Welcome | View My Profile | Sign Out
MediaPost Home About MediaPost Privacy/Terms Media Kit Sitemap
Publications Home News
Online Media Daily Media Daily News Marketing Daily Mobile Marketing Daily Search Marketing Daily
Daily Feed> Email Daily Feed> Video Daily Feed> Social
Online Blogs
Online Spin Email Insider Search Insider Behavioral Insider Online Publishing Insider Mobile Insider Video Insider Gaming Insider Performance Insider Metrics Insider Social Media Insider Just An Online Minute Daily Online Examiner Raw Blog
Media Blogs
Research Brief Diane Mermigas:On Media TV Watch TV Board Magazine Rack Media Creativity Notes From the Digital Frontier Digital Outsider Mad Blog Red White and Blog
Marketing Blogs
Engage:Hispanics Engage:Kids 6-11 Engage:Moms Engage:Boomers Engage:Gen Y Engage:Teens Marketing:Green Marketing:Sports
Magazines
OMMA Magazine Media Magazine
Subscribe
Feedback Loop RSS Feeds Archives Subscribe
Feb 24 OMMA Metrics Measurement (NYC) Feb 25 OMMA Behavioral (NYC) Mar 17 OMMA Global (San Francisco) Apr 14 Search Insider Summit (FL) Apr 18 Email Insider Summit (FL) Apr 27 Outfront Conference (NYC) May 12 OMMA Mobile (NYC) May 13 Digital Out-of-Home Awards (NYC) Jun 15 OMMA Video Jun 16 OMMA Publish (NYC) Jun 17 OMMA Social (NYC)
Recently Concluded Events
Jan 26 OMMA Social (San Francisco) Jan 25 OMMA Performance (SF) Jan 12 MEDIA Agency of the Year 2009 (NYC) Jan 11 OMMA Agency of the Year 2009 (NYC) Dec 6 Email Insider Summit (Utah) Dec 2 Search Insider Summit (Utah) Nov 3 OMMA Adnets (NYC) Oct 30 OMMA Video (LA) Oct 29 OMMA Mobile (LA) Oct 29 OMMA Mobile & Video (LA)
All MediaPost/OMMA Events Event Blogging Past Event Videos
Industry Events Calendar
2010 Digital Out-of-Home Awards
2010 MEDIA Agency of the Year 2009 2010 OMMA Agency of the Year 2009 2009 Creative Media Awards 2009 OMMA Awards 2009 Digital Out-of-Home Awards 2009 Media Agency of the Year
All Awards
Employment Situations Wanted Services Offered Post a Job
Briefs Reports Online
MediaPost Directories
Mobile Insiders Group
People Finder Edit My Profile View My Profile My Contacts My Calendar
HOME • MANAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS • MEDIA KIT
M3tr1c Conv3r51on: The decline of the click-through has publishers looking to make an impression
by Catharine P. Taylor, Monday, June 1, 2009, 12:00 AM

SHARE

TOOLS

RELATED ARTICLES
TAGS:  banners, Display, Conversion Cycle, Online Publishing, Metrics

MOST READ

If the click-through in display advertising were human, it would be someone to pity -- so few people have anything nice to say about it. Here are just a few of the derogatory things people had to say when asked for this story:

"The click-through gets a bit more attention than it deserves."

Eugene Becker
senior vice president, director of measurement and analytics,
MRM Worldwide
"In my world right now, I don't even want to talk about the click."
David Honig
founder, Media6Degrees
"The click-through is a measurement of efficiency. It's not a measurement of profitability, or achievement of a goal."
Max Kalehoff
vice president/marketing, Clickable
"A click-through is nothing more than a hint these days ... a hint that someone may be interested."
Mike Goodnough
managing partner/analytics, Emerge Partners
And Joe Laszlo, director of research at the Interactive Advertising Bureau says, "The IAB fully believes that the click is an overused metric."
 
In fact, the status of the display ad click is so low that some smarter advertisers are using it to get themselves better deals. Several people interviewed for this story said that with click-through rates so low - comScore recently put them at 0.1 percent -- they buy their advertising on a cost-per-click basis, knowing that they'll get what they really want -- impressions -- for free.
 
While there are those that still believe in display ad clicks - and its utility as a metric in paid search is undisputed - clearly, the click-through has spiraled downward as a metric compared to its halcyon days in the late 1990s, when it was held up as the standard for online advertising effectiveness. "Everyone was talking so much about click-throughs because we were all so excited about the fact this was such a measurable medium," recalls Pam Horan, president of the Online Publishers Association.
 
Not Impressed
Now, the hunt is on for better ways to measure online display, a mission that has gotten only more serious as the recession, the decline in click-through rates, and the skyrocketing amount of inventory - much of it sold out on the long-tail by ad networks - has put pressure on pricing.

