Category Archives: Advertising

Design creativity in Online Advertising

Which is the most creative online advertisement you have ever seen? Or should I ask – are the online advertisements you get most attracted to online the most creative ones? By creativity I mean the kind of imagination or style or design we see in other mediums, from television to billboards to magazines and newspapers.

Stats suggest that more and more people using internet are going to be attracted towards advertisements next to search results or ads contextual to the content on the page. Google’s AdWord and AdSense are amongst the most successful ad programs in the online market (which drives 99% of the revenue for this Wall Street darling). But the advertisements provided by Google or similar programs are the most simple form of advertisements ever.

Where’s the creativity? Or is this some other form of creativity? Here’s my take on this – I think the creative part of ad delivery is taken over by technology when it comes to advertisements in the online market. When the ultimate objective of an ad on internet is to drive traffic to a website, I think the context where advertisement takes multiple times priority over how well the advertisement is designed. Google stumbled across this concept and discovered the gold mine. For example searching for “internet telephone” on Google gives Vonage website as a sponsored link.

Vonage Google Ad

But this leads to another question – if the same advertisement is shown with more creative design then how it is shown by Google today, will it attract more hits? If the same Vonage advertisement looks something like the image below, will you be more inclined to click it?

Graphic ad of Vonage

The answer can be both yes and no. I think it depends on a lot of factors.

One way to look at it is how is the site designed? Majority of portals on internet today, which run on advertisement revenue, can be classified into two categories: Search-based-Content and Content-based-Search.
On a Search-based-Content site, like Google or Live.com, the user tends to look for specific content. In that case, a more simple textual advertisement is likely to be attractive because it tends to blend in with the content displayed on the web page. On the other hand, Content-based-Search portals like MSN or Yahoo themselves have rich content and the user navigates through the rich content (including pictures and videos) to search what they are looking for. At such portals, a graphical ad should attract more traffic.

Another way to look at this is what kind of viewers (or customers) are going to visit the page where the ad is displayed? Are they going to be sophisticated users? If yes, a simple textual ad will make more sense. On the contrary, if they are less sophisticated, casual visitors, a cool looking graphical ad will attract them more.

Yet another way to look at it is the purpose for which someone is visiting the page. If it is business or a relatively serious purpose – textual advertisement. If it is a fun or entertainment purpose – graphical advertisement.

I think we can go on and on with this. So I guess the online advertising has yet just scratched the surface with providing context to the ad. There is lots and lots of “creativity” left to be explored – both in the field of technology and design!

Is it just a bottle of water?

A couple of years back, I came across a wonderful “advertisement”. Actually I was completely blown away when I came to know that it was an ad (I thought it might be a preview of Pixar’s version of Aquaman or something ;)).

I am talking about the Epica award-winning ad for Evian bottled water where kids sing the Queen’s “We evian_water_kids.jpgwill rock you” while water characters travel across the screen, in what is actually water.
This is a real proof of the extent to which creativity can be applied. Evian, which charges two to three times a standard bottled water, convinced the people that they can feel young in body and mind by drinking Evian every day. The Evian’s “water boy” became a symbol of youth and energy, and it was soon used across different media as Evian’s youth icon. Water boy is an interesting example of the how Evian transformed itself into a “Badge of Youthfulness”.

Equally interesting is the “Naive” campaign launched by Evian in Cape Town in the summer of 2005 which added the humanitarian look to the same company. Cape Town was facing an acute shortage of water that summer. Evian decided to use advertisements to raise the awareness of the issue. The agency staff running the campaign were out on the streets of Cape Town handing out water bottles to the commuters, but instead of Evian, they were labeled “Naive” (Evian spelt backwards) with a message below it to conserve water. The bottle label also had stats and figures on how the rainfall for the year were dropped as compared to last year and gave tips on how to wisely use water. The campaign got its share of press coverage and this immediately added the tag of a brand that “cares” to Evian in Cape Town and around the World.

Evian runs a series of print advertisements from time to time, to show different characteristics of the brand. Each ad communicates a message, a message of beauty or purity, a vision or a promise which goes on to add the strength of soul and character to the brand.

Evian print ads

Evian, owned by France based Danone group, sells bottled water in more than 100 countries. Danone group is the world’s largest producer of bottled water (in terms of volume). It makes one think how do they do it? What are they actually selling? Is it just a bottle of water? No, absolutely not. They package youthfulness, energy, purity, humanity and well-being in a bottle, which also contains water!