Tasteful Ad Tactics for Social Media

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Internet advertising can be tricky, especially when dealing with social media. How do you get users to see ads without being ignored or too in your face? While ads bring essential revenue to a website, they can also turn off social media visitors losing crucial social media votes in the process. So don’t waste your valuable linkbait by using tactics that will hinder results and follow these tips.

Bad Tactics

1. In-Text Advertising

This form of keyword advertising inserts a script into a page and double underlines any keywords.  When the mouse is over the keyword an ad pops up that is associated with it.  Social media users thoroughly dislike this method.  Many times this form of advertising will garner comments like “I feel like I’m on a mine field when I move my cursor.” If you do use in-text advertising, simply turn it off until your story is popular so users can focus on your content, not your ads.

intelitext-1

2. Excessive Contextual Ads

While contextual advertising can generate revenue, excessive amounts can leave a bad taste in your visitors mouths. Using contextual ads all over the page, in the middle of the page,and in the middle of  paragraphs gets out of control and makes the site look like it is trying way too hard to maximize its income.

3. Pop-ups, Pop-unders and Floaters

These are ad’s that pop up or under the browser window you are on. They have been evolving in tactic and style. Whether it be “shooting the monkeys or whacking the mole” these deceptive dialog boxes can be highly irritating (especially the ones with sound).

pop-ups

4. Too Flashy/Noisy

You don’t want to induce a seizure in the user or visitor to your site. Creating banner ads that flash like crazy and give people headaches will hurt (literally) you more than help. Ads that play sounds or music  add even more distraction to the mix. Visitors rarely stick around a website that plays music, especially when they are in the office, or already listening to music of their own. Intrusive advertising disturbs and disrupts the user so get rid of these immediately to maximize your social media exposure.

5. Too Many Pages

When a site gets greedy and wants to rack up the adviews they split the content up across multiple pages, it is an instant turnoff to social media users.  While slide shows may be great your ad impressions, they can instantly lead to a social media ‘down vote’ and bring the haters out of the woodwork on the comments. If you have 12 items on a list try putting 4 items per page instead of one item every page, your visitors will thank you.

forbes-slideshow

The Good Tactics

1. Consistency

It is true banner blindness is an issue, but instead of trying to combat where you place the ad and further annoy users and disrupt interaction, keep ads consistent. Place ads on the top or sides of the pages, rather than located directly in the text.  Studies show that we are suckers for advertising, even if it isn’t embedded within the heart of the story.  So ditch those ads that float across the screen, and start being consistent and the user may follow up willingly.

2. Honesty

If I click on your ad I want to know where I am going before I get there. Being honest establishes trust. Ads that speak plainly and are not deceptive seem more credible.   Using credible ad sources also make your site look more professional.  Many times lower level ad networks feature poorly executed ads that can “cheapen” your site.

3. Fast Load Times

Social media users are out for information and instant gratification, they live in the moment. Slowing them down are disrupting this process is negative and will be avoided by them. Make sure ads relatively small in size and they won’t die before the graphic even loads.

Using good advertising tactics translates into more social media votes for your website.  Good content is extremely valuable, so follow these tips to make sure that social media is talking about your content, not your ads.

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Comments

  1. I especially hate the in text ads and the floating pop-ups which always seem to cover what I am currently reading.

  2. Thanks Patrick….liked this advice (especially what not to do) so much I’ve added it to our popular Superlist of What Not To Do in Social Media http://tinyurl.com/6rahtu

  3. eric hebert says:

    I think what we’ll start seeing is more “site sponsorships” ala Myspace – where multiple ads are bought within one page or even site backgrounds being converted into one big ad. Multiple impressions on one page pretty much guarantee that the viewer will see the add at least once!

  4. John says:

    I am the SEO and Social media director for a womens health website and you just confirmed what I’ve been thinking for a very long time. It’s rather disappointing that my company pretty much banks on every “bad topic” you list.

    How do I tell a company, which drives most of their revenue through CPM ads and pageviews-per-click that they’re doing it all wrong?!!

    Tough spot to be in when you tell someone their fundamental way of making money isn’t what the user likes.

  5. Joseph C. says:

    “I think what we’ll start seeing is more ‘site sponsorships’ ala Myspace”

    Eric, I’ve noticed this trend coming up more as well. Pandora went to town with the concept – see the Energizer Bunny ad, complete with unique background image & color scheme. Here’s a short post talking about the change.

