Social Media & Digital Marketing in Singapore

How Much Is That Banner Ad In The Window?

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

I chanced upon the banner ad rates offered by one Singaporean company awhile back, and saw that a prominently placed banner ad goes for S$4,000 a week, with the promise of “reaching” millions of “eyeballs”.

In Seth Godin’s book “Purple Cow”, there’s a chapter called “law of large numbers” where he bought 300 million banner ads for US$600. That’s more than one banner impression for one person in the United States. The result? He made a loss. Selling $500 of merchandise in total. He doesn’t specify what merchandise, but does it matter?

To break even on S$4,000 a week, you need to sell:

  • 8 16gig iPhone 3Gs (about one a day)
  • 10 Amazon Kindles (about 1.5 a day)
  • 50 Xbox games (about seven a day)
  • 400 movie tickets (just over 50 a day)

and that’s on revenue, not profit.

The flipside of this is of course, there’s no guarantee that some people of the 300 million saw the ad, and bought the merchandise some time later, thus making it untrackable. But isn’t it the same as any TV, radio or print ad you buy anyway?

Do you think you’re going to do better than Seth Godin’s case study? I’m going to leave the parallel of “reach” and “eyeballs” to traditional media to you.

If you’re in marketing, you’ve probably heard of the old adage “I know half of my marketing doesn’t work, I just don’t know which half”. The good news is if you’re employing banner ads in your marketing “arsenal”, they automatically fall into the half that isn’t working.

But that’s just one case study, if you’re buying banner ads, I’d like to ask you: How have they worked for you?

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TV: Still Most Powerful?

Thursday, February 7th, 2008

I’m at a relative’s place for Chinese New Year, and the TV is on, and I see this station id going something along the lines of “Still the most powerful, TV”, and later on during another commercial, they’re advertising how cheap it is to get a TVC on the network.

Given that internet spending is going to surpass radio, and some projections have it outspending print by 2010, how long can TV be safe? And how delusional are these people to put that on their network?

I think the fact that they have to use their own ad time to put ads for themselves says a lot. I’m going to label this as desperation, how about you?

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