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- Electronic Billboards on the Digital Superhighway
-
-
- A Report of the Working Group on
-
- Internet Advertising
-
- The Coalition for Networked Information
-
-
- March 18, 1994
-
-
-
- With somewhere between 8 million and 20 million users (figures are
- decidedly imprecise), the international information highway known as the
- Internet is Madison Avenue's dream: easy (and cheap!) access to a
- population that is literate (most information is in text form), moneyed
- (they have computers and the necessary communications accessories),
- intelligent (a large proportion are connected with universities or
- research centers), and willing to reveal interests and desires by
- joining "lists" and "newsgroups" that reflect passions from operating
- systems to social systems.
-
- Yet the Internet, born out of a people-to-people effort that has
- its roots in barn raisings and volunteer fire departments, has
- traditionally been anti-commercial. Even answers to questions posed on
- lists like "fatfree" or in newsgroups like "alt.wedding" are often
- preceded or followed by messages that proclaim the respondent's
- independence -commonly known as the "Standard Disclaimer."
-
- Several people have mentioned the Standard Disclaimer
- (.e.g., "I have no connection with this company whose
- products I am recommending") and described it as a
- cultural tradition, and as a way of escaping criticism
- for advertising.
- [From: schull@merlin.cvs.rochester.edu (Jon Schull)
- Date: Thu, 28 Oct 93 19:12:48 -0400]
-
- Other forces are now at work on the Internet, forces that do not
- come out of the volunteer tradition. They include:
-
- >> Commercial services that provide Internet access to those not
- connected with higher education or research
-
- >> Businesses that provide commercial information via the Internet
-
- >> Those who are trying to sell products using this new way of gaining
- access to potential customers
-
- Many Internet users are concerned about those new forces on the
- Internet. Some have proposed banning advertising completely. Others have
- proposed limiting or controlling advertising. Still others argue that
- the free-speech rights that make possible much Internet discussion and
- activities are inimical to a prohibition on advertising.
-
- In the course of a one-month on-line discussion of advertising on
- the Internet, sponsored by the Coalition for Networked Information (from
- which all the quotes in this paper come), the consensus seemed to be
- that some guidelines are important for Internet advertising, but that
- they should be just guidelines, and not requirements. Few were willing
- to take on the job of censor.
-
- "...we all have to realize that we are in the dirty
- business of defining what acceptable free speech is
- on the Internet. While we are not necessarily going
- to ban certain forms of free speech, we are
- certainly looking to control it. So far the only
- criterion or definition of what we are going to
- control seems to be if it involves the crime of
- someone making money off of it.
- [From: Bob <bobk@bigbird.rad.washington.edu>
- Date: Thu, 28 Oct 93 01:47:37 -0400]
-
- More important was the growing conviction among participants that
- advertising is as important an information source as many other
- electronic publications on the Internet, and that advertising serves the
- needs of Internetters as well as advertisers.
-
- People want information about the products and services they buy;
- they want to make intelligent choices based on solid information. They
- want to know as much as they can about these products and services, and
- they want that information quickly and easily when they need it.
-
- That means a change for advertisers. Today's advertising tends not
- to be information rich. The goal of print-based advertising, or
- television or radio advertising, is to catch the attention of the
- potential customer and leave a simple message that can be translated
- into "buy me" when the time is appropriate. The cost of delivering a lot
- of information to people who may not want ANY information is too high in
- current mass media. The densest information -- the cautions, warnings,
- and considerations that accompany advertisements for drugs in magazines
- and newspapers -- is presented only because federal law requires it.
- Pharmaceutical manufacturers know that only a tiny fraction of the
- people who notice their ads read that small type. If they did not HAVE
- to provide that information, they probably wouldn't.
-
- However, advertisers are delighted to provide detailed information
- for the potential customer who seeks it. That is why so many
- advertisements encourage people to call 800 numbers or write for more
- information. People who are interested in detailed information about a
- product or service are people who are thinking about buying.
