Study: It’s More Effective to Advertise Online Than On TV

This doesn’t make a lot of sense to me:

Every £1 spent on print advertisements yields £5 in revenue,
compared with £2.15 for television and £3.44 for online advertising, a
study of 26 leading UK retailers found.

In other words, the advertising hierarchy goes like this: Print >Online>TV. I hope this is true! After all, online advertising pays my rent. But I can’t imagine it is.

I just conducted a quick non-scientific study of some bloggers behind
me. “What’s your favorite online ad?” I asked. They wrinkled their
foreheads, gazed off into space, and looked somewhat lost for a few
seconds. “Exactly,” I said. “I can name my favorite TV ads,” one said apologetically.
“Exactly,” I said again.

The study was conducted my Microsoft advertising, which “recommended
retailers increased online and print advertising
budgets by 10 per cent and decreased television budgets by that
amount.” Since Microsoft’s online products like Bing would profit from
an uptick in online advertising, this sounds like a classic example of consider the source. The Times dutifully points out that this study differs from larger professional surveys.

I don’t have access to the findings, but it seems to me that a little
bit of intuition goes a long way. Television advertisements take up the
whole screen. They play. They have volume and live-motion and stories
and punch-lines. Even if online advertisements are more “targeted,”
most web ads capture our attention the way the frame around an oil
painting stands out to the viewer. TV ads interrupt with stories.
Online ads just hang around the perimeter.




Email this Article
Add to digg
Add to Reddit
Add to Twitter
Add to del.icio.us
Add to StumbleUpon
Add to Facebook