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I believe you're trying to boost the blogosphere advertising spend for brands and media houses. good support than.
Cheers!
Jean
I know whenever I see an advertisement for the 14th time, I truly remember that brand, especially if the advertisements are on top blogs.
It also makes me want to find out what that company is and will kick me in the butt to click on that ad even with a severe case of "ad blindness".
Advertisers could then buy ad spots to be displayed in the collection.
The key would be in creating a compelling SuperBowl ad that made people want to look at more ads, and making enough money to pay for the SuperBowl ad. HA!
... Scott
You combine the amount of people seeing the ad, the attentiveness people give towards super bowl ads and the follow up elements i described and i think you'd be hard pressed to argue that putting a banner on a blog is going to be more effective.
@BarbaraKB - I think it's one way to find people who are writing about your space. Which would you recommend?
This is a great idea for businesses, whether local or national, to spark a discussion among a loyal audience.
Hell, I'd dance a jig if a business was interested in paying me $3,000 for a Super Bowl alternative (and what a cool alternative it would be... muahaha!).
But if they did take advantage of blogs, there'd definitely be a lot of happy people bouncing around the blogosphere. :-)
If you could logistically make that easy, I bet you could sell it.
The truth is that would be VERY difficult to do. Chucking 3 million bones for everyone's eyeballs is simple. It is unartful. Your ideas is clever. Make clever easy and you win ;)
I brought this up in my BNI networking meeting this past Tuesday. I wasn't referring to my fellow members to not advertise on the Super Bowl.
The thought was actually why spend money in dying local newspapers and find local city websites to advertise with instead.
Also, we need to stop calling them blogs. Community sites (websites) is better because the small business owner thinks, 'blogs' that's just personal journals. This mindset is changing but it is still slow.
For a small business to find a local website to advertise with AllTop might not be there best choice, but a simple google search might get them pointed in the right direction.
But if *everyone* takes your advice and cuts their superbowl ad for 2010's superbowl, how long before there isn't a superbowl (not that I would care, in particular).
Ultimately, I think fear will keep the superbowl ads (and the superbowl) safe. The big companies will be too afraid to not advertise. What if that kind of advertising really does still work and fewer people buy coke this year because we didn't advertise? What if our competitor does something brilliant and that one ad causes everyone to switch?
But while the old corporations continue advertising on old media it gives opportunities for new companies to spring up in their place.
Superbowl '00 Advertiser
Blogs are global!
At least, to the English-speaking world...