-
- The advantage of advertising on the Internet is that the ability to
- provide "layers" of information, giving netters a choice of how much
- information to get on a product or service. The information is available
- immediately (unlike products for which people must write), and can be as
- current as the advertiser chooses to make it (unlike brochures that may
- be out of date by the time they are printed).
-
- For both advertisers and Internetters, this emphasis on
- information, controlled by the reader, changes the nature of
- advertising. As Tim O'Reilly writes on GNN:
-
- "...what information a customer retrieves is
- entirely under his or her control. We firmly
- believe that people on the Net are interested
- in solid, detailed information about commercial
- products. They don't want unsolicited
- advertising, but they do want to be able to
- retrieve information that they are looking for
- -- and that includes commercial information as
- well as free information.
- [http://nearnet.gnn.com/mkt/gnn/tim.letter.html]
-
- For many years the debate centered on whether advertising should be
- allowed on the Internet. The Internet, originally supported almost
- entirely by federal funds, had rules about commercial participation that
- could be summed up in two words: not allowed.
-
- In recent years, however, the nets that make up the Internet have
- expanded, to include some strictly commercial cables and some nets that
- are very comfortable selling access to businesses both for their own use
- and to reach individuals on the Internet. Some of those businesses began
- to advertise. Some of the advertising was effective, some just created
- hostility. Now advertisers are beginning to ask: What works? What is the
- "right" way to advertise on the Internet? (This is a question of
- efficacy, not of morals.)
-
- As an advertising presence has grown on the Internet, the goal for
- many participants in the CNI discussion was to figure out HOW a business
- might advertise, not to decide WHETHER to allow advertising.
-
- And in general the conclusion most people reached was that
- advertising on the Internet has to satisfy two prime rules:
-
- 1. It should be passive, rather than active, allowing the Internetter
- to come to the advertiser rather than having the advertiser foist
- his or her message on the Internetter.
-
- 2. It should offer solid information rather than hyperbole, letting
- the Internetter unfold more and more details about products and
- services as the need for information grows.
-
- Madison Avenue has an opportunity to create a new form of
- advertising, one that is almost as good as sending a salesperson to each
- prospect's house, to sit at the dining-room table and answer questions,
- give demonstrations, and make sure that this potential customer is sold.
-
- That new form of advertising is being invented even as we write
- this, by those who are trying different forms of Internet advertising
- and identifying what works.
-
-
- WHAT IS INTERNET ADVERTISING?
-
- Internet advertising today falls into six categories:
-
- o Endorsements -- Recommendations from users
-
- o Billboards -- Postings on cognate lists or newsgroups
-
- o Yellow Pages -- Searchable data bases of information from advertisers
-
- o Penny Shoppers -- Product-focused or service-focused electronic lists
- or e-mail subscriptions
-
- o Newspapers -- Advertising that underwrites editorial content
-
- o Junk Mail -- Direct (and unsolicited) to your mailbox
-
-
- ENDORSEMENTS
-
- Cher does not yet recommend her health club on the Internet, but
- many others tell of their experiences with products and services -- both
- positive and negative. As one participant on a list said:
-
- There are a number of books and articles around which
- describe this kind of marketing approach. The most
- accessible one I've found is "The One to One Future"
- by Peppers and Rogers. (Sorry for that blatantly
- commercial message. Here's the standard disclaimer:
- I have nothing whatsoever to gain from the sale of the
- book. :-).
- [From: brian@eit.COM (Brian Smithson)
- Date: Thu, 28 Oct 93 00:22:21 -0400]
-
- Endorsements might be exempted from the "advertising" category,
- because they often come in the context of a question answered ("Does
- anyone know where I can get...") or an experience shared ("My service
- provider offers..."). Even when the endorsement comes from someone who
- works for the company, the promotion is accepted when it is not
- blatantly commercial and is a reasonable answer to a question posed by
- someone else.
-
- Endorsements also are among the most effective advertisements on
- the Internet, because they are offered publicly in an interactive
- medium. Anyone who disagrees can post her own opinions, and such
- debates often form the best -and most unbiased -- analyses of products
- and services. Advertisers whose products and services are discussed
- positively by others gain customers and loyalty. And when an advertiser
- participates in the debate, the power of the Internet really comes
- through. Advertisers whose products are panned can learn first hand
- about customers' problems -- and solve them and let others know that
- those problems have been solved.
