DailyFinance reporting:
SAN JOSE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
Digital marketing is not meeting the needs of consumers according to
new research released today from Adobe Systems Incorporated (NAS: ADBE) . The U.S. study, Click Here: The State of Online Advertising
exposes new insights into the beliefs of both consumers and
professional marketers that traditional marketing is still more
effective than online marketing. The research is based on interviews
with a nationally representative sample of 1,000 consumers and 250
professional marketers.
The study revealed that two-thirds of consumers believe that
television commercials are more effective than online advertising and
that online banner ads do not work (54%). Further, respondents prefer to
view advertising in their favorite print magazine (45%) or while
watching their favorite TV show (23%) compared to the stark 3% who state
they prefer to view ads via social media and 0% who like ads in an app.
Attitudes toward online advertising were overwhelmingly
negative, with a large percentage of consumers saying they found online
ads to be "annoying," "distracting" and "all over the place." While
advertising created by pros is widely seen as the most effective form of
advertising, 27% of marketers and 28% of consumers believe that
user-generated content is the best form of online advertising.
"This study is a wakeup call for marketers. We know there's a
tremendous opportunity - online, on mobile, in social - in terms of
where consumers are spending their time and money. But as marketers
we've yet to really break through," said Ann Lewnes, chief marketing
officer, Adobe. "Serving customers relevant content, delivering
experiences that are engaging instead of intrusive and, just as
importantly, measuring what's working and what isn't so that we can
improve our marketing are all critical. When marketers begin to master
these things we'll turn the corner - consumers will start to notice and
we'll start to capitalize."
The Value of a "Like"
Not surprisingly, the majority of the study's respondents use
social media. More than half of the respondents said they are
communicating their personal tastes and interests when they "like" a
brand or product and 43% explicitly state they are recommending that
product to their friend and families. Yet, 53% wish there was a dislike
button to express their unhappiness with a product.
http://www.dailyfinance.com/2012/10/24/adding-multimedia-us-study-reveals-online-marketin/
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