But if there is consensus about the limited value of the display ad click-through, that like-mindedness breaks down when it comes to developing a new metric that will give advertisers a better idea of how their ads are performing. Some parts of the online ad industry favor data that unearths the branding impact of display advertising, others are pushing bigger display ads formats; still others are trying to help advertisers connect how branding ads further up the purchase funnel impact the final click that converts into a sale; and then there are those who advocate advertisers use metrics such as downloads and registrations to better gauge consumer engagement.

Whatever the solution, for many in the online advertising community, getting beyond the click-through has gone from being important, to an all-out emergency. "We're seeing a lot of requests from publishers and marketers and agencies to measure advertising beyond the click," says Gian Fulgoni, executive chairman of comScore.

ComScore is one of several major companies that have recently launched products squarely focused on creating new metrics to make display advertising more meaningful. In November, it launched the comScore Brand Metrix norms database, which uses data across ten vertical categories to help advertisers measure metrics such as brand awareness and purchase intent, and, like the click-through, behavior. Its data showed a 27 percent increase in online sales and a 17 percent increase in offline sales among Internet users exposed to ads for a brand versus those in a control group. ComScore also measures advertiser site visitation and branded trademark search on people who were exposed to online display ads. ComScore wants to prove that display advertising influences consumers, even if they don't respond right away by clicking on an ad.

That gets at the topic of who in the online food chain should get credit for conversion, or attribution measurement. This runs on the theory that Google, and other companies in paid search, get too much credit for the value of their click-throughs. Tracking what happens before the last click, and measuring what simple exposure contributes toward completing a sale, is at the heart of this attempt at building better metrics. "There is a reason people are searching," explains Honig. "You don't wake up in the morning and say, 'I'm going to search for this.'?"

This metric, sometimes described as a view-through, is being espoused not just by comScore but by companies such as Microsoft. The company's Atlas Institute undertook a study last year which tracked 17 million conversions (including sales, registrations and leads), going 90 days back from the conversion event itself. It showed that over half of the ad exposure for those who converted occurred between a week and 60 days before the final click; less than a third of exposures happened in the two days prior to the final click. Such data makes a compelling case for the value of consumers merely seeing an ad. If this argument sounds old, it is - at least in Internet time. While DoubleClick has looked at the issue recently, a Google search conducted for this story dug up a DoubleClick case study on the subject dating back to 2004 - and that's almost certainly not the first one published.

Supersize 'Em
While studies such as Microsoft's get highly technical about how display advertising can be effective without clicks, in other parts of the online universe the answer is a little more, well, direct: Make the ads bigger.

In early March, the Online Publishers Association announced it had created three new display units - one of them even dubbed the XXL - to meet a number of objectives, including building "a metric that emphasizes the impact creative advertising can have on Web viewers while preserving the Internet's well-established ability to engender response." In other words, you can have an ad impression and get a click-through, too!

By July, many OPA members, including CNN, Meredith Interactive and The New York Times will accept the units, which will, according to Horan, allow "marketers to deliver that brand experience right on the [publishers'] pages." The group also wants the new units to usher in an era of fewer, more noticeable, ads that have more impact with consumers.

Importantly, the new units will only be sold by the publishers themselves, which may stem the tide of ad dollars flowing to ad networks which sell it at low cost.

The Interactive Advertising Bureau, which, like the OPA, represents many of online's so-called premium publishers, is (sort of) following suit. In late April, it launched the Re-imagining Interactive Advertising Task Force, which, for the first time, will involve agency creative directors at shops ranging from digital specialists The Barbarian Group to BBDO in discussions of how to make interactive advertising more engaging. The task force is an outgrowth of IAB CEO Randall Rothenberg's concerns about the not-very-memorable state of online advertising. In a blog post in February, he urged readers to "Prove to your customers that causing the heart to beat quick is at least as important as making the mouse click."

IAB research chief Laszlo says the effort isn't directly aimed at getting beyond the click-through, but it's impossible to completely disassociate the effect that better creativity has on an ad's impact. "Encouraging fresh thinking around online creative is a necessary step (though not by itself a sufficient one) toward broadening the use of interactive advertising to convey brand messages," he says. "And branding success should be measured by means other than the click."

If the publisher focus is to get maximum engagement from consumers within the confines of their own sites and servers, those who represent advertisers have other priorities. "We are pushing our advertisers to look at KPIS [key performance indicators] and returns that a publisher would likely not get access to," says xPlusOne's Ted Shergalis. (xPlusOne helps advertisers and agencies maximize ROI.)


MRM's Becker says the metrics that matter are things like page views, downloads, video initiations and completions, registrations, and sharing of content, often activities that occur long after the click-through, if a click-through was what got the visitor to the client's site in the first place. He urges "don't buy [publishing] brands. Buy the outcomes." In that context, it doesn't really matter what sites, premium or not, that an ad appears on, as long as the consumer, once at the advertiser's site, is engaging with the content there. In fact, it doesn't even matter what medium ads appear on, as long as they result in achieving the goals the advertiser wants.

Emerge's Goodnough, like Becker, urges clients to look at engagement metrics -where exactly the consumer engages is beside the point. Companies like Eloqua, he says, tally points for different types of engagement such as downloading or taking a quiz, making the click-through seem, if not irrelevant, old-fashioned. "In the old days, all that would be noticed is the click-through," he says.

