Article Index
10 Easy Ways to Promote Your Website
5 Simple Steps to Accepting Payments
5 Steps to Understanding HTML
5 Ways to Avoid the 1998 Look
6 Reasons Why You Need a Website
7 Ways to Make Your Web Forms Better
A Question of Scroll Bars
Ads Under the Radar Linking to Affiliates
AJAX Should You Believe the Hype
All About Design Principles and Elements
An Introduction to Paint Shop Pro
An Issue of Width the Resolution Problem
Avoiding the Nuts and Bolts Content Management Software
Beware the Stock Photographer Picking Your Pictures
Building a Budget Website
Building Online Communities
Clean Page Structure Headings and Lists
ColdFusion Quicker Scripting at a Price
Column Designs with CSS
Content is King
CSS and the End of Tables
Cut to the Chase How to Make Your Website Load Faster
Designing for Sales
Designing for Search Engines
Dont Be Scared Its Only Code HTML for Beginners
Dreamweaver The Professional Touch
Encryption and Security with SSL
Finding a Good HTML Editor
Focus on the User Task Oriented Websites
Fonts are More Important Than You Think
Free Graphics Alternatives
FrontPage Easy Pages
Hints All the Way
Hiring Professionals 5 Things to Look For
How Databases Work
How the Web Works
How to Get Your Website Talked About on Blogs
How to Install and Configure a Forum
How to Make Visitors Add You to Their Favorites
How to Run Ads Without Driving Visitors Crazy
How to Set Up Your Hosting in 5 Minutes Flat
IIS and ASP Microsofts Server
Image Formats GIF JPEG PNG and More
Its a World Wide Web Going International
JSP Java on Your Server
LAMP The Most Popular Server System Ever
Making Friends and Influencing People the Importance of Links
Making Searches Simple
Offering Free Downloads on Your Website
Opening a Web Shop with E Commerce Software
Perl Cryptic Power
Photoshop a Graphic Designers Dream
PHP Easy Dynamic Websites
Picking a Colour Scheme
Printing and Sending the Two Things Users Want to Do
Putting Multimedia to Good Use
Python and Ruby the Newer Alternatives
Registering a Domain Name
Registering Your Users by Stealth
RSS Really Simple Syndication
Setting Up a Mailing List
Setting up a Test Server on Your Own Computer
Some Places to Go For More Information
Taking HTML Further with Javascript
Taking HTML Further
Taking Your Website Mobile
Text Ads Unobtrusive Advertising
The 5 Principles of Effective Navigation
The Art of the Logo
The Basics of Web Forms
The Basics of Web Servers
The Case Against Flash
The Confusing World of Web Hosting Making Your Decision
The Evils of PDFs
The Importance of Validation
The Many Flavours of HTML
The Smaller the Better Avoiding Graphical Overload
The Top 10 Biggest Web Design Mistakes
The Web Designers Toolbox
The Web is Not Paper
Theres More than One Web Browser
Time for User Testing
Titles and Headlines Its Not a Newspaper
Tracking Your Visitors
Understanding Web Jargon
Uploading Your Website with FTP
Using Flash Sensibly
Using Quizzes and Games to Get Traffic
VBScript Javascript Made Easy
Websites and Weblogs Whats the Difference
What Do You Want Your Website to Do
What You See Isnt Always What You Get
Which Database is Right for You
Why Doing It Yourself is Best
Why Java Will Drive Your Visitors Away
Why Word is Bad for the Web
Why You Should Put Your Content in a Weblog Format
Why You Should Stick to Design Conventions
Working With Templates
Writing for the Web

Text Ads Unobtrusive Advertising

Text Ads: Unobtrusive Advertising.

Advertising on the web is big business again, but idea behind the revival is quite strange. Back in the dot-com boom days, all ads were graphical, as it was assumed that this was the best way to get people to click through. However, modern ad companies, led by Google's AdSense division, have found that text advertising works just as well as (if not better than) graphical banners. It's this discovery that got advertising on the web moving again. But why does it work so well?

What Does a Text Ad Look Like?

The answer to this question is that they look pretty much like any other link. A typical text ad might look like this:

Buy My Stuff
I have stuff to sell to you. Come buy it.
http://www.example.com/stuff

It's as simple as that: headline, text, URL. The ads usually appear in a 'block' of three or four, followed by an 'Ads by' message, but it's just as possible for them to appear on their own. Clicking anywhere in the ad follows the link –some text ads even exclude the text and URL parts, making them nothing but a link. One of the good things about the text ad approach is that it solves the 'banner blindness' problem, where users gradually learn to ignore banner-shaped areas of websites and so don't actually see the ads at all.

Text Ads Annoy No-one.

Text ads are very subtle: they don't jump out at you, animate, open in a new window or make noises. The great thing about them is that their lack of annoyingness is also part of their power: people actually pay more attention to an ad that looks like a useful link than they do to one that looks and sounds like an ad. You get to annoy your users less while making more money from click-throughs, and you get to reduce the amount of space ads take up on your site while increasing their effectiveness. It's win-win.

Lower Ad Costs.

Text advertising also works out well for the advertisers themselves. Previously, to advertise on the web, you had to get a bunch of banners made in different sizes. Each time you wanted to change the message, you needed a new banner. Uploading these banners to the various ad sites was a pain, and the cost of the bandwidth used to serve the ads made the ad rates more expensive to advertisers. There was also a need for ads to be reviewed to ensure that they were suitable for the intended audience.

Text advertising changes this situation, removing a huge number of the costs associated with the whole process of putting ads on a site. Text takes effectively no bandwidth. You can't really produce anything unsuitable in text – or, at least, things that are unsuitable can be easily flagged by automatic filters. The whole process of creating an ad and taking it live becomes much easier for the advertisers: lower cost, and with more flexibility to create campaigns at short notice.

What this means for the marketplace is that there has been a shift in who buys advertising: instead of sites having three or four big advertisers, they can now have hundreds of small ones. This lets small businesses advertise when they wouldn't have been able to before, not to mention removing websites' dependency on their advertisers and giving them greater freedom to say what they want to. Again (and this is a pattern with text ads), it's win-win.

Text Ads and Context.

Finally, it's worth noting that the power of text ads doesn't just come from the fact that they're not graphical. It's also important to note that the systems serving the ads pay more attention to context than the old graphical systems did: they can compare the text of the ads to the text of the websites that are being advertised on, to find the best match for the ads in question. This raises click-through rates by making ads highly targeted.

In short, we're moving away from the web full of flashing graphical ads that are mostly irrelevant to what we're reading, towards one with sober text ads that offer us just what we wanted.