Thursday, November 22, 2012

Is display advertising still the safest option?

An article by WebProNews raises an interesting question - will brands shift focus away from Facebook?

The WebProNews piece which can be read in full here points out "There has been quite a bit of controversy, especially in recent weeks, about how many of Page's updates are making it to their fans' News Feeds, as Facebook pushes its monetization efforts (like promoted posts), which are essential to make shareholders happy." Further on and quoting from another blog "Defining engagement by clicks, likes, shares, unlikes and reporting works for Google's search engine, I don't believe it works for a social network."

And while Facebook has always been the biggest dilemma in what it really offers, look what has happened to Twitter. The function of Twitter is more immediately obvious as a means of sending news headlines optionally linked to the full story published on your blog or Virtual News Office. But the Lord McAlpine issue demonstrates the importance of keeping to the law in what is written and passed on in the public domain. 

Perhaps not surprising that many clients, even those experimenting with social media, still maintain a significant share of the marketing communications budget in display advertising in the traditional trade press. There is safety here particularly that advertising is going to appear associated with industry relevant editorial copy - content that is not going to lead to legal recrimination. Of course the voices of those selling online advertising regard print advertising as archaic and lacking the trackability of online pay per click advertising for example. Much depends on where your audience goes for information. Are they still reading printed publications? Do they influence and cultivate views and opinions on what is going on in the market and who are the important companies in that sector? At a stage when not actively researching products or yet ready to make a purchase, magazines remain a convenient way to keep in touch and seeing advertisements and press coverage remains an important part of that function. When ready to check out possible vendors for a product,  then it is time to turn to Google, but not turning to search for a generic product but as a quick means of going directly to already familiar brand names - thanks to awareness from that display advertising.
 


 

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