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Advertising on Web 2.0

May 22nd, 2007 by Mike McKinnon

Blue Lithium Labs did a research study comparing the conversion rates, the CTR and CPC of traditional media sites to those of user generated content sites like YouTube and MySpace. The report can be found here and is free to download.

The highlights of the study were:
conversion-graph.JPG

  • Ads on non-2.0 sites (classic editorial content sites) convert 31% better than ads run against user-generated content (see Figure).

  • Ads on top-brand non-2.0 sites (defined as comScore’s top 250) convert 175% better than user-generated content sites.
  • However, 2.0 media is so *cheap* (as of now anyway) that it’s still worth testing.

While the study is a cautionary tale about investing in advertising on Web 2.0 sites, I think it misses the critical point of Web 2.0. The study measures traditional advertising traffic on sites that are geared toward non-traditional users. Web 2.0 is about the user. Advertising is about the company. Therefore, it makes sense that people that are browsing Web 2.0 sites are not interested in the traditional advertising medium.

The strength of Web 2.0 lies within creating relationships, telling a story and two way communication. Using traditional advertising buys on Web 2.0 sites is almost like trying to get a square peg to fit in a round hole.

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One Response to “Advertising on Web 2.0”

  1. ReadyTalk Blog » Blog Archive » Politics goes Web 2.0 Says:

    [...] be seen whether the political parties will use social media for its intended use. I wrote about the failings of traditional media buys on social media sites a few weeks back. Will politicians use social media to engage their constituents in ongoing [...]

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