Marketers have online advertising utterly backward in their thinking, according to Dean Donaldson, digital experience strategist for campaign-management firm Eyeblaster.
âThe entire industry has made itself about click-through rates to justify why you would spend money on online advertising at all,â he said. âThe value of branding and direct response online has been locked down into click-throughs.â
He added that most purchases driven by online advertising donât happen as the result of clicks.
âWhen people are searching for information online, theyâre building up awareness. Theyâre looking for ratings mechanisms,â he said. âThen they take that information and go buy in a shop.â
Donaldsonâs comments come on the heels of a study by Microsoftâs Atlas Institute contending that by focusing on sites that drive clicks, most online marketers ignore the awareness and brand-building effects of ads customers saw before the sale.
In a study of more than 17 million online conversions resulting from the campaigns of 250 advertisers across thousands of sites over 90 days, Microsoftâs Atlas Institute found that the average converter was exposed to 18.5 of the marketerâs ads in within 90 days before the campaigns.
According to Eyeblasterâs Donaldson, the whole online advertising industry is flawed.
âIf youâre talking about shampoo, P&G is the largest advertiser in the world, but no oneâs going to buy shampoo online,â he said. âWhoâs going to look for a shampoo micro-site?â
However, he said, branding online has evolved to the point where it can be done better than through television.
âTVâs got two senses involved: sight and sound. Sight and sound connected with emotions more powerfully than radio, which was just sound,â he said. âNow weâve got sight, sound and touch. If you give people the ability to tough and feel, theyâre more likely to remember and theyâre more likely to purchase whether the purchase happens offline or online.â
When someone interacts with a brand online, Donaldson said, it helps nudge them along the path to purchase.
âItâs driving results; itâs just not driving clicks,â he said.
As a result, Donaldson added, he has been explaining to clients that their focus should shift away from being mainly concerned with developing ad formats that drive clicks.
âInstead, it [should be] replaced with: âHow do we get new formats to drive an experience which is going to drive actual results, irrespective of the actual click or not?ââ he said.
Donaldson added the focus on click-throughs is ad-agency driven.
âThe agencies tell us all the client is looking at are click-throughs,â he said. âAnd we say: âWell, theyâre only looking at click-throughs because you told them to.â If all weâre talking about are clicks and the clicks arenât leading to conversions then their only option is to pull the campaign.â
Donaldson said some publishers have begun offering visitors branding experiences without them ever having to click away from the sitesâdisplaying branded wallpaper around the perimeter of the page, for example.
âThe old way of thinking was: âWe donât want things to intrude into our content because people are going to get upset,ââ he said. âBut the last thing they want is for people to leave their sites. And if you look at it from a user standpoint, the declining click-through is proof that users donât want to leave the site.â
He added: âIf you let people explore and play around whilst within your environment, they can have an experience which will help drive those emotional connections and drive conversions.â
He also said consumers are increasingly aware of the tradeoff between free content and ads and, as a result, are increasingly less annoyed by advertising online.
âPeople have realized that content costs money to create and they donât want to pay for subscriptions,â he said. âPeople are less offended than they once were.â




