Offline Versus Online Advertising
There are exceptions to every rule and it is important to analyze each situation on its own merit. But as a general starting point, a good rule of thumb for creating online ads is to remember the following: successful offline advertising gets consumers to buy products or services; successful online advertising drives consumers to a website, which in turn should sell the consumer.
For example, the ultimate goal for a television ad for dishwashing liquid is to convince the viewer that the next time they buy dishwashing liquid, they should buy that particular brand.
An online ad for dishwashing liquid can’t really get enough information across to convince a user to buy that product. The online ad takes the user to a website that extols its benefits. Even if that site is not an ecommerce site and doesn’t sell the product, the purpose of the site to convince the user that the next time they go out to buy dishwashing liquid, they should buy that particular brand of cleaner.
The online ad program should influence the messaging: PPC versus CPM
Ads running on a PPC basis should first create interest and then qualify the user before they click through to the site, since each click will cost the company money. Qualifying the user first stops wasteful click-thrus and increases ROI.
Ads placed on a site with a weekly or monthly CPM should create interest and drive as much traffic to the site as possible. Since ad expenditure is based on the number of people that have the opportunity to see the ad and not how many people click on the ad and go through to the site, the ad doesn’t need to qualify users as much as a PPC advertisement. But that doesn’t mean you should write an ad that sends everyone to the site. It means an ad on a CPM site doesn’t have to qualify the user as much as a PPC ad.
Remember, there are certainly exceptions to this rule and we’re not talking about branding efforts online.
If you take one thing away from this post it’s this: online ads drive traffic to websites, which then sell the users on the product.