Archive for December, 2006

Strong Argument Made For Death of Page View

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Writing on his Micro Persuasion blog, Steve Rubel concisely explains why the online metric mainstay, the page view, is becoming useless and predicts its death in 2010. Citing the rise of navigate-within-page technologies such as Ajax, Flash and widgets which negate the need to leave a particular URL to experience new content, Rubel says the media community will need to face the music very soon and stop the chest beating about the importance of page views. While there doesn’t seem to be a replacement metric on the horizon, aside from already existing Time Spent and Unique Visitors, the industry may need to come up with one very soon lest the usefulness of online metrics become as useless as traffic count for billboards.

A Virtual World Campaign with Community in Mind

By Zachary Rodgers

So much for “If you build it, they will come.”

As part of a national television, outdoor and Internet campaign, women’s portal iVillage has launched a presence in virtual world Second Life. Unlike many other in-world campaigns, the strategy driving the NBC-owned site’s activities there is based on the actual dynamics of the community.

Starting on December 14 and occurring every two weeks thereafter, a local resident will curate a “girls night out” inside Second Life, with a group of avatars that will all congregate at the iVillage loft on Sheep Island.

Over the course of the evening the group will visit two to four locations. Each destination will host either a tutorial, an event with music, or a speech by the person who owns the in-world locale. The evening ends with a discussion back at the iVillage loft.

ClickZ graphic
Avatars will gather at the iVillage loft, pictured, for a girls’ night out in Second Life.

“To be able to go into a virtual world and enable the avatars to communicate, to get together, for us is wonderful,” said Linda Boff, chief marketing officer for iVillage Properties. “This was a way to promote connection, to do it in a way that’s really what Second Life is about.”

The deployment was created by ElectricArtists, which also conceived and built an earlier Second Life campaign for Starwood Hotels and its new “aloft” hospitality brand. The virtual hotel opened its doors last August, fully a year before it will debut on Planet Earth.

The in-world effort contrasts with a slew of other advertiser forays into Second Life that have taken the form of branded destinations, such as a car lot or retail outlet. While iVillage has its “loft” there, its core idea in Second Life is outward bound and community driven.

According to Marc Schiller, CEO and founder of ElectricArtists, the goal with the iVillage work was to “take a brand that’s synonymous with women’s communities and use it to help people explore Second Life more deeply and celebrate great women inside the virtual world.”

Schiller also notes that nearly half of Second Life avatars are female, though he acknowledges some of those are created and steered by men.

“We knew this wasn’t about first-person shooters and 16-year-old kids,” he said. “It’s really about exploring environments. We want to continue to create new properties in Second Life that play against what might be a growing backlash.”

A separate blog will track iVillage’s involvement with Second Life.

Other elements of the iVillage national branding campaign include four TV spots, outdoor advertising and banner placements. The broadcast executions show women dealing with humorous or exasperating public situations, then discussing them online at iVillage.

iVillage has also given customized shirts away to women in influential professions, or as Boff puts it, “women who have megaphones.” Yoga instructors, bloggers and DJs are on the list. One shirt being handed out to female bartenders reads, “i see you. i will get to you. i said i will get to you.”

The effort coincides with the launch of “iVillage Live,” a new talk show that will be simultaneously broadcast and streamed online.

Kirshenbaum bond + partners Is the lead agency on the integrated campaign, iVillage’s first in five years.

Three quarters of Web users on broadband


Games, instant messaging among high-speed users leading activities

More than three-quarters of residential Web users got on the Internet using a high-speed broadband connection in November, according to a study released Tuesday.

The 78 percent broadband penetration rate for U.S. homes represents a jump from 65 percent a year earlier, Nielsen/NetRatings found.

The research company said broadband users spent 33 percent more time online than dial-up users — nearly 35 hours for the month, compared with 26 hours and some change for dial-up. Broadband users also viewed twice as many Web pages.

An estimated 936 billion SMS messages were sent in 2005, and this number may reach 2.3 trillion by 2010, research firm Gartner predicts. “Nobody could have could have predicted the phenomenal success of SMS and the race is on to find its successor,” said Gartner analyst Nick Ingelbrecht. “Without a doubt new services are needed, but a clear leader has yet to emerge from the messaging services currently being deployed such as mobile IM [instant messaging], video messaging, mobile e-mail and unified and integrated messaging.”

Reports: Mix of Search and Display Advertising Best

Two studies have found that a mix of display and search advertising campaigns garnered the best results for advertisers.

An Avenue A/Razorfish report states that final click-through impressions may be getting more credit than they deserve, and a mix of brand and direct response advertising should therefore be adopted, reports ClickZ News. Moreover, “Close the Loop: Understanding Search and Display Synergy,” a report created for Yahoo by comScore, found that online users exposed to both the search and display advertising campaigns purchased the advertiser’s products and services 244 percent more online and 89 percent more offline compared with users not shown the ads.

The Yahoo study also states that the users exposed to both types of ads increased their share of pageviews relative to competitive sites by 68 percent, and time spent by 66 percent.

In “Actionable Analytics” released by Avenue A/Razorfish, similar results were reported, finding that consumers exposed to display media were 27 percent more likely to click on a branded search term than those not shown the display ad. The same group was 41 percent more likely to complete an online purchase.