Title: The Internet as Communication
1The Internet as Communication
- The importance of interactivity
- Implications for mix elements
- -Web-Based Advertising
- -Issues for Perspective
2A Resource for Communication
- A unique medium
- Provides flexibility
- Provides multiple means for communication
- A context for content
- Distinction between information (content) and
vehicle that conveys it (communication) - Distinction between context/vehicle and
infrastructure how it is presented (Internet)
3Context for Content Communication Model
Communication (Type of Ad)
Consumer
Firm
Content
Medium
Consumer
Consumer
Infrastructure (Internet)
4A Resource for Communication
- A unique medium
- A context for content
- Distinction between information and vehicle that
conveys it - Distinction between context/vehicle and
infrastructure that conveys it - A context with multiple vehicles
- Different forms of marketing communications
5Media Typology Based On Characteristics
Dynamic Media
Face to Face Selling
Television
Web E-mail
Radio
Instant Messaging, Chats
Blogs
Impersonal
Personal
Multimedia Web
Static Web
Magazines
Direct Mailings
Billboards
Static Media
Source Hoffman Donna L. and Thomas P. Novak
(1996), Marketing in Hypermedia
Computer-Mediated Environments Conceptual
Foundations, Vol. 60 pp. 50-68.
6Characterizing Communication
- Components
- Source
- Message
- Receiver
- Processes
- Encoding (by source)
- Decoding (by receiver)
- Communications
- Communication Process
7The Communication Process
Marketer
Source
Ad
Encoding
Message
Medium
Channel
Decoding
Consumer
Receiver
8Advertising Communications Model
Consumers
9Autobiography
10Narrative
11Drama
12Parsing the Vocabulary
- Marketing communication as a noun
- A noun is a thing
- E.g., a message and its form
- A Download Netscape 128.0 Now!!!! Button
- Marketing communication as a verb
- A verb is an act
- E.g., the process of sharing information
- Interactivity between source and receiver
- Interactivity between receiver and content
13Parsing the Vocabulary
- Marketing communication as a noun
- A noun is a thing
- E.g., a message and its form
- A Download Netscape 128.0 Now!!!! Button
- Marketing communication as a verb
- A verb is an act
- E.g., the process of sharing information
- Interactivity between source and receiver
- Interactivity between receiver and content
14InteractivitySource and Receiver
Source
Receiver
15Source and Receiver Interactivity
- Interactivity is based on the size of the
targeted audience - Broadcast (mass audience)
- One-to-many
- E.g., Static web-pages (Phase II website)
- Narrowcast (focused audience)
- One-to-some (focused)
- E.g., Cable channels, protected servers,
restricted access - Pointcast (Individual audience)
- One-to-one
- E.g., Direct mail, e-mail, Blogs, chats
16(No Transcript)
17InteractivityReceiver and Content
Source
Receiver
Message Content
18Receiver and Content Interactivity
- Role of user control over message
- User preferences (customerization)
- Dictated by computing constraints
- User as active participant
- Pull (selectivity) vs. Push of traditional media
- All forms (broad, narrow, point) can be pushed
with the Internet but more often pulled by
user! - Internet enables pull
19Effects of Interactivity on Content
- Use communication to match product to needs
- Individualized offering personalization
- Differently driven by push and pull
- Pull is user-initiated (e.g., My Yahoo!)
- Push is marketer-initiated (e.g., Amazon recs)
- The difference may affect the quality of
personalization
20Marketing Mix Implications - Product
- Communication and Product Strategy
- Mass customization with communication
- Two requirements
- Receiver-content interactivity
- Modularization
- Customization characteristics
- A continuum (mass production to personalization)
21A Continuum
Mass production to Personalization
Mass Production
Personalization
Customization
n customers, several product forms
One product form, n users
n customers, n product forms
Interactivity
High
Low
Process
Individual Preferences
Optimize for Markets
22Marketing Mix Implications - Product
- Communication and Product Strategy
- Mass customization with communication
- Two requirements
- Receiver-content interactivity
- Modularization
- Customization characteristics
- A continuum (mass production to personalization)
- AmericanGirl (Customization)
- My Twin (Personalization)
- My Jones Soda (Personalization)
23Marketing Mix Implications - Pricing
- Communication and Pricing Strategy
- From static to dynamic pricing
- Limits to fixed price models
- Fixed is better for low differentiation, low
elasticity (variability) - Internet price trans. price sensitivity
- The Internet and alternative models
- Real-time pricing Fun with supply demand
- Role of infomediaries
- Auctions (e.g., eBay)
- Companies as price-setting middlemen (Priceline)
- So what pricing models are used online?
