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-Jeff
You're spot on the mark with this one. It's not the ad sellers that loose...it's the site owner...
I have a very short fuse for slow loading sites.
I'm sure there's some sort of ajaxy technology that could pull the ads in after the site loaded
Also sites with multiple ads from different servers will load a different rates and that could make the entire page lag.
Keep it simple on the advertisements.
http://www.iabcanada.com/standards/cuap2.shtml
Note that these are the Canadian standards but they are similar to ones for the U.S. and other territories.
Even if you're not developing ads for sites that require you to conform to IAB specs (many big publishers do) it's probably a good practice to do so, as they work hard to balance load time with creative needs.
The difference between 2 or 3 seconds and 7 or 8 seconds? For the people I want reading me blog, it's huge.
I've been using Firefox for over a year now and didn't realize that some changes I made were affecting IE. IE wouldn't load the page until everything had loaded, where FF, loaded quick.
I don't think the main issue is necessarily load times. I've started poking around a forum on a topic I'm interested in, and the "our sponsors" header takes up all of the space above the fold that isn't reserved for navigation. The advertising becomes a costly nuisance and a recurrent usability annoyance. The experience loses its seamlessness.
It's like trying to hold a dinner party with some stranger who paid for it sitting in the middle of the rug letting out loud yelping noises from time to time. OK, the party gets paid for, but there is a cost.
I'm certainly not opposed to monetization--we've all got to pay the rent, and there's nothing wrong with trying to come up with good models to do that. But a good model needs to respect the reader before all else, and to introduce itself when it is wanted, not when it's an annoyance.
Adwords is a pretty primitive implementation of that idea, but at least they get the balance more or less right.
Must stop writing things, am becoming less and less coherent.
I'm all for ads, it's become the norm. I believe that we have an innate ability as humans to filter out advertising that has no value or relevance in our lives. As such, the ads that are relevant to our needs or interests will be properly designed to attract the attention of it's demographic audience.
Regards,
Rick