
On this day in 1994, HotWired.com made Internet history by becoming the first online publisher to display a banner ad. The unit was 468 x 60 pixels and was purchased by either Volvo, MCI, Club Med, Zima, 1-800-Collect or AT&T, all of which reportedly bought ad space that fateful day. The AT&T version above asked/promised, "Have you ever clicked your mouse right here? You will."
If the copywriter were given a do-over today, he or she might change the line to, "You will, for a few years anyway."
To say the banner ad has had an ignominious childhood and adolescence is to understate consumers' loathing for it. The format has been equated with deception and sleaze to such an extent that it's reputation today is worse than any other ad medium suffered at a similar stage of development. To make matters worse, the effectiveness of display ads has steadily declined on nearly every metric: click rates, interaction rates, brand recall, you name it.
Of course banners have had a few good moments along the way. Apple's "Get a Mac" campaign broke ground by synchronizing ad space on NYTimes.com. IBM brought live video chat to banner space. GE, American Express, and Pringles also come to mind as great banner ad brands.
And luckily, the banner's fortunes are bound to improve. No sane person would argue display advertising is endangered, however much they may hate IAB standard formats. More to the point: The past year or two have brought some striking developments in display media, which collectively promise to help this awkward teenager finally learn to drive like an upstanding medium.
A sampling of those developments, as reported on ClickZ:
-IAB Seeks Creative Rebirth for Banner Ads
-OPA Hopes to Spur Greater Creativity with New Ad Units
-Agencies Break Away From Ad Networks
-Google's Ad Exchange Opens for Business
-Study: Financial Display Ads Need More Human Touch
Posted by Zachary Rodgers at 2:21 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
Sadly, most of us have grown accustomed to seeing some pretty nasty images in online ads. Flabby bellies, yellow teeth, dominatrix chickens.
Well, I may have stumbled on the most bizarre, indeed grossest image yet. Today, while doing research on Facebook for a story (believe it or not, I actually do story research there), I stumbled upon a woman shaving.
Not her legs. Not her underarms. Not her...um...Her face!

OK, now unfortunately I've heard about some women doing this, but do I really need the pictorial?
We can thank American Laser Centers for this ad, which links to a lead gen page promoting free laser hair removal.
Oh, and please excuse my headline. I guess I've been inspired by the New York Post.
Posted by Kate Kaye at 12:13 PM | Permalink | Comments (2)
Gawker Scammed By Malware Crew Pretending To Be Suzuki Ad scam is similar to one put over on the New York Times recently. Take an extra few minutes to read the WHOLE thread and comments section. (Business Insider)
Wall Street optimistic on ad outlook (Hollywood Reporter)
TopTenReviews Buys Space.com Tech product review site now owns Space.com, LiveScience.com and Newsarama.com after deal with consumer media division of Imaginova Inc.
Tourism Queensland disses 'Best Job' shop Agency behind winningest campaign at Cannes Lions is snubbed. (AdFreak)
Online Rally May Sidestep Newspapers (NYTimes.com)
Publicis sees better Q4 after Q3 sales fall (Reuters)
IAC Reports Profit but Ad Revenue Slips (NYTimes.com
Posted by Zachary Rodgers at 9:46 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)
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