-
-
- BILLBOARDS
-
- Billboards are the signs on the road that tell about services on
- or near the road -- in this case the Internet equivalents of hotels and
- motels, tourist attractions, restaurants, and gas stations. They are
- most acceptable when they appear in context, most reviled when they are
- scattershot attempts to find audiences in unlikely spots.
-
- A billboard might be a press release or product announcement on a
- list or newsgroup devoted to a related topic. For instance, a list
- devoted to public-access library catalogs might accept a posting from a
- company that helps institutions computerize their card catalogs.
-
- Some lists tend to get more billboards than others. On com-priv,
- where participants discuss the commercialization and privatization of
- the Internet, related advertising is viewed with equanimity:
-
- To: com-priv@psi.com
- Subject: Re: Internet Business Report and Internet
- Letter Date: Mon, 15 Nov 93 23:27:22 EST
-
- Attention Subscribers of Internet Business Report
- or Internet Letter
-
- Flushed with their continued international success,
- the publishers of THE INTERNET BUSINESS JOURNAL are
- presently offering you a free three month trial
- subscription to THE INTERNET BUSINESS JOURNAL.
- THE INTERNET BUSINESS JOURNAL's premiere issue in
- June 1993 attracted the attention of sources such as
- Business Week, Fortune, Wired, The Globe and Mail,
- and since then continues to set the standard for
- reporting on Internet business opportunities and
- resources.
-
- The editor of THE INTERNET BUSINESS JOURNAL, Michael
- Strangelove, explains the reasoning behind this bold
- free offer, "We have a product that is guaranteed to
- be simply the best, and therefore dare to invite
- comparison. When it comes to price, focus, content,
- and quality, we continue to set the standard. Success
- is always imitated, but why should you settle for
- smaller, more expensive products?
-
- Subscribers may take advantage of this offer by
- sending proof of subscription to THE INTERNET
- BUSINESS JOURNAL, Subscription Manager, 208-A
- Somerset Street East, Ottawa, Ontario, CANADA
- K1N 6V2. (Tel: 613-747-6106 / FAX: 613-564-6641).
-
- THE INTERNET BUSINESS JOURNAL:
- Commercial Opportunities in the Networking Age
- Published by Strangelove Internet Enterprises Inc.
- Purveyors of Fine Internet Publications
- Mstrange@Fonorola.Net
- [From: mstrange@fonorola.net (Strangelove Press)
- Date: Mon. 15 Nov 93 23:27:22 EST]
-
- Alt-wedding, a Usenet discussion group important to those who are
- planning weddings, is not comfortable with advertising, and participants
- gently make their feelings known when advertisers invade their space:
-
- From: Brown@underground.irhe.upenn.edu (Teisa Brown)
- Newsgroups: alt.wedding
- Subject: Wedding Coordinator
- Date: 6 Jan 94 19:46:06 GMT
- Followup-To: alt.wedding
- Organization: IRHE
- Lines: 25
-
- Hello Everyone:
-
- I am so happy that so many are going to be married
- soon. Wedded Bliss!
-
- Nothing like it.
-
- My name is Teisa Brown and I live in Philadelphia,
- Pennsylvania. I wanted to let you all know that I
- am a professional wedding coordinator and would be
- happy to extend my services to you. I can work with
- you even if you do not live the Philadelphia area.
- I specialize in wedding budgets $5,000 and under.
-
- I can reached via e-mail or phone at ....
- during the day. Should you want additional
- information, please do not hesitate to contact me.
- My mailing address is as follows:
- ....[name and address deleted]...
-
- Look forward to hearing from you soon.
