Banner Ads Must Die!!!

Banner Ads Must Die!!! image the walking dead s4 e16 zombies 636 380 300x179.jpgBy , Published November 2, 2014

Earlier this week I was asked for my view on which marketing tactic is like “The Walking Dead” of marketing.

I was honored to be included on the list of contributors along with amazing thought leaders in marketing like Ann Handley, Joe Pulizzi, Doug Kessler, Neil Patel and more.

They suggested some outdated marketing tactics including over-promotion, quantity over quality and a lack of courage. And those are all good ones.

My advice of which marketing tactic was like the walking dead: banner ads!!!

Banners. Must. Die!!!

Why it needs to die: They simply don’t work. Your customers ignore them. Your future customers might even hate you for interrupting their content experiences. The only reason spending on banner advertising is not dying faster is because marketers are shifting money from traditional marketing (print, radio, TV) to digital formats. But click through rates on banners are less than .1% (0.08% is the average) in most industries. Eye-tracking studies show that everyone ignores them so even for branding and awareness, this tactic is hard to justify.

Banner Ads Must Die!!! image banner blindness 300x1711.jpg

What marketers should do, instead: Marketers need to shift their banner ad investments into brand content marketing experiences. Why interrupt what your customers want, when you can be what your customers want?

Consider the stats:

  • You are 31 times more likely to win the lottery than to have someone click on your banner ad (Business Insider).
  • You are 112 times more likely to complete US Navy Seal training than to have someone click on your banner ad (Business Insider).
  • You are 475 times more likely to survive a plan crash than to have someone click on your banner ad (Business Insider).
  • Around 31% of ad impressions can’t be viewed by users. (Comscore)
  • 8% of Internet users account for 85 percent of clicks. (ComScore)
  • 50% of clicks on mobile banner ads are accidental. (GoldSpot Media)
  • Kraft rejects 75% to 85% of ad impressions due to fraud, quality and other issues (AdAge)

So while banner advertising still represents about 19% of online advertising, and that figure grew in dollar terms from the prior year, the share of banner advertising is slipping (down from 21% the year before.)

I believe there’s still hope that we will abandon this zombie marketing tactic. What about you?


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