Google's Plan To Penalize Advertisers Whose Websites Load Slowly Will Benefit Consumers And Google
from the now-less-irritating dept
News.com points out that Google is planning to measure the time it takes to load the target pages for its ads, and penalize ads that point to slow-loading pages in AdWords auctions. Ads that point to websites that pop right up will be ranked above those that load like molasses. I think this is not only a great idea, but a good illustration of why Google has been so successful in recent years. As we've noted before, one of Google's great strengths has been its relentless focus on improving the user experience, even when doing so might not help the bottom line in the short run. One of the ways Google does this with its ads is by prioritizing relevance over cost-per-click: Google shows you the ads it thinks you're likely to click on before the ones with the highest bids.
The payoff for Google is that over time, people begin to subconsciously associate the Google brand with a fast, clean, efficient user experience. Most user don't specifically notice that Google's ads are more relevant or its pages load a half-second faster. They just begin to feel that Google sites are generally less annoying than other sites. An extreme example of the opposite phenomenon is About.com, which I've learned to avoid it like the plague (despite the fact that it often has relevant information) because every time I click on an About page my screen seems to fill up with pop-up ads. Another example is mainstream sites like Forbes and Salon that make you watch a full-page ad before they'll show you the content you asked for. These policies goose revenues in the very short term, but at the expense of making it less likely that users will come back in the future. In contrast, by giving preference to advertisers with quick-loading websites, Google will be ensuring that users who click on ads find the experience as painless as possible -- and therefore, more likely to click on ads in the future.
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Filed Under: advertisements, faster loading websites
Companies: google
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Salon got clipped, About was aborted
I've absolutely never cared for about.com (hated is more appropriate). In the search engines it always appears relevent but it never is. The information is marginal at best. What's there is spread over as many pages as possible to increase page views and then, as you noted, are the ads. I put about.com in every hosts file I edit so any attempt to load a page is in-effect aborted.
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About?
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improving the user experience
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Maybe it's just me...
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Re: Maybe it's just me...
I'll just point my Google Ads to a very fast minimal page that links to the slower bulkier page. Or I'll make my page very light and bulk it up with Javascript that hopefully Google won't catch.
Hopefully it won't be that easy to abuse.
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I used to think that as time went on, pages would load faster and faster as speeds increased. What's actually happened is that average page loading times have stayed the same, and pages have simply grown more complex to take up the extra bandwidth.. Maybe Google's plan will contribute, ever so slightly, to making what I "used to think," come true?
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100% Content, One Ad-For-Access and That's It
We are using the 100% opt-in Ultramercial format to achieve this. The same model that five years ago brought Salon back from the brink of bankruptcy and brought 47% of their ad revenue according to their own 10Qs. Salon has since moved away from the correct implementation (see our site http://www.motorcarmarket.com) and run an interstitial that is forgettable.
The trade off for Salon was more viewers entered their site so they could increased page view impressions for ads most people ignore. They gave up a respectful, honest format that gave advertisers a one-on-one, full-screen, opt-in engagement for less than the cost of a key word click.
Paul Grusche
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Maybe
I've been complaining about the poor quality web development for a while now. Seems like I'm no the only one.
They need to do this with their search results as well. Not bump a page to the bottom just because it take 1.5min to load, but it should be a factor.
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Re: Maybe it's just me...
This shouldn't hurt any small businesses either. I work as a web developer in Western Massachusetts, and most of the small businesses around here run their hosting with one of many local hosting companies (I myself run one alongside the development work). While these companies don't offer the same amount of resources (such as bandwidth and space that we know the client will never use anyways) the big hosting companies do, they don't overload the machines and they cater to these businesses. They're also fairly cheap- my average client pays about $15 a month. The few bigger clients who need their own servers need them because they're businesses are successful, so they tend to be able to afford it.
The only people who will suffer are those who aren't willing to work to keep their business current. It isn't a matter of money in most cases as much as it is a lack of understanding- many people seem to think that you can put a website up, ignore it, and it will act as a perpetual money machine. These are the same people who react to lowered sales by only increasing the amount of money they're spending on advertising, while ignoring the underlying problem. A slow site is a sign that the company maintaining the site has fallen into this pattern so I can see why Google would want to reward other sites over them
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Re: 100% Content, One Ad-For-Access and That's It
Not only was the advertisement that showed up one of the most annoying things I've ever seen, it didn't even function right. After being shuffled from site to site the ad finally dumped me onto a 404 page.
Well done.
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Ads are killing sites
I commend Google for promoting speed in advertising as generally its the ads that are causing the slow page loads, but they should also limit numbers of ads per page.
Putting a couple of relevant ads along the side of a page is okay but having ads embedded into the middle of content is ridiculous.
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an alternative to advertising
I pay $120/mo out of my pocket to host a system which tens of thousands of people use for good and useful purposes. Nobody charges for any of that stuff. I support it with my own $120 and consider it the tax I personally owe to keep the internet running and full of free information.
Now, I know $120 a month is an awful lot to ask everyone to pay. But lets use it as a starting point. In 2006, U.S. online advertising spending was $16.8Bln. If each 300M americans contibuted his $120 then the free internet would be funded to the tune of $36Bln.
Or, to fund it at current (2006) levels each american would need to contribute $60/month.
So, thats how much free stuff you're getting. Not a bad deal... but... I pay more than that, so I have earned my right to my adblocker.
You should consider doing it, also, and in return you will have also earned the exquisite moral delight of knowing that you played to the strengths of the system of free information, instead of leaving it to the adverting sharks to sully it with noise and flashy cacophony.
Perhaps not a practical alternative to advertising.. but an alternative, nevertheless, as promised.
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Free Speech?
Say there's two pages full of information about MegaCompany X. One of them contains a great deal of information about how MegaCompany X has destroyed the environment, run ma and pop shops out of business, etc. but is run on a small-budget hosting site. And the other page is run by MegaCompany on their MegaServers.
I go out and search for MegaCompany information, and no matter how much more relevant the critical page is, because it loads slower, it will be further down in the results? Seems less than fair to me...
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Two points
Seriously, though, with so many companies offering pop-up blockers (AOL, AOL toolbar, Google toolbar, Firefox, IE, Yahoo toolbar, Earthlink, etc), why in the world is anyone seeing pop-up windows?
And with so many people blocking pop-ups, why would any company even still think this is a viable form of advertising?
Second, does Google's plan penalize the website or the web hosting company? Suppose a business designs a super-fast site, but the hosting company is slow (or is down or whatever their excuse is). The business can't do anything except complain while their search ranking falls.
Or will this encourage businesses to switch away from slow hosting companies?
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GMail takes forever to load!
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So many here do not like a miracle... don't believ
Google offers to fix the internet for free, keeping it from becoming (MORE)predictable than rush hour(s) in LA- and nobody is singing Google praises?
Come on! Move out of your van and notice who the problem is.
Fantastic, once in a year, article, in that it reports on a SOLUTION rather than a problem.. so again:
Haaannd...Salute! for Techdirt.
Mike
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Re: GMail takes forever to load!
GMail loads extremely fast for me - as does all of Google. Of course the major reason Google is fast is the thousands of NetScalers they have running. :-)
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Re: Re: 100% Content, One Ad-For-Access and That's
mkam
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Google Analytics, too, please.
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Re: Maybe it's just me...
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