You have probably noticed that across the Web,
two different things are happening right now:
- More and more sites are asking you to pay
a fee to subscribe to all or part of the Web
site.
- Advertising is becoming more and more "in
your face." There are now pop-up ads, ads that
play music and sound tracks, ads that swim across
the screen, and so on.
The second trend is true of nearly all commercial
Web sites. There are many new forms of Web advertising,
and they are more and more obvious. Many Web users
have questions about all of these new ad types.
For example:
- Why do Web sites have so many ads now?
- Why do Web sites allow pop-up ads that open
new windows? (Many people hate closing them
all.)
- Why do Web sites allow these floating ads
that cover the content so I cannot read it?
- How can I make all these ads go away?
In this edition of HowStuffWorks,
we will look at all the different forms of Web advertising
in use today, as well as the economics that are
driving them, so that you can have a much better
understanding of how Web advertising works. Whether
you are a casual surfer or someone running your
own Web site, you will find this article to be a
real eye-opener.
In the Beginning:
Banner Ads
When the Web first started being a "commercial
endeavor" around 1997 or so, thousands of new
sites were born and billions of dollars in venture
capital flowed into them. The sites divided into
two broad categories:
- E-commerce sites - E-commerce
sites sell things. E-commerce sites make their
money from the products they sell, just like
a brick-and-mortar store does.
- Content sites - Content sites create
or collect content (words, pictures, video,
etc.) for readers to look at. Content Web sites
make their money primarily from advertising,
like TV
stations, radio
stations and newspapers.

A typical banner ad at
the top of the page
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In the beginning, "advertising" on the Internet
meant "banner ads" -- the 468x60-pixel ads you
see at the top of almost all Web
pages today (including this one). In 1998
or so, banner
advertising was a lucrative business. Popular
sites like Yahoo could charge $30, $50, even $100
per thousand impressions to run banner ads on
their pages. These advertising rates provided
fuel for much of the venture capital boom on the
Web. The idea was that sites could start up and
increase their page impressions to make easy money
from banner ads. If a site could generate 100
million page impressions per month, it could make
$3 million per month with banner ad rates at $30
per thousand impressions.
Where did numbers like $30 or $50 per thousand
impressions come from? That's what magazines
typically charge for full-page color ads. The
Internet took the same payment model and applied
it to banner ads.
At some point, advertisers came to the conclusion
that banner ads were not as effective as full-page
magazine ads or 30-second TV commercials. At the
same time, there was an incredible glut of advertising
space -- thousands of sites had a million or more
page impressions available per month, and companies
like DoubleClick
began collecting these sites into massive pools
of banner-ad inventory. The economic principle
of "supply and demand" works the same way on the
Web as it does everywhere else, so the rates paid
for banner advertising began to plummet.
Let's look more closely at what determines banner
ad rates.
Banner Ad Prices
A company buys advertising for one of two reasons:
Branding refers to the process of impressing
a company name or a product name onto society's
collective brain. Let's say you have come up with
a new brand of soda, or you are opening a new restaurant,
or you are selling a new widget.
You want to get the product's name (and sometimes
the product's features and benefits) firmly planted
in people's heads. This is branding.
Branding happens with both new and existing
products. When you see a billboard that says nothing
but "Coke" on it, or you see a NASCAR
car that says "Tide" on the hood, or you see
a feel-good ad on TV about a car company or an
oil company but there's no mention of a product,
that is branding. The advertiser does not necessarily
expect you to do anything today -- the advertiser
simply wants to impress itself on your consciousness.
On the other hand, a direct sales ad
is an ad that is trying to get you to do something
today, right now, as you look at the ad. The advertiser
wants you to:
- Click on the ad
- Call an 800 number
- Drive immediately to the store
...or do some other active thing so that you buy
something, download something or sign up for something
today. The advertiser counts the direct responses
to the ad and measures the effectiveness of the
ad by those responses.
What branding advertisers came to feel
about banner ads is that banner ads are not the
most effective vehicle for branding. Relative
to a magazine ad or a TV ad, banner ads are small
and easily ignored.
What direct sales advertisers came to
feel about banner ads is that the response rate
for banner ads is low. For most banner ads, the
industry average seems to hover between two and
five clicks per 1,000 impressions of the ad. That
is, if a banner ad appears on 1,000 Web pages,
between two and five people will click on the
ad to learn more.
Those five clicks per thousand impressions don't
have much value to most advertisers. The reason
is because those five clicks will not all generate
sales. Out of 100 clicks, perhaps one person will
actually do the desired thing (buy something,
download something, etc.).
An Example
Here's an example. Let's say that a publisher
wants people to buy a book, and hopes to increase
sales of the book through advertising. The publisher
has budgeted $3.00 per copy of the book to spend
on advertising. If the publisher is paying $30
per 1,000 impressions for banner ads and purchases
100,000 impressions for $3,000, here is what happens:
- The banner ad appears 100,000 times.
- Let's say the response rate is five clicks
per 1,000 impressions, so 500 people click on
the ad during the time the 100,000 total impressions
are running.
- If two percent of those 500 people actually
purchase the book, that results in 10 purchases.
- The publisher had to pay ($3,000/10) $300
for each book purchased through that ad.
Obviously, paying $300 to sell one book is not a
good economic model for a publisher, especially
since the budget is $3.00 per book. For this type
of advertising to work for the publisher, the publisher
would need to pay 30 cents per 1,000 impressions,
rather than 30 dollars.
The Result
So banner ad rates began to decline. Today, if
you shop around, you can buy banner ads from thousands
of Web sites or brokers for 50 cents or so per
thousand impressions -- which is pretty much exactly
what they are worth to a person who is trying
to sell something with banner ads using a direct
sales model.
It is possible for some Web sites to charge
more than 50 cents per 1,000 impressions. For
example, the top 100 or so Web sites can charge
a premium because of their size. There is also
a process called targeting. For example, if you
want to sell a GPS, you can advertise on the HowStuffWorks
GPS article and get a targeted audience
for your ad, which will typically increase the
click-through and response rate for the ad. Yahoo
and many search
engines target their banner ads to the search
words people type in, and they charge more for
these targeted ads. But for most other Web sites,
there is very little money to be made from banner
ads.
In order to charge more than 50 cents per thousand
impressions, Web sites have to offer ads that
either:
- Have a lot more branding power
- Get a much higher click-through rate
Therefore, you find many different advertising formats
and experiments on the Web today.
Sidebar Ads
A sidebar ad (also known as a skyscraper ad)
is similar to a banner ad, but it is vertically
oriented rather than horizontally. Because it
is vertical, the height of a sidebar ad can often
reach 600 pixels or more, and sidebars are generally
120 pixels wide.