24Online Pricing Models
- Pricing models for online ads
- CPM
- Click-through
- Flat-fee
25CPM
- Cost Per Thousand (CPM)
- How much it costs to reach 1000 people
- Based on each type of communication
26How to Calculate CPM
- An online shoshkele has 10,460,000 impressions.
- A full page shoshkele costs 8,000.
0.76
27Online Pricing Models
- Pricing models for online ads
- CPM
- Click-throughs
- Flat-fee
28Online Pricing Models
- Clickthroughs (CTRs) the percentage of the ad
views that result in an ad click. - Recently, average clickthrough rate has declined
to about 0.17 according to Nielsen Netratings. - First used in 1996 by PG but model failed to
catch on because it did not take into account the
impact on the consumer from simply viewing ads
29Online Pricing Models
- Pricing models for online ads
- CPM
- Click-throughs
- Flat-fee
30Online Pricing Models
- Flat fee flat rate charged per time period for
an ad of a specific size (the traditional print
ad model) - Typically used when web site first created and
has no track record of viewers - Major media sites (e.g. Yahoo CNN) use flat
pricing - Costs can range from 100,000/month for a general
ad on Yahoo because of its high traffic to 2,000
a month on Spacenews.com, a speciality web site
for the space industry.
31Online Pricing Models
- Pricing models for online ads
- CPM
- Click-through
- Flat-fee
- Whats it worth ROAI
- of impressions purchased avg. click-through
rate avg. customer turnover (visitors to
customers) avg. net profit/sale expected
return.
32Calculate ROAI
- You purchase 100,000 impressions
- You get average of 4 click-throughs
- And 5 customer turnover
- You then make a profit of 100 every ticket
priceline resells
100,000 x .04 x .05 x 100 20,000 ROAI
33Marketing Mix Implications - Placement
- Communication and Distribution
- Internet as point-of-sale
- From complex sites to simple banners
- Decision making for online channels
- Destination site
- Full-fledged channel (all communication aspects
managed) - Most efficient for online transactions (e.g.,
Dell.com) - Micro-sites
- In-depth brand information, externally hosted
- lower online channel efficiencies (e.g., home
appliances) - Promotion Strategy
- Use promotions to distribute information and to
achieve marketing goals - Or use a combination!
34Marketing Mix Implications - Promotions
- Communication and Promotion
- Sales promotions
- Short-term incentives
- Coupons, contests
- Public relations
- Corporate and brand image
- All unpaid-for exposure
- Site content
- Events (e.g., Sponsorship of events)
- Personal selling
- Direct Contact via online communication
- E.g., Responses to information inquiries (Car
dealers) - Advertising
35Online Advertising
- Advertising is a big deal online
- Two forms
- 1) text-based and 2) web-based (multimedia)
- Text Based
- Email (can be multimedia), Blogs, Chats
- Web-based
- Banners, Pop-Ups, Rich Media
36Internet Promotions are Not New
Internet Promotions
Banner Ads
E-Mail
Website pressroom
Online Events
Chat Rooms/Listservs
Viral Marketing
37A Little History
- First Internet advertisement sold in 1994
- Hotwire.com sold the ad for 30,000/year to ATT
the annual cost to run its web site - Early advertisers included ATT, Sprint, MCI,
Volvo, Club Med and Zima - In the early days, clickthrough rates were 25
- Today Internet advertising is a 4 billion dollar
business
38LARGEST CREATIVE PORTFOLIO ranked by of
unique creatives
Week of November 14 20, 2005
Source http//www.netratings.com
39Top Site Genres (where ads placed)
Ranked by impressions Week of November 14 - 20,
2005
Source http//www.netratings.com
40Leading Consumer Packaged Goods Advertisers
Ranked by impressions Week of November 14 20,
2005
Source http//www.netratings.com
41Types of Online Advertising
- Banner Ads
- SideBar Ads
- Pop-Up and Pop-Under Ads
- Rich Media (Interstitials and Shoshkeles)
- Email
- Blogs and Chats