    Some bloggers have talked about having ‘sponsored posts.’ Not sure how I feel about the pay for content concept in regards to blogs. Your thoughts?

    • Hi Joseph, thanks for commenting. I feel that the Pandora ads work when they interact with the user, much like the article you linked stated, by suggesting stations or like the iPhone ad suggesting the application for the phone. Sponsored posts may be a bit 'skewed' depends on how it is approached and executed.

  6. Jeff says:

    Ya, I think you’re talking about gutter ads. The whole site becomes a themed page. I think they are effective in building brands but I’m not really sure about the click throughs.

  7. Hendry Lee says:

    The Forbes screenshot reminds me of the Forbes version of Richest People in America.

    I have to press the “speed up” button so I don’t waste a lot of time per profile.

    In blogosphere, we often see top 100 list all in one page. Perhaps Forbes could have divided the list into a few pages.

    That makes a lot of readers happy, you’re right.

    These tips are useful for general web publishing as well. Thanks for posting.

  8. #5 is a big one, whether for advertising reasons or otherwise. I don’t know how many times I saw something interesting on Digg or elsewhere, only to find that I would have to multiclick to see each item. My next click has always been the “back” button.

  9. Tough spot for sure, no easy way to give bad news ;) but it is important that they hear it from you!

  10. chiropractic says:

    I love the plugin Chris. It rocks (but not as much as 10e20.com does)!

    In text advertsing bugs me most, followed by multi pages of content for a single article or set of photos.

  11. Leo says:

    Yeah, the intext ads are VERY annoying. I usually don't hang around on the website with those because invariably I will accidentally click on an ad. Plus if they are real close to a live link, then it is harder to click the link.

  12. I absolutely hate in text advertising. There is nothing worse than having your mouse scroll across an ad the comes up and dominates the screen.

  13. Adrian Eden says:

    Great article, consistency is the zest of the gods, that is for sure, same with transparency.

  14. Lenen says:

    I hate the in-content advertising links with popups and pop-ups such as the hotmail ads which always cover what I am currently reading. They are just too distracting that I'm even thinking about not using that email account any more.

  15. Matt says:

    You're right on page with in-text ads. Extremely difficult to navigate through those "mines". Really annoying.

  16. Shawn says:

    I prefer to try to blend.

    I have my ads so there not to noisy, But they stick out as well.
    I am using WordPress and Adsense on a Post by Post basis.

    I also hate intext advertising, It takes away from the value of a quality post.

  17. jame says:

    o really I appreciate this this is important thing and thanks for giving information.

  18. Patrick says:

    Thanks for reading jame, glad you found it useful!

  19. asdqwe says:

    Thanks Patrick….liked this advice (especially what not to do) so much I've added it to our popular Superlist of What Not To Do in Social Media.
    Thats a great one. Enjoyed reading it thanks.

  20. Richie123 says:

    EXACTLY> I especially hate the in-text advertising. I tend to click on them too much and it spoils the reading.

  21. Richie says:

    I have submitted this and voted this useful information to reddit. Great Post Patrick!

  22. Vicky Blake says:

    Fully agree.
    I always close the site when pop-ups or pop-unders start. It's a horrible heritage of the first adult sites that should be thrown away…

  23. kris says:

    I hate these tactics. I've actually started skipping major sites like espn.com because they've started pound people with pop-ups!

  24. Mexabet says:

    I resent sites that use In-Text Advertising, Pop-ups, Pop-unders and Floaters. They seem like "forcing" me to click on their ads. In particular, any site that uses Pop-ups and Pop-unders doesn't look genuine to me.

  25. Patrick says:

    Thanks for reading and commenting Vicky! I am on board with that.

  26. Patrick says:

    It does seem like they are being aggressive. Thanks for commenting Mexabet!

  27. Murray says:

    And one more practical advise that really helps.
    - Build your community. If people in your community trust you they also start to trust the ads that you're placing.
    Of course it stands along with your idea to be honest.

  28. alagausun says:

    I appreciate this this is important thing
    acai berry

  29. Teruki_M says:

    I am in e-business and sadly, those ad techniques work, and that's why they keep using them. I don't use them even I know they work, because I myself thing they are anoying!