A typical sidebar ad
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A sidebar ad has more impact than a banner ad
for at least two reasons:
- A tall sidebar ad is two to three times larger
than a banner ad.
- You cannot scroll a sidebar ad off the screen
like you can a banner ad. With a banner ad,
you can scroll just 60 pixels down and the ad
is gone. With a sidebar ad, the ad is with you
much longer.
Because of this increased impact, sidebar ads have
higher branding power and a higher click-through
rate. A typical sidebar ad has a click-through rate
of 1 percent (10 clicks per 1,000 impressions),
or about two to three times that of a banner ad.
Advertisers will typically pay $1.00 to $1.50 per
1,000 run-of-site impressions for sidebar ad placement.
Advertisers pay more for targeted sidebar ads, just
like they do with targeted banner ads.
Varied Shapes and
Sizes
Banner ads and sidebar ads have standard sizes,
but in the last year or two people have tried
all different sizes and placements. Here are three
examples:

The orange ad in the
upper right is 250x250 pixels. Ads this
size or larger can be found within the text
of articles in some cases. They act like
magazine ads that break up the text to get
more attention.
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On this page you can
see a narrow strip for Netscape at the top,
a standard banner ad, a square AOL ad mid-page,
and four smaller ads along the bottom.
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On this page there is
a round WSJ button up top along with ads
for Casio, Ubid and Radio Shack along the
side. At the bottom there are tiny ads for
four money sites along with small ads for
CareerBuilder.com and WSJ.com (even the
advertising is sponsored!).
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Sites don't get paid much for these smaller
ads, because generally the click-through rates
are low. But by putting 10 ads on the page, it
can add up to $2 per 1,000 page impressions.
Pop-Up and Pop-Under
A pop-up ad is an ad that "pops up" in its own
window when you go to a page. It obscures the
Web page that you are trying to read, so you have
to close the window or move it out of the way.
Pop-under ads are similar, but place themselves
under the content you are trying to read and are
therefore less intrusive.

A typical pop-up ad
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A typical site with two
pop-up ads that appear on top of the home
page
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Pop-up and pop-under ads annoy many users because
they clutter up the desktop and take time to close.
However, they are much more effective than banner
ads. Whereas a banner ad might get two to five
clicks per 1,000 impressions, a pop-up ad might
average 30 clicks. Therefore, advertisers are
willing to pay more for pop-up and pop-under ads.
Typically, a pop-up ad will pay the Web site four
to 10 times more than a banner ad. That is why
you see so many pop-up ads on the Web today.
Floating Ads
If you have ever been to a Web site that uses
them, you know what "floating ads" are. These
are ads that appear when you first go to a Web
page, and they "float" or "fly" over the page
for anywhere from five to 30 seconds. While they
are on the screen, they obscure your view of the
page you are trying to read, and they often block
mouse
input as well.

