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Tired of TV ads? Look for
'webmercials' sneaking into your computer
By Michael
James Sun Staff
It's Saturday afternoon and
you're looking at ESPN or the Discovery Channel when yet another
commercial comes on. That's about the time to get up and get a
drink, run to the bathroom or make a quick phone call while the ads
play out.
Except the break you're
taking isn't from watching television. It's from surfing the
Internet.
Television-style
commercials are invading cyberspace, stuffing streaming video of the
Coca-Cola polar bear and the Taco Bell Chihuahua between Web pages.
Corporate bigwigs, stymied in their efforts to make Internet
advertising pay off, hope "webmercials" and online video
advertisements may be the answer.
"They allow for a much more
consistent and enjoyable ad experience," says Hilary Fadner,
spokeswoman for Unicast, designer of such commercials for Microsoft,
Nike, and Procter & Gamble. "It's going to enable Internet ads
to be much more compelling and engaging."
Not everyone welcomes the
idea that you'll be watching, say, a Miller Lite commercial in
between Web pages on CBS Sportsline. Some experts believe the 10- to
15-second online commercials may generate more e-complaints than
e-commerce.
"People go to the Internet
with a specific purpose in mind and they're annoyed when they're
stopped or distracted," said Naomi Moriyama, president of the
Digital Powerhouse in New York, an Internet market research firm. "A
TV-like commercial is a huge detour for Web users, and they don't
want to take those detours."
Webmercials and their
cousins, dubbed "interstitials," use streaming video technology to
send high-quality ads to your computer during the pauses in Internet
surfing. Interstitials have been around a while but advertisers
haven't found them effective, because most people didn't want to
wait for invasive windows with ads to load while they're browsing.
In most cases, users clicked them off before the ads were
displayed.
But Unicast has taken the
technology further with a new concept - superstitials - that have
been getting a lot of interest from some of the country's biggest
advertisers.
A superstitial silently
loads itself into your computer through your idle modem as you view
a page. It eventually pops up in its own window. The advantage to an
advertiser is that the ad doesn't interrupt with an intrusive
download window, because it loaded into the computer's cache before
it began to play.
Internet commercials are
shorter versions of their television counterparts, but the look and
feel is the same. Most are animated, slick and modern, but some
incorporate old film footage - a Platinum Beef & Seafood Co.
webmercial, for instance, has old, tinkly piano music playing while
showing 1930s footage of a seafood bar.
"The trick is not to make
it too irritating to consumers," said Alexandre Konanykhine, the
chief executive officer at KMGI.com, which produces webmercials for
such companies as DuPont and AT&T. "If you can make the
webmercials appealing and helpful, with supporting animation, maps
and diagrams, then people will see them as helping the Internet
become a dynamic medium. "
Konanykhine, 33, came a
long way to practice the art of webmercialing at his Empire State
Building office in New York. He once ran a bank in Moscow, but, in a
case publicized throughout the world press, he fled Russia in 1992
after claiming that the Russian mob wanted to take over his
business. He also claimed at that time that he was the target of
Russian assassins who wanted to silence him.
Those days are behind him
and today he's living the life of a true capitalist, trying to make
a fortune on electronic commercials and the World Wide Web. He says
he thinks webmercials are here to stay.
"The future of the Internet
is more exciting to me than the Russian adventure stories of my
past," said Konanykhine, who has a personal Web page titled "How I
Became Russia's Most Wanted."
"We believe the Internet is
about to undergo an important transition ... creating a
multibillion-dollar market which we would like to dominate."
Webmercial entrepreneurs
like Konanykhine are filling a niche left open by traditional Web
advertising, which most agree has failed miserably. The ad world,
hoping to find a way to cash in on the booming Internet frontier,
has been desperate to come up with new strategies. Webmercials
enable designers to put more graphics and sound into their ads,
giving them a much better feel over the frequently dull banner ads
most Internet users are accustomed to seeing.
Studies have shown that
banner ads, usually displayed in small clickable boxes on Web pages,
get fewer than one click per 100 visitors. Advertisers have been
trying without much success to find ways to target the banner ads to
consumers - for instance, an inquiry of "music CDs" entered into any
search engine will give you many banner ads for online music
companies.
Some defend the banners as
effective - and even socially valuable.
"Without efficient,
targeted online ads, companies offering goods or services to a niche
audience would suffer," said Jeffrey M. Seal, an executive at
Viewsource Media, a Cincinnati company that markets businesses on
the Internet. "And potential customers, such as families not getting
the child support they need - and having trouble dealing with
government red tape - might not learn about the services that can
help them."
But many have found flaws
in banner targeting. Paul Farris, a professor and Internet
advertising expert at the University of Virginia's Darden Business
School, said he recently did a Lycos search for "Pascal's Wager" and
was greeted with four online casino ads.
Blaise Pascal, the
17th-century scientist and philosopher who created the noted proof
of God quandary, probably never foresaw the marketing tools of the
Internet.
"In my case I was actually
so curious about those gambling ads that I clicked on them," Farris
said. "The pornography and the gambling people are probably doing
pretty good."
The webmercial idea is an
interesting one, Farris says, but he thinks that it'll be met with
animosity from those who feel that television-style ads are too
obtrusive for the Internet.
"It's out of context of the
medium," Farris said. "Some people will feel like they've been
hijacked. They'll say, 'Here I am in a medium where I was exercising
control and I've had that control taken away from me.' The Internet
is about control - we like to turn the pages ourselves."
Those making webmercials
argue that as the Internet and television evolve and meld, online
commercials will give users extraordinary control. For instance, in
the not-too-distant future of interactive television, someone
watching a baseball game could press a few on-screen buttons and buy
tickets to the next day's game. Or, a viewer could buy airline
tickets to France after being swept up in the Paris scene in the
movie "Casablanca."
Despite debate over what
type of advertising will win out on the Internet, one thing is
certain: Big business is ready to pump billions into online ads,
whatever form they may be in. Forrester Research, an Internet
consulting firm, estimates that U.S. online ad spending will grow
from $2.8 billion last year to $22 billion in 2004. Mostly, those
ads will be targeting the about 60 million U.S. households that will
be online by that time.
And no matter how much
advertising is done on the Web, there will be people like Ed English
making a buck off the ad industry when it does its job poorly.
English's company, InterMute Inc. in Braintree, Mass., develops a
program called AdSubtract that enables Web users to block Internet
ads and unwanted file cookies.
"People are extremely
frustrated by Internet advertising," English said. "What really
frustrates people is being delayed access to their content. These
ads out there now are blinking and flashing and twirling so much
that it's just absolutely crazy."
English predicts the public
won't be pleased with webmercials.
"This is not television,
and people know it's not television," he said. "It's going to
alienate people even more. It's just another thing that will be in
your face on the Internet."
Originally published on July 3, 2000 in
The Baltimore
Sun.
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