-
- * * *
-
- From: Brown@underground.irhe.upenn.edu (Teisa Brown)
- Newsgroups: alt.wedding
- Subject: APOLOGIES FOR AD
- Followup-To: alt.wedding
- Date: Mon, 10 Jan 1994 10:00:39 -0500
- Organization: IRHE
- Lines: 8
-
- In response to the ad I placed about a wedding
- coordinator, I want to apologize for sending my ad
- through this forum. I have offended a few and they
- have let me know.
-
- Never again will I make that mistake.
-
- Teisa Brown
- University of Pennsylvania
-
- The participants in alt.wedding, who are more interested in the
- flames of passion than in flaming, probably treated Ms. Brown gently.
- Billboards for products unrelated to the subject under discussion on
- lists and newsgroups may very well engender unprintable words and
- threats -- the practice known as "flaming."
-
- But where such advertising is allowed, it is often most welcome,
- because the participants in these lists and newsgroups have joined to
- get the kind of information advertisers can provide.
-
- For advertisers, billboards on lists and newsgroups that allow it
- are opportunities to reach people who have already expressed an interest
- in the kinds of products and services offered. These people are, in
- marketing terms, "pre-qualified": they care about these products and
- services.
-
-
- YELLOW PAGES
-
- Participants in the CNI discussion were most enthusiastic about the
- Yellow Pages approach, in which advertisements from a variety of sources
- are collected into a searchable data base. They felt that a Yellow Pages
- service fits most comfortably into the Internet culture -- and takes
- best advantage of the tools developed for the Internet. Searching and
- presentation tools like Gopher, Archie, WAIS, and lately Mosaic make
- organizing and delivering advertisers' information relatively easy, and
- allow Internetters to find that information relatively painlessly.
-
- Gopher is currently the most useful and friendly of the
- net-searching protocols. A Gopher "burrow" containing a
- wide selection of products and services, including
- options for requesting updated information and
- containing levels of background information on the
- product's features and the company's history, maybe even
- offering graphics files, would allow Internet users to
- "shop", as in the Yellow Pages, and browse and compare
- products.
- [From: fig@path.net (Cliff Figallo)
- Date: Tue, 26 Oct 93 11:25:00 -0400]
-
- On the other hand, the Yellow Pages works only when someone is
- looking for information, and not when advertisers are trying to interest
- people who may never have heard of their company or their product. In
- addition, the Yellow Pages service itself must be advertised heavily in
- order to get Internetters to use it, which leads to "intrusive"
- advertising being used to trumpet the availability of "non-intrusive"
- advertising.
-
- ...let's admit that non-intrusive advertising is almost
- an oxymoron. The word "advertising" comes from the
- Latin word meaning "call attention to," and to call
- someone's attention to something you have to intrude on
- that person's attention. And so, if you have a new
- product (or whole new type of product, which doesn't
- even fit into existing yellow pages categories!), you
- will certainly need to "intrude" -- i.e., to ADVERTISE.
- You will also need to intrude on people's consciousness
- if you have a new cause, a new politician (talk about
- oxymorons!), a new idea, etc.
- [From: gehl@ivory.educom.edu (John Gehl)
- Date: Wed, 13 Oct 93 18:52:37 -0400]
-
- Advertisers like having their product and service information in an
- expected spot. It means that those who go out looking for such
- information have an easy time finding it. But Yellow Pages advertising
- lacks the serendipitous quality of advertisements designed to entice
- readers who may not at that moment be actively seeking information about
- a product or service.
-
-
- PENNY SHOPPERS
-
- Penny Shoppers are the four-page to 20-page tabloid-size
- agglomerations of classified and display ads that are left in the handle
- of front doors around the country. They contain nothing but advertising,
- mostly from mom-and-pop pizzerias, dry cleaners, and full-service gas
- stations in the neighborhood. They are a low-tech version of the coupon
- packages that are becoming popular in upscale areas.
-
- The Internet has its own version of Penny Shoppers, the
- "misc.forsale" newsgroups that seem to be attached to major metropolitan
- areas, and the lists sponsored by purveyors of products -- often
- computers and software -- that include as many new product announcements
- as answers to users' queries. Those who subscribe to such newsgroups and
- lists know what they are getting, just as Penny Shopper readers
- recognize their blatantly commercial nature. But sometimes people really
- want to know what is for sale and on sale. That's valuable information.