A screenshot of a typical
floating ad for a Norton product: This ad
is completely animated, with four or five
moving parts. The ad plays for about 15
seconds. Note that it does have a "Close"
button, so there is a way out of this ad.
Many floating ads do not have this feature.
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This page has been set up so that a floating
ad should appear every time you load the page.
If you have the right browser combination, then
you should have seen the ad when you clicked into
this page. The ad is about 5 seconds long. It
floats over the page and then should settle in
the upper right hand corner. If you would like
to see lots of other examples of different floating
ad campaigns, click
here and here.
Floating ads are appearing more and more frequently
for several reasons:
- They definitely get the viewer's attention.
They are animated. Many now have sound. Like
TV ads, they "interrupt the program" and force
you to watch them. They can take up the entire
screen. Therefore:
- From a branding standpoint, they are much
more powerful than something like a banner ad
or a sidebar ad. They cannot be ignored.
- They have a high click-through rate, averaging
about 3 percent (meaning that 30 people will
click through for every 1,000 impressions of
a floating ad).
The high click-through rate, as well as the greater
branding power, means that advertisers will pay
a lot more for a floating ad -- anywhere from $3
to $30 per 1,000 impressions depending on the advertiser
and the ad. Because they can pay a lot of money,
Web sites are willing to run floating ads.
The only problem with floating ads is that they
annoy people. Some people become infuriated
by them, and will send death threats and three-page-long
rants via e-mail.
That is why you do not yet see them everywhere.
The annoyance problem points out something interesting
about advertising, however. When pop-up ads first
appeared, they bothered lots of people and you
did not see them on very many sites. After a while,
people got used to them and stopped complaining,
and now pop-up ads can be found on tons of sites.
Television provides another useful example.
If television programs were ad-free today, and
suddenly a TV station were to start running eight
minutes of advertising every half hour right in
the middle of programs, people would go NUTS!
There would, quite possibly, be riots in the streets.
But since we are all familiar with TV ads, they
don't bother us much. In fact, during the Super
Bowl, the ads are a big part of the show!
As people get used to floating ads, they will
become more common.
Unicast Ads
They are not very common yet, but Unicast
ads are spreading across the Web right now.
A Unicast ad is basically a TV commercial
that runs in a pop-up window. It is animated and
it has sound. The ads can last anywhere from 10
to 30 seconds.
If you go to this
page and then this
page in sequence, a Unicast ad should appear
automatically after 5 seconds (but may not depending
on your browser, the date, the moon phase, etc.).
If you would like to see many more examples from
Unicast, please
click here.
A Unicast ad has roughly the same branding power
as a TV commercial. However, a Unicast ad offers
something that TV ads cannot -- the ability to
click on the ad for more information. And people
do click on them at an amazing rate -- a 5-percent
click-through rate (50 clicks per 1,000 impressions
of the ad) is not uncommon.
Because Unicast ads have branding power and
because people click on them, $30 per 1,000 impressions
is a common rate paid to Web sites right now.
Because they pay so well, they are likely to spread
rapidly.
Other Variations
You are likely to see many other variations on
the theme as time goes on. Here are several examples:
- HowStuffWorks offers something called a "takeover
campaign." Viewers visiting HowStuffWorks
see a large ad when they first come to HowStuffWorks
each day, and then they see the message reiterated
throughout the site in banner and sidebar ads.
The advertiser essentially "takes over" the
site for one or more days. The approach works
very well as a branding play because the brand
is visible to viewers throughout their entire
visit to the site. Click-through rates are very
high. Advertisers have been very pleased with
the results, and negative reader reaction has
been minimal because everyone is familiar with
banner and sidebar advertising.
- CNN has been experimenting with streaming
sidebar ads, as shown here:

A small video ad appears
in the right sidebar on this CNN page, with
sound, and plays for 30 seconds. The reader
can control the ad with the three buttons
(Play, Pause, Stop) underneath the ad.
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- Pull-down banner ads have appeared
on some sites. Their operation varies depending
on the site. On some, when you mouse over the
banner ad, it expands to fill much of the page.
On others, the banner ad is expanded-size initially,
then shrinks to normal size after several seconds.
Here's an example of one that shrinks after
several seconds:

