Ask HN: What advertising works on you?
Over the past five years I have possibly clicked on about ten contextual advertisement, mostly for my own amusement (e.g., seeing how relevant the ad was). The only online advertisements that were even close to being effective on me were the ads for Bing, Evony, and Mail-Chimp (I like the latter's 60s-esque "lets get social" ad).
Of course, advertising on the internet works on some demographics, but what about the HN demographic? What types of advertisements have worked on you? And why? What are some important principles regarding advertising to the more learned crowd?
16 comments
[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 50.3 ms ] threadThat and affiliate ads. What person in the HN crowd hasn't given (MT) a thought after seeing all the high-profile sites recommending it?
Effective advertising doesn't always = click throughs and action. But also in terms of name recognition and branding. Every "impression" is just that. Is GoDaddy the best domain registrar? No... but you likely know they are a registrar.
Probably the biggest example is Amazon affiliate links. The other day I was looking for a new Bicycle pump, so I looked at different bicycle pumps online and visited a random blog where the author bitched about bicycle pump problems they had, then talked about a pump they bought that solved the problem. Sure enough, at the end of the post was a link to Amazon for the same model, so off I clicked.
Have you ever watched Derren Brown's show? The human mind is incredibly susceptible to suggestion. The purchasing decisions you make in just about all aspects of your life will to some extent be determined by the advertising you have been exposed to. Ads create mind-share. When you next need a product or service, the provider that is likely to be the first you think of is likely to be the one to whom's ads you have recently been exposed - knowingly or otherwise.
Edit: we are, as Douglas Adams parodied with his Electric Monk, believing machines.
Consciously, very often in a negative way: Some ads make me less likely to buy or even consider the advertised brand/product. These include obviously fraudulent e.g. Enzyte (not that I needed, but if I ever did, I would never consider), to the we-assume-you're-an-idiot-and-have-short-term-memory ones like Ditech, and includes the we're-trying-hard-to-exploit-your-thought-processes-but-are-incompetent-at-it ones like Sprint's.
If an ad is smart, I'm more likely to be interested in the product e.g., Sony's '80s Trinitron 5 second genius ad: A man stands by a turned off Trinitron and says "This is the new Sony Black Trinitron. But I can't show you how good it is. Not with this one" (and knocks on the screen of the TV you're watching from the inside)
I think 99.9% of the advertising I see leaves no impression at all, though.
I can't measure my unconscious response (duh), but I suspect it's nearly non existent -- I have so few brand name items that it's unlikely to have had much effect.
I think the only internet advertising that has made an impression on me are Hulu/etc video advertisements (basically tv commercials, but generally more relevant to me). I can't think of any standard internet advertising (banner ads, google ads, etc) which has made an impression on me.
It's the only ad campaign that has made me go out and buy a product basely only on that ad campaign.
I've never eaten at Red Lobster but oh MAN do I want to. That half lobster, flames lapping up and engulfing it, charry grill lines, being dipped in fake yellow butter.... mmm...
And Olive Garden. I have been and think its awful. But every time I see the commercial I want to go back. It just looks so good and tickles my brain in exactly the right ways.
I know that eating at these places will leave my disappointed, but somehow the rich visual imagery (planned by food stylists, not chefs...) just appeals to me on some visceral level that short-circuits the rational mind in me.
Lucky for me there's not "order now" button on my TV thats hooked up to a credit card.
Ads like those will drive me to install ad blockers, which I've never before bothered with.