  30. RohitK says:

    HI Patric,
    You are 100% right regarding social media marketing. Some people do not now how to design proper website for social media. But those who know they are successful. I want to say that after knowing all these things also people do not want to change their websites.

    • Patrick says:

      Thanks for reading and commenting RohitK. Change can and should be something that is thought of positively and constructively each day ;) I agree.

  31. Linda says:

    I agree with many of these points. They're seemingly common sense, yet so many websites are guilty of these crimes.

    Linda,
    Walset County Veterinarian, Heartworm Medicine

  32. Parvez says:

    I really think that this is an important thing.

  33. TriviaGirl says:

    Some good tips on what to do. Unfortunately not enough webmasters are going to come across the post. Pop-ups have to be the worst.

    ~Jane
    Canada, Trivia Questions

  34. Andy says:

    yeah..good insights. ads that pay on per click basis like Adsense are usually the ones that fall under Excessive Contextual Ads. Too much advertising sucks but a good ad is one that doesn't look like an ad.

    hgh
    herpes treatment

  35. bbq smokers says:

    In my opinion In-Text Advertising is the worst tactic. It is irritating. I agree to your idea "If I click on your ad I want to know where I am going before I get there". Honesty and Fast Load Times are really good tactics. Webmasters must follow these tips.

  36. Lydia says:

    I totally agree with the suggestions. Stuffing the site with all kinds of ads, buttons, flash, only distracts people from what the site wants to get across.
    Lydia, editor Gaba Supplements

  37. This blog explains ads which are coming while opening the site…. This blog is useful to who are all giving advertising to know the feedback from users..

  38. Fred says:

    I would have to agree with all of them, but I'm especially annoyed by the excessive contextual ads. I certainly have never clicked on a "double underlined" link on purpose simply because it's obvious that it is a sponsored link. The few times I inadvertently clicked on them, I was redirected to a random site that was not relevant to the text that was underlined!
    Regards,
    Fred Trucking Insurance

  39. Fred says:

    I would have to agree with all of them, but I'm especially annoyed by the excessive contextual ads. I certainly have never clicked on a "double underlined" link on purpose simply because it's obvious that it is a sponsored link. The few times I inadvertently clicked on them, I was redirected to a random site that was not relevant to the text that was underlined!

    Trucking Insurance

  40. Fred says:

    I would have to agree with all of them, but I'm especially annoyed by the excessive contextual ads. I certainly have never clicked on a "double underlined" link on purpose simply because it's obvious that it is a sponsored link. The few times I inadvertently clicked on them, I was redirected to a random site that was not relevant to the text that was underlined!

    Trucking

    • Patrick says:

      Thanks for commenting Fred. I agree, contextual ads that direct you to another place altogether are lame ;)

  41. dlbb says:

    Your tips are very great, easy to understand and follow.
    Thank you.

  42. Pop text ads are really annoying and I think they destroy a lot of the trust you have with your visitors.

  43. fayis says:

    A very good informative one

  44. Forbes get so many views from Yahoo that I don't think they care about their crappy slide show script. The content they display is usually just fluff stories… they only write them for the ads. My biggest dislike is the latest trend (Not mentioned above) to stuff ads at the start of every video story. Which leads me to a similar pet peeve – when the local TV New Stations say go to our website for more. If I wanted to get my news online I wouldn't be watching your newscast. It's circular moronic! And if I am so interested to go to their site, it's usually buried someplace I can't find it anyways. Yes that is my real name… hey mutual beneficially eclusive something other other right?

  45. AndrewEJ says:

    I personally find contextual ads very annoying. They prevent me from reading the content, and I will exit the page immediately that i see a pop up ad, out of principle.

  46. fluffyman19 says:

    I appreciate this, it is an important thing

  47. Jay says:

    I agree those pop ups are annoying and will significantly reduce the number of return visitors. Its so annoying when you have a thousand pop ups on your desktop!!

  48. Geld lenen says:

    Think social media costs a lot more time than you first expect it to.

  49. Joanne says:

    Thanks for sharing this; your input is appreciated and has made me change my opinion slightly. About the 3rd paragraph though, could you expand on that a little? I'm a bit confused about what you mean (so maybe others are too).

  50. joe barry says:

    As bad as this may sound, there are tremendous results being had by pop unders and overs. yes we hate when it is done to us, but it works.

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