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![]() Status: ***** Elder Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: News Office
Posts: 1,295 Spent time on board: 0:05:24 Hours Rep Power: 3 ![]() | Looking for ticket buyers, the Los Angeles Sparks women's pro basketball team recently tried a new ad play: A TV commercial during which viewers could press a button on their remote to get a team brochure. Hundreds responded. "Whoever was on our billing information as head of household got the information," says Jim Heneghan, ad sales chief for cable company Charter Communications, which created the newfangled "interactive" TV ad and sold the time to the Sparks. Cable operators such as Charter, as well as their satellite TV rivals, all are experimenting with such ads. Their goal: battle Internet media for ad dollars by merging a TV commercial's impact with formerly Web-only selling points such as interactive content, ad targeting based on consumers' personal data and precise effectiveness measurement based on how many people click on an ad for more information. With a traditional 30-second spot you only know how many people saw it, says Sam Chadha, marketing director for deodorants at consumer products giant Unilever, which has used interactive ads for several products, including Degree deodorant. "Interactive TV lets marketers also study consumer behavior in response to the ad." Making TV spots work harder is one of the ad industry's most discussed -- and elusive -- goals. Already, two-thirds of big marketers said standard TV ads became less effective in the past two years, according to a January survey by the Association of National Advertisers and Forrester Research. The good news for sellers of TV ad time: 43 percent also said they are eager to try interactive TV ads. Nike and Unilever are among the advertisers that have created interactive TV campaigns. Many more -- from mom and pop retailers to national banks -- are trying out a two-way dialog via the channel clicker. Among the possibilities: -- TV ads or video-on-demand-offerings that let viewers order... More... |
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