When you first enter
the page, the banner ad is large...
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...and then shrinks
to a normal size (note that this site
is using oversized banners at 725x70
pixels, and the width of the site is
built around its banner ads). Buttons
on the ad let you re-expand it if you
choose to.
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All of these different ad formats are trying to
find combinations that give advertisers what they
want -- high click-through rates and branding power.
In return, advertisers are willing to pay Web sites
for running these ads because the ads work.
How Bad Can It Get?
This page could be set up to give you a barrage
of advertising:
- There are multiple banner and sidebar ads.
- Imagine that there are two or three pop-under
ads.
- Imagine that there is a floating ad.
If there were a Unicast ad playing over the top
of it all, that would be a worst-case scenario.
It is hard to imagine a Web page having much more
advertising than this.
I have never seen a Web site go this far, but
some get close. The reason you see things like
this is because it pays well. A Web site can,
in theory, make between $40 and $50 per 1,000
impressions if every page were loaded with this
much advertising. That is a lot of money. On the
other hand, this much advertising tends to turn
readers off.
An Example
So why do Web sites end up running so many ads
like this?
Let's create a hypothetical Web company and
use it as an example. The company is called XYZ,
and it is a small, successful content site. Here
are some of its parameters:
- The company has 1,000,000 visitors a month
who read, on average, eight pages per visit.
So there are 8,000,000 page impressions per
month.
- The company has 10 employees, with an average
pay of $40,000 per year. Some make more, some
make less, and $40,000 is about the middle.
That means payroll is about $36,000 per month
(when you add in the 8% employer match for Social
Security and medical).
- Benefits per employee run $400 per month,
or $4,000 total per month.
- Office rent is $4,000 per month.
- Equipment leasing and bandwidth to run the
Web site is $4,000 per month.
- Other costs include phone
lines, power,
office furniture and computers,
legal/accounting fees, travel, advertising,
coffee,
subscriptions, blah, blah, blah. Let's say it
averages $20,000 per month in "other costs."
XYZ therefore spends $68,000 per month.
If XYZ places banner ads on its 8,000,000 pages
per month and gets 50 cents per thousand impressions,
it makes $4,000 per month. Obviously, that isn't
going to cut it -- $4,000 per month does not even
cover one person, or the bandwidth and equipment.
If XYZ is able to sell floating ads or Unicast
ads at $30 per 1,000 visitors (not page impressions
-- visitors), then the site's 1,000,000
visitors per month can generate $30,000 per month.
That, plus the banner ads, gets the company to
$34,000 per month. You can see that there is still
a problem -- XYZ is only halfway to breaking even.
But $34,000 is much better than the $4,000 that
banner ads alone would generate.
Keep in mind that there is no guarantee that
XYZ will be able to sell all of its ad inventory.
It would take a very good sales person (or sales
force) to find companies to sign contracts and
pay for all of that inventory (8,000,000 banner
ad impressions per month, 1,000,000 Unicast impressions
per month). There is no guarantee, for example,
that XYZ can find companies to pay $30 per 1,000
impressions for 1,000,000 floating ads or Unicast
ads. If XYZ is able to sell ALL of its inventory,
it is extremely lucky, so getting to $34,000 per
month every month is a long shot.
XYZ therefore needs to find other ways to make
money. If XYZ now:
- adds in sidebar ads
- adds in 250x250 ads in the middle of articles
- adds in pop-under ads
- adds in one or two other ad features
...then the company might be able to bring in another
$15,000 per month, and it is getting close to its
goal of breaking even.
That kind of math is exactly why you see so
many ads on Web sites today. It's either:
- Lots of ads
- Switch over to subscriptions (and hope that
you can get 50,000 people to subscribe -- no
easy task)
- Go out of business
A Web site is a business, and it must cover its
expenses to survive.
What Do You Think?
In this article, you have learned several different
things:
- You have seen how Web advertising has evolved
over the last three to four years.
- You have seen a complete catalog of the many
different types of advertising that Web sites
use today.
- You have discovered how much money Web sites
make from different types of advertising.
- You have gained a better understanding of
what advertisers look for when running ads for
their products and services.

The HowStuffWorks ad-free
server has zero ads throughout (except,
of course, the two demo pages in this article),
as this screen shot shows. The user can
also customize the view with the CUSTOMIZE!
button to, for example, remove the sidebars
or the graphics within the article.
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Keep in mind that many sites offer an option.
If you do not like all the advertising, you can
subscribe to the site. For example, HowStuffWorks
offers the ad-free server for just $1.00
per month (click
here for a 7-day free trial). If ads truly
annoy you, or if you simply don't like all of
the time that ads waste, then the ad-free
option is definitely the way to go.
What do you think? If you have questions,
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us by clicking
here.
For more information, check out the links
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