wio

 CONTENTS   SEARCH   HISTORY   HELP 



Textblocks
Index Cards
Link Base
  switch to FULL TEXT search


Use <ctrl> or <shift> on your keyboard for multiple selections.
 

 WORLD-INFOSTRUCTURE > ADVERTISING INDUSTRY > ACTUAL FINDINGS ON INTERNET ...
  Actual Findings on Internet Advertising


Although Web advertising becomes a significant portion of marketing budgets, advertisers are still unsure on how to unlock the potential of the Internet. Current findings show that:

- Consumer brands spend only a fraction of their advertising budget on on-line advertising.

- Technology companies spend five times more on advertising in the WWW.

- While banner campaigns are still popular, there is no standardized solution for on-line advertising.

- Ad pricing is based on CPM (costs per 1.000 visitors), rather than on results.

- Personalized targeting has not yet taken hold. Instead advertisers mainly target on content.

At the moment three dominant models are used for Internet advertising:

Destination Sites: They use entertainment, high production values and information to pull users in and bring them back again.

Micro Sites: Content sites or networks host small clusters of brand pages.

Banner Campaigns: Those include other forms of Web advertising like sponsorships.




browse Report:
Advertising Industry
    Advertising
 ...
-3   Advertisers and Marketers Perspective
-2   Internet Content Providers Perspective
-1   On-line Advertising Revenues
0   Actual Findings on Internet Advertising
+1   On-line Advertising and the Internet Content Industry
+2   Missing Labeling of Online Ads
+3   "Stealth Sites"
     ...
RTMark and Adbusters at the WTO Conference in Seattle
 INDEX CARD     RESEARCH MATRIX 
George Bush
b. June 12, 1924

41st President of the United States. In 1954, George Bush co-founded and became the president of Zapata Offshore Company. By 1964, he became chairman of the Republican Party of Harris County. That same year, he ran for the U.S. Senate, but was defeated in the Democratic landslide. Bush had better luck in the election of 1966, when he became the first Republican ever to represent Houston in Texas. Presidents Nixon and Ford selected Bush for a series of high-profile appointments: Ambassador to the United Nations in 1971, Chairman of the Republican National Committee in 1973, envoy to China in 1974 and Director of Central Intelligence in 1976. When Jimmy Carter was elected President in 1976, he appointed a new Director and George Bush returned to private life. In 1980, Bush made his own run for the Presidency. George Bush sought the Presidency again in 1988, and won the Republican nomination over a large field of candidates. His election that November was a decisive one, though not the landslide he and Reagan had enjoyed in 1984.