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Why paid advertising is not the future of web marketing

Adrian Adrian McDermott March 23rd, 2009


This guest post on TechCrunch  by Eric Clemons I found really thought-provoking. It is quite a long and detailed argument, pointing out step-by-step not only why advertising is failing on the Internet at present, but why it is bound to fail in the longer run. It’s well worth reading in its entirety, but I’ll just give a summary in case you’re in a hurry.

Clemons says that advertising revenues are falling in the mainstream media because people don’t really trust advertising and don’t particularly want it. For example, broadcast networks put on their advertising the same time so that viewers can’t switch channels to avoid it. Even AdWords, Google’s big revenue source, depends on misdirection, or at least the threat of it. And location-based advertising, pushing messages that you are very likely to want because of where you are, the content of your recent e-mails, where your friends go etc, he thinks will also fail because of the trust issue.

It could be argued that the decline in advertising revenues in conventional media is a natural response to the increasing diversity of information sources, and that Clemons is overstating the user’s role in it, but I think there would be a smokescreen. The real point is that users have more of a choice of ways to find out more about any service or product for themselves, which weakens the persuasiveness of advertising content hugely.

To give my own take on Clemons’s argument, the fact is that advertising clearly works best where information is restricted. Where information is free, easily available, and easy to select and compare, users can easily select between information they trust and information that they don’t. A recommendation by friends or from clearly neutral sources has an inherently higher value. So, as social platforms are more and more popular, their role in disseminating information becomes increasingly important.

We’re certainly not the only people saying that the key is to be authentic, and offer users the information they want when they want it. But Clemons’s critique of the paid advertising model makes the most cogent case for this that I have seen to date. To put it in a nutshell, there are two clear consequences, one for marketing, one for PR. In marketing, the point is to engage the prospect more directly, openly and personally, using the best tools and content you can. In PR, same thing, different target, i.e. the blogger, commentator or analyst rather than the prospect. That’s got to be good for the market, the vendor and the customer.

Tags: AdWords, Eric Clemons, Social media, TechCrunch

This entry was posted on Monday, March 23rd, 2009 at 8:50 am and is filed under Blogging & media. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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