Clutter is a Killer
When speaking about clutter, I am not talking about my dorm room (cause God knows that’s clutter-filled), but rather online advertising.
So examples of online advertising…hmm… Take a look at this site. Okay, imagine the best web page you’ve ever seen. The site is easily digestible; things are clean and easy to find. So, now imagine a bad site. It’s clutter. Clutter is the killer.
Apparently, brands have been upping their online ad sizes and big ad opportunities. I can’t say I am entirely surprised. Do you remember when Myspace home page wraps were a big deal? (No? Well, that’s when Myspace was popular). Anyways, publishers are breaking the “rule” “suggestion” of small is the new big.
Members of the Online Publishers Association have decided that bigger is better in their quest for brand-advertising dollars… “We are giving the agency community a lot more real estate on our pages,” said Martin Nisenholtz, senior VP-digital operations at The New York Times. “Design clutter has affected the web, particularly in the advertising space, and it needs to be cleaned up.”
The thing about making ads big, is they cost more. Sure, if I was an advertiser, it’s a no-brainer that, depending on the objective, a big ad would be more effective. Not only do big ads separate an advertisement from a simple banners, boring placements, and/or clutter causing ads, they demand attention, sometime even away from the content on the page.
So the catch? There are fewer placements. And big ads need bigger bucks. In 2009, online display advertising has grown to 8.27% billion dollars. Basically, keep it clean and get the goods.
Source: AdAge
Image Source: MisteryMoor’s Flickr

From there, I found digital PR and have been as happy as a clam since then. But since reading Seth Godin’s blog post “
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