Internet to replace television, print and radio in 2010

Posted: March 18, 2009 in Online advertising
Tags: , , , , , ,

 

media usage change over time

media usage change over time

I recently showed this image to a marketer of a traditional tea brand. The chart clearly shows the year that the Internet will wipe out television, print and analogue radio as consumer’s preferred media. That year is 2010. By 2020, all media will have converged into pure digital platforms. 

Isobar, the agency who made this chart, believe we (as in Western countries) are already at the tipping point which started in last year and is continuing now. We can see the change happening all around us. Here in Britain, Virgin Media is pushing broadband rates up to the stratosphere by installing fiber optics to the houses, otherwise known as the crucial last 10 yards that currently limits many people’s broadband speeds. Current broadband rates are at 20mB/sec in some places (though naturally real speeds vary dramatically). Basically though, it’s already fast enough to stream HD quality movies in realtime. This largely explains the phenomenal success of BBC’s iPlayer. 

As media converge online to the point where digital media accounts for over 80% of media consumed, the distinctions between different types of advertising will disappear.  Branding, direct, print, TV – will become a seamless marketing continuum. 

However, even though there will be more opportunities for online operators to put advertising messages in front of consumers as people start consuming the majority of their entertainment/ infotainment and services online, the challenge to create a measurable impact with them will be greater than any marketers have faced before. Being able to filter, ignore and even bypass ads will be easier than ever.

1998 eye tracking study by Future Lab

1998 eye tracking study by Future Lab

Already by 1998, a mere couple of years after banner ads become serious business, consumers subconsciously started to ignore online ad media. During this time, the average click rate for a banner was around the 2.3% mark. Over the years, most sites blindly stuck to their guns and kept the same formats and placements year after year, to the point where the average click rate has now dropped to 0.03%. How anyone in their right mind can claim this to be a reasonable or effective CTR is beyond me, and it should be beyond you as well. 

Simply put, if you are still using classical online ad strategies of buying banners, skys, leaderboards and whatever, you will continue to see your ROI erode to the point you might as well go back to buying those unaccountable television ads again. Your digital strategy needs to adopt with the times. Online ads are no longer a viable option. Instead, you should be looking at other options such as creating branded entertainment or branded utilities which bypass the consumer’s filtering process and engages them with value adding interactions.

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Comments
  1. It’s actually quite funny that new means of online advertising are closely followed by new means of avoiding online advertising.

    Maybe we should go back even further in time and start using the “really” traditional ways of marketing/advertising: direct mail delivered by snail mail (hey, did you remember the Postal Service still exists?), clever inserts between trade magazines and so forth? Perhaps write the odd sales letter every now and then?

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