainly does
not mean that the 120x600 is a size to bet against for the future. It
and the 250x250, along with the other newer IMUs, are the hottest
creative units going as far as growth. Pop ups will continue to grow and
be hot. Especially if true creative talents are turned loose on the
unit.
Safa Rashtchy, Senior Research Analyst Internet Media and Marketing
for US bancorp Piper Jaffray, recently issued a report, and he too
believes that "pop-ups are here to stay," as stated in his newsletter,
Silk Road Weekly.
"For advertising to be effective, it has to be intrusive" Rashtchy
wrote. Whether we like it or not, pop-ups are a "lean forward" device.
Rashtchy went on to say, "Obviously, there is a fine line beyond which
advertising may alienate consumers, and we believe the online
advertising industry is still experimenting with different levels of
intrusion to find the right balance. Just like any medium, there will be
the extreme cases where both the quantity and quality of advertising
will be excessive and distasteful. This shouldn't distract us from the
fact that mainstream publishers can also use the pop-ups in an effective
and appropriate way."
Rashtchy opined three reasons why they are "here to stay":
- Pop-ups are highly effective. We know that they get higher
click-through rates. Their conversion rates are high also. Yes, some
people hate them, but not so much that it affects the traffic on the
sites serving them.
- Major advertisers like Orbitz, Dell, Providian, Morgan Stanley and
Columbia House are among the top ten users. This shows a trend. It
won't be long before other major advertisers use pop-ups too.
- Sites banning pop-ups are in a minority and have good reason to
ban them (e.g., Google and iVillage who do not want to interrupt the
user experience). This is not likely to spread to the majors,
according to Rashtchy. And he makes a good point. After all, aren't
the highly effective rich media takeover ads that have zoomed across
sites like Yahoo!, The New York Times and CBS MarketWatch also
pop-ups, albeit much more creative than the X-10 camera ads (which we
cannot forget, still worked like crazy).
To get the full report, go to http://www.gotoanalysts.com/rashtchy.
We agree with Rashtchy. In all forms of media, intrusiveness has won
the day. After all, what's more intrusive than a TV spot?
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