Content As Advertising: Making Advertising An Easter Egg For People To Hunt Down
from the nicely-done dept
Over the years, we've talked a lot about how
advertising is content (and how
content is advertising), and it's always nice to see cool examples that really demonstrate that in practice. Our friends over at NOTCOT are doing a fun little experiment with Bonobos pants, in which they're
hiding little Bonobos Easter Eggs throughout the site, and offering prizes for people who find them.
The end result? People who are interested are
actively hunting for the content, which is clearly "advertising." It's not intrusive. It's not annoying. It's not deceptive. Instead, it's
desired and it has users actively seeking it out. That's the quintessential goal, when you do a good job of hitting that point where advertising is good content -- when it has absolutely nothing to do with being intrusive or annoying at all, but rather is
actively sought by an audience. It's the holy grail. Unfortunately, it's also something that's still difficult to convey to advertisers, who are too often afraid to try something new and creative. So kudos to NOTCOT and Bonobos for a fun campaign.
Filed Under: advertising, advertising is content, content, content is advertising
Companies: bonobos, notcot
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It is certainly a neat take on it, since it weaves it so elegantly with their core content, and that's something a lot of contests fail at (though, again, I always find I supersize my fries way more often during Monopoly days, since you only get stamps on the large). But the truly impressive advertising-as-content feats are those where you don't have to give away prizes in exchange for engagement.
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True. Though, to be fair, I never claimed that it was "innovative." Just using it as an example of a cool promotion.
But the truly impressive advertising-as-content feats are those where you don't have to give away prizes in exchange for engagement.
Yes, that's definitely true as well.
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Everyone, including me, likes to believe that advertising doesn't effect us. But it does. And that's not necessarily bad.
We are all people who earn money then spend some of it on things we want and need. We benefit from being made aware of our choices, being educated about them, and being empowered to choose them. Of course, some advertising is deceptive or manipulative or just plain bad - but the core social contract of advertising is a good one (because let's not forget: if there was no advertising, many things that you currently enjoy would increase in price - everything from television to city buses)
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Skin
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One of the simple, immutable truths of advertising.
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td advertising and the ads on td are very far from this. Its intrusive and annoying all the way around here.
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I'm still "actively hunting for the content" HERE.
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20070215/002923.shtml
"I hope that soon I'll be able to show why there will always be the opportunity to recover the fixed costs (though, it still depends on execution, which doesn't always happen)."
FOUR AND THREE QUARTER YEARS SO FAR, MIKE.
It's merely essential to a business to recover "sunk (or fixed) costs".
By the way, for anyone who thinks I'm alone in yelling about this huge flaw, just READ the comments. It's obvious that Mike is just stalling because /can't/ answer that basic question -- nearing five years now...
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Re: I'm still "actively hunting for the content" HERE.
Give me 100 /million/ and I'll make a /movie/ of it for you.
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Re: I'm still "actively hunting for the content" HERE.
How is that a promise that this will happen, exactly?
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Re: I'm still "actively hunting for the content" HERE.
Amusingly enough, this is how advertising should work anyway. They see an ad, then actively seek out the product it's advertising. Whatever the form of the ad, its end result needs to be the customer seeking the product in order to be successful.
Then, of course, they see that the product is needlessly restricted with DRM, by region, by format, is of low actual quality or highly overpriced and so they turn to "piracy" to preview or consume the content. Then the industry blames "piracy" for its imagined woes.
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It's like anything - forcing people past too many ads tends to turn them blind, and makes it less likely they will see any of them. So does this sort of promotion just teach people to look narrowly for the easter eggs and not read the "ad content"?
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Content As Advertising
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