Have you ever tried “binge clicking”?
I recently binge-watched Marvel’s “Daredevil” on Netflix, but I rarely have the time to do so between work, exercise and raising
two boys. Since binging is something most Americans do in one form or another, I experimented to see what would happen if I started “binge-clicking” — basically, clicking on at
least one ad on every Web page I was on for a predetermined period. I did this for two days and learned some interesting things: namely, that clicking on ads creates a significantly smaller
universe for my media experience.
Our industry has thought about clicks in absolutely the wrong way for years -- only not because of the the reasons you might have read about. In the old
days, clicking was a way to uncover new content and find new destinations, and marketers used them as such. Banners were almost a discovery tool. There was very little value attributed to
awareness and simple exposure to a message.
Nowadays, I would argue the click is borderline meaningless. All it does is provide a quick measure for short-term impact resulting
from ongoing frequency of exposure. When someone clicks on an ad, it’s because they’ve been hearing about or seeing a product for some time, and they finally decide to check it
out. If they don’t click, it’s not because the ad was ineffective, but because they simply didn’t need to know more at that time.
In my experience the last few
days, I found very few ads delivering me anything new. Ads were profoundly over-weighted toward retargeting. The role of discovery and driving awareness was almost nonexistent.
When I did click on the ads, I was able to get one to two degrees deeper into the Web, at best. Most ads brought me to a dead-end: to a product site or a shopping cart for purchase. In terms
of customer acquisition, it was definitely more focused, but in terms of helping me uncover new products and services, it was utterly useless. The Web has become a very focused environment and its
lost some of the discovery elements that made it so exciting in years past!
The only exception there was Amazon, where the retargeted ads I saw dropped me into the almost endless world of
Amazon -- you can binge-click forever in those rainforests of economic interconnectedness.
No wonder click-through stinks. Consumers are not stupid -- they know that clicking will
only get them to one page beyond where they were, and that most of the ads they see are intended to drive a sale, not present something new.
I feel the industry has created an
overdependence on retargeting, with not enough marketers using modeling to find new customers and increase awareness of their products and services. The Web is the most powerful tool for
discovery of information in history -- and we’re using it like a used car salesmen who bombards you when you walk onto the lot.
Data can be used to find new audiences. My sincere
hope is to see more marketers use data to open up new lines of customers and prospects, rather than continuing to pummel the existing ones into submission. Agencies can be a huge piece of this
solution, because they can create more innovative campaigns and put data to good use if they are trusted to do so.
Try your own experiment: “Binge-click” for an hour to see
what happens. I bet you’ll be a little surprised at how small the Web actually can be.