Ad Sense and Sensibility

September 12th, 20078:26 pm @ Ian Delaney

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I use Ad-Block Plus. I have done since I first heard of it, a couple of years ago. I think it’s brilliant. I think ads on the Internet are annoying and intrusive and that they fundamentally don’t work – I either don’t look at them, or I want them out of my face, or I resent the bandwidth they’re sucking up. The only time I turn it off is when I am shopping. On those occasions, sponsored links seem pretty much as likely to yield relevant results as organic search.

Yeah, but Ian, you’re killing the web.

I wha…?

Yeah. You see all the sites you use – YouTube and Google and the Guardian and all those blog publishers. They’re sustained by advertising. Especially the web 2.0 sites that you’re constantly banging on about.

But I don’t click on them. And I don’t look at them. And I hate them.

Doesn’t matter. The media owners sell them by the thousand page views – CPM – if you don’t load the ad, then they don’t get paid.

So loading ads that I hate, don’t look at and never click on is better?

Of course it isn’t. There are some false analogies been drawn here. This isn’t the equivalent of free riding – avoiding paying your ticket on public transport so everyone else has to pay for you when the fare prices go up. It’s not even like reading someone else’s newspaper over their shoulder because you’re too mean to buy your own. Advertising is not a necessity to me: it maybe to you, media owner or brand manager, but I don’t care. For me, and most people, being forced to look at adverts is more like the cinema scene in A Clockwork Orange where Alex has his eyes pinned open and is subjected to an endless barrage of images of grotesque cruelty.

The big argument seems to be that the free web depends on advertising. That the democratic access to publishing that the blog revolution and web 2.0 allows means that sites that gather a readership can make money. That you can start your own publishing company, like weblogs.inc, gawker or shiny, without having major capital backing from the start. You know what? I couldn’t give a shit. What makes you think that you should earn money even though your publication preferences are different from my consumption preferences? I owe you nothing, online publisher. Eat it down.

How about this.

(a) Instead of advertising, media owners and service owners go for a paid model. If their stuff is good enough, people will pay. I pay for several magazines on subscription, and a lot more on a whim; I would do the same for content of similar quality and relevance on the web. Many professional journals already operate on this model. Make your stuff worth something to me. Similarly, I pay for a lot of the software I use on my computer – of course I’d pay for software of the same quality on the web. This is the Internet, of course, though, which has historically been free of commerce – there will be free alternatives to what you offer. So raise your game and make it better: if you’re doing this full-time, then it ought to be a hell of a lot better than what us hobbyists can produce.

(b) If brands want to interact with me, then they give me something of value. Money (or money-off, a more realistic scenario) normally does the trick. As do freebies. Helpful information or services might work. Sometimes even a cool video or a flash game might be enough. Probably, if people were clever, then they’d work with popular online publishers to make people aware of this good stuff. That’s not an endorsement of advertorial: if the stuff is good and relevant, then it will deserve editorial attention.

(c) Brands could maybe divert their advertising budgets to improving their products. Good stuff really gets my attention – and when I see a recommendation that seems to be heartfelt, I’ll take a lot of notice. It screws your copycat business? Oh dear – don’t care.

Elsewhere: Simon Collister reckons that Ad-Block Plus is simply complementing our natural abilities: “even before those devices existed we were blocking TV adverts by getting up to make a cup of tea or switching over to another channel”. Mark Evans – director of a blog network – says “If you believe in Web 2.0 and/or if you believe in the concept of free, Adblock is pure evil“. Nick Carr has forsaken the plug-in for the sake of seeing the web as it is, although he’s “pretty sure that Jesus would use Adblock Plus”. Kent Newsome agrees that better content and services are the answer, though perhaps not for bloggers: “Mechanics don’t have to give away their services, because they provide a service people will pay for”. Umair Haque agrees that advertising is simply not as valuable as the content it surrounds and thus fails: “Marketers, as we’ve pointed out before, have to figure out how to make ‘ads’ that benefit people”. Alan Patrick – in an unusually romantic moment – reckons sites that tone down the intrusiveness of their ads might enter into “some form of handshake arrangement” with readers.

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