If advertisers are becoming more sophisticated about engagement metrics that have nothing to do with the click-through, the problem for publishers is that it gives them less data to sell against. If an advertiser is getting lots of downloads on its site, but the activity is happening many clicks away from the publisher's site, the correlation between the two becomes weaker. While some people representing advertisers see little activity on the publishing side to encourage advertising engagement on the publishers' servers, there are more signs this is starting to happen. In fact, one of the OPA's goals with its new ad units is to build such elements as video streaming and lead capture into the ad unit itself, not only combating the problem, as Horan puts it, of "taking [consumers] somewhere else all the time" but also of giving publishers more engagement data they can potentially have access to, which, in turn, should help them convince advertisers of the value of their inventory.

If it seems, after all this discussion, that the click-through is yet to find a good replacement, you're right. But it looks unlikely there will ever be any one substitution. Even as the click-through in display advertising has lost much of its reputation, advertisers, agencies and publishers have all gotten smarter about defining objectives for online advertising, and, obviously, there are many different kinds of objectives. "Any one of these different metrics [will] start to take their place in the field," notes the IAB's Laszlo.

And no one thinks the click-through in display advertising will entirely go away (indeed the IAB just released its click measurement guidelines in May). Instead, it just looks like a metric that's acquiring a lot of new, more popular, friends.

8 people recommend this article. 

3 comments on "M3tr1c Conv3r51on: The decline of the click-through has publishers looking to make an impression"

  1. Daniel Redman from Evisibility
    commented on: June 17, 2009 at 2:01 PM
    So odd that it made my abdomen tingle when I read this article; I wrote a very closely related article on June 3rd. It's as if I am in your brain, or vice-versa, Catharine P. Taylor. Well done, and thank you for giving this display conversation more legs!

    http://tinyurl.com/stupidbanners

  2. Paula Lynn from Who Else Unlimited; hollywood5459@verizon.net
    commented on: June 16, 2009 at 12:14 PM
    Anybody taking a look at sales numbers?

  3. Gogi Gupta from Gupta Media LLC
    commented on: June 16, 2009 at 11:49 AM
    Catherine -

    I may be in the minority here, but CTR seems like its getting a beating because media buyers like sexy over "works".

    In our world (where offline conversion is paramount), we use three metrics to measure success. Total click volume (how many people are you really reaching), CPC (how cheaply can you by those visitors) and CTR (are you buying the right visitor). If you get a lot of visitors, for a low CPC with a high CTR, its triangulated that its a good buy.

    I've seen campaigns where you get good volume, but its by brute force. Or low CPC, because its a publisher giving away traffic. Or great CTR, but its low volume. Its hard to argue with a campaign that gets all three right, and that's what clients should be asking for.

Leave a Comment

You must be signed in to comment. Sign In

Do you have strong opinions and inside knowledge about the topic of this article -- and do you want to share your insights, observations and points of view regularly with the readers of MediaPost? To be considered as a MediaPost contributing writer, please send pertinent info about your credentials, plus several column ideas and one example of your writing on the topic, to pfine@mediapost.com. Please see our editorial guidelines here first.

CATHARINE P. TAYLOR
  • Catharine P. Taylor has been covering digital media and advertising for almost 15 years. Contact her here.


AUTHORS

ARCHIVES

Recent OMMA Magazine Articles
Logging In: The False Darwinism Of Competition   
How many ad networks on one media plan are too many? If you are running a...
Ad Nets Focus: The New Vertical Is Horizontal   
Vertical ad networks once promised deeper service based on transparency, so-called "expert" knowledge of niche audiences,...
Web U: To Bid Or Not To Bid   
Hamlet asked, "To be or not to be?" Advertisers have to ponder "To bid or not...
Tipping the Iceberg   
Sometimes a number can be both frightening and liberating. Like this one from Don Schultz, a...
Creative Roundtable: Inside the Box   
UPS' cardboard world wows visually, but is it the right package? You are always urged to...
The Best Intenders   
Advertisers love search stats, but maybe there's a better way to get ahead of the curve...
Ed:Blog - Survival Guide, Glitter and Doom Edition   
On the heels of last year's econapocalypse we released our previous survival guide. And, well, here's...
More Than You'd Expect Inside   
It's likely you never heard about Intel's 90-day trial for Alzheimer's patients and their caregivers. That's...
Everyone Else Is Doing It   
Most of us can remember when as children we would ask our parents' permission to do...
Who Is This Person, Anyway?   
Coming out of anthropology, I have always been interested in social and cultural interaction, identity and...
>> OMMA Magazine Archives 
ABOUT MEDIAPOST • MASTHEAD • MEDIA KIT • RSS FEEDS • PRIVACY/TERMS & CONDITIONS
©2010 MediaPost Communications. All rights reserved.
1140 Broadway, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10001
tel. 212-204-2000, fax 212-204-2038, feedback@mediapost.com