-
- As a result, the proliferation of product-focused or sale-focused
- lists and newsgroups continues. It's effective advertising because the
- customer chooses it.
-
- I note that Sun has a press release mailing list
- (sunflash) which many people *voluntarily* subscribe
- to. In fact, some people archive it!
- [From: Christopher Davis <ckd@eff.org>
- Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1993 17:27:12 -0500]
-
- The Sun list is run by Sun and limited to Sun products. Other
- newsgroups and lists modeled after Penny Shoppers may be open to anyone,
- and many have advertised and sold everything from computer chips to
- houses on the Internet. Note all the different newsgroups the following
- ad appeared on:
-
- From: death@nmt.edu (That's Mr. Death)
- Newsgroups: misc.forsale.computers.mac
- misc.forsale.computers
- misc.forsale misc.forsale.computers.workstation
- comp.sys.next.marketplace
- Subject: SIMM MEMORY - 4, 4Mb 30 pin for SALE
- Date: 9 Nov 93 12:45:09 GMT
- Sender: death@black.nmt.edu
- Followup-To: death@black.nmt.edu
- Organization: New Mexico Tech
- Lines: 9
-
- I have 4, 4Mb 30 pin SIMMS for sale. 1 * 8 I believe.
- They work great in NeXTStations and NeXT Cubes, and in
- most (if not all) Mac's. Not sure about what else uses
- them.
-
- Best offer takes them. I may sell them 1 at a time as
- long as I sell all four. Hey - make me an offer, you
- may get a great deal...
-
- thanks,
- death@black.nmt.edu
-
- From the advertiser's point of view, these lists and newsgroups
- are golden. People who use them are not only "pre-qualified" because
- they are interested in the subject, they actually are actively seeking
- the products being offered. As Rob Raisch, president of the Internet
- Company, said in Mary Cronin's recent book: "On the Internet the
- customers come to you."
- [Doing Business on the Internet, by Mary J. Cronin, Van Nostrand
- Reinhold, 1994. Page 129.]
-
-
- NEWSPAPERS
-
- In the newspaper model, advertising underwrites editorial copy. The
- cost of collecting, organizing, and disseminating the information is
- passed on to the advertisers in return for giving them space to reach
- the people who want that editorial material. Newspapers receive some 80
- per cent of their income from advertisers; subscriptions and newsstand
- sales make up the rest.
-
- On the Internet, advertising can underwrite the provision of
- valuable information in a similar way, making it possible for
- Internetters to see articles or use resources that otherwise might be
- out of their price range -- or might not be offered on the Internet at
- all because of the information-owner's fear of wholesale copying.
-
- For information providers, the newspaper model means that costs are
- covered up front. For advertisers, it means that people who might not
- otherwise find out about products and services have been drawn in by the
- lure of free or low-cost information. For Internetters, the opportunity
- to get access to certain resources at little or no cost makes up for the
- advertising that must accompany it.
-
- And often the advertising itself is a lure, as it is with ACADEME
- THIS WEEK, the Internet glimpse at the information in The Chronicle of
- Higher Education.
-
- ___________________________________________________________
-
- Internet Gopher Client [v1.12]
-
- ACADEME THIS WEEK: The Chronicle of Higher Education
-
- 1. NEW IN "ACADEME THIS WEEK".
- 2. INTERNET ALERT: a new hacker attack/
- 3. INFORMATION from the February 9 Chronicle: a Guide/
- 4. EVENTS IN ACADEME: February 8 to February 21/
- 5. BEST-SELLING BOOKS on campuses.
- 6. ALMANAC: facts and figures on U.S. higher education.
- ->7. JOB OPENINGS in Academe from the February 9 Chronicle/
- 8. ABOUT THE CHRONICLE: subscriptions, advertising, copyright.
- 9. ABOUT "ACADEME THIS WEEK": search tips and more/
- ___________________________________________________________
-
- Internet Gopher Client [v1.12]
-
- JOB OPENINGS in Academe from the February 9 Chronicle
-
- ->1. SEARCH using The Chronicle's list of job titles/
- 2. SEARCH using any word or words of your choosing/
-
- ___________________________________________________________
-
- [ACADEME THIS WEEK, from The Chronicle of Higher Education.
- chronicle.merit.edu, Gopher port 70; or look under All the Gopher
- Servers in the World.]
-
- The Chronicle of Higher Education's Gopher, ACADEME THIS WEEK, has
- been available on the Internet since April, 1993, and has posted
- between 700 and 1,200 job ads each week -- without a single complaint
- from Internet users. (When there is a comment, it is most typically
- appreciation.)
-
-
- JUNK MAIL
-
- The issue of advertising on the Internet is really an issue of
- "junk e-mail," an electronic version of the tons of paper sent to the
- eponymous "resident." A mailbox full of promotions one neither chooses
- nor wants engenders fear and loathing in the hearts of Internetters, and
- leads to the most vicious flaming.
-
- While the very openness of the Internet makes it possible to flood
- e-mail addresses with electronic flyers, the culture of the Internet
- stands squarely against it. Internetters see themselves as part of a
- great experiment, all sharing their knowledge freely without imposing on
- their fellow netters.
-
- And for some Internetters, junk mail creates an unwanted expense as
- well as an annoyance. Some people pay usage fees based on time on line,
- or storage charges for mailboxes. Those people really are paying to
- receive mail they do not want. Even the Post Office charges the mailer,
- not the recipient, for direct mail.
-
- Even so, some advertisers will try sending junk mail to lists of e-
- mail addresses gained openly or covertly. These advertisers believe that
- even if most of the recipients throw away the message (and hate the
- advertiser), those few Internetters who are induced to buy will more
- than make up for papering the net with unwanted mail.
-
- Surprisingly to some, junk mail had its defenders in the
- discussion:
-
- If advertising is to be available over the net,
- either you must reach out for it or it must come
- to you unrequested. The former is a possibility
- for established products, but new products must
- necessarily reach out to you.
-
- I see only three ways that this can be done. There
- could be a registry where you indicate the types
- of products you wish to hear about; there could be
- commercially sold name lists that have much the
- same effect; or each company could reach out to
- individuals as best it can, respecting any
- personal objections to such advertising.
-
- The clearinghouse model doesn't exist yet, although
- it's a good idea. (Incidentally, the clearing house
- for direct-mail advertising reports that four
- times as many people ask for _more_ advertising as
- ask for less.)
-
- The brokered lists also do not exist yet,
- although they are also a good idea. A few
- email lists may be available from professional
- societies, but I would guess that such use is
- severely restricted.
-
- So, there really is no choice but for
- low-margin companies to send you unsolicited
- advertising. As they do so, they are to be
- commended if they keep the messages short (with
- more details on request), infrequent (but often
- enough to help you if you need the product),
- and customized in whatever way you request.
- Announcements in mass-distribution lists should
- be especially infrequent since they can't be
- customized. (I would favor having a moderator
- screen the ads.) Ads to individuals are better
- as long as the company keeps track of any
- requests that you make -- e.g., to be removed
- entirely, or not to have your name sold. This
- is called "relationship marketing," and is
- often quite popular with the customers. It
- hasn't been feasible at the national level
- until just recently, but it is certainly
- feasible on the net.
- [From: Ken Laws <LAWS@ai.sri.com>
- Date: Sun 21 Feb 93 15:17:44-PST]
-
-
- CONCLUSION
-
- The Internet is too good a market: There are too many people using
- it, with too many "interest" groups, for advertisers to stay away. With
- the pressure for advertising comes a need for guidelines if the Internet
- culture is to be maintained.
-
- These guidelines can be created, and they will be welcomed by
- advertisers and users alike.
-
- Here are our suggestions for guidelines for Internet advertising:
-
- 1. Provide information.
-
- 2. Don't impose.
-
- Simple. Easy to remember. Effective.
-
- Like good advertising.
-
-
- ___________________________________________________________________________
-
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