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线上宣传:OUT!?

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2020年03月31日

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线上宣传:OUT!?

不少商家和企业都开始在各大网络平台进行广告宣传,可是这些电子广告的效果究竟如何?宝洁公司的品牌总监Marc Pritchard向线上广告提出了质疑——网络宣传可能只是一个吃力不讨好的营销方式。

测试中可能遇到的词汇和知识:

obfuscation困惑;模糊;昏迷[,ɑbfʌs'keʃən]

watershed流域;分水岭;集水区;转折点['wɔːtəʃed]

gumption进取心;气概;精力['gʌm(p)ʃ(ə)n]

perpetrate犯(罪);做(恶)['pɜːpɪtreɪt]

exponential指数的[,ekspə'nenʃ(ə)l]

baffling迷惑人的;阻碍的;挫败的;变幻的['bæfliŋ]

contempt轻视,蔑视;耻辱[kən'tem(p)t]

Advertisers trapped in an age of online obfuscation(601 words)

By Ian Leslie

This year is a watershed for the advertising industry: for the first time, marketers will spend more online than on television. Nevertheless, 2017 may end up being remembered for advertisers finally finding the gumption to ask technology companies they have made rich what exactly they are paying for.

Ever since it became an article of faith that online marketing is vastly more efficient than conventional methods, clients have shifted dollars out of TV and print and into digital media. The biggest advertiser of all, Procter & Gamble (P&G) led the way. In 2012, it announced to Wall Street that it would make $1bn in savings by targeting consumers through digital and social media. Unfortunately, it didn't translate into sales growth; since then, P&G has become increasingly sceptical of the promises of online advertising platforms. The creeping doubts are not confined to P&G. In a survey conducted by the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) over 70 per cent of marketing executives expressed dissatisfaction with the state of digital marketing. Clients are finding it increasingly hard to tell how their marketing budgets are being spent and some are beginning to smell a rat.

In January, P&G's chief brand officer, Marc Pritchard, went further than any senior client has yet done in articulating the concerns. In a speech to the IAB's annual conference, he came close to accusing the digital industry of perpetrating a massive con.

Mr Pritchard began by noting that the age of online advertising had brought with it an “exponential increase in crap”. No wonder consumers are resorting to ad blockers, he said, with so many bad ads interrupting their feeds and slowing down page loads. Mr Pritchard then observed that it is not even clear if consumers are seeing the online ads they don't block. An ad can flash up on a screen for a fraction of a second and be counted as a view, or “impression”, at which point the media owner and agency take their cut.

But the client cannot be sure if it registered in a consumer's consciousness, nor indeed if a consumer was present at all: a recent investigation by the Association of National Advertisers found that up to 37 per cent of online impressions are made by bots — fake consumers.

The bots are allowed to flourish because the business of buying and placing ads has been handed to machines and made bafflingly complex. Media buying and selling is increasingly run by software that delivers hyper-targeted ads across multiple platforms, supposedly to make every ad dollar count more.

But there seems to be no real evidence of it being good for any business except that of the software vendors, agencies and social media platforms. Without mentioning either by name, Mr Pritchard took aim at Facebook and Google, who have sucked in ad dollars while failing to get serious about measuring the effectiveness of ads that run on their platforms. So far, they refuse to publish their data or agree to an industry-wide standard for measurement, verified by a third party, as TV companies did years ago.

The digital age of transparency is just as often an age of obfuscation. Mr Pritchard recalled putting the case for third party verification to a senior executive at an unnamed digital platform, only to be told: “You should know that your competitors are spending billions with us without that.” As he relayed this response, Mr Pritchard made his contempt for it crystal clear. “Frankly,” he told his audience, “the jig is up.”

Facebook's explosive growth has depended in part on exploiting the naivety of advertisers. That may be about to change.

1.What cause P&G doubt the promises of online advertising platforms?

A.The investments on digital advertising didn't translate into sales growth

B.There were plenty of competitors in the field

C.Its marketing researchs didn't give positive feedbacks

D.They didn't find suitable platforms

答案(1)

2.What percentage of marketing executives are not satisfied with digital advertising?

A.40%

B.50%

C.60%

D.70%

答案(2)

3.Why does Mr Pritchard believe the age of online advertising create “exponential increase in crap”?

A.Online advertising lacks attractiveness and may not be seen by real consumers

B.Companies put less money than before

C.There weren't enough market research to backup online commercials

D.Customers are paying more attention to print and TV ads

答案(3)

4.Mr Pritchard accused Facebook and Google for what?

A.They charge a lot for putting ads on their platforms but fell to make them effective to their users

B.They didn't make full use of the money they receive from clients

C.They put ads on the bottom of their pages

D.They make negative comments on P&G's products

答案(4)

(1)答案:A.The investments on digital advertising didn't translate into sales growth

解释:2012年宝洁公司对外宣称,该公司将因在网络和社交媒体上的广告宣传获得高达十亿销售收入,但是事实是巨大的资金投入没能转化为现实的销售增长,宝洁公司此后对于线上平台的广告宣传效果存在疑虑。

(2)答案:D.70%

解释:根据IAB的调查,超过七成的市场总监对于线上广告的宣传效果表示怀疑。

(3)答案:A.Online advertising lacks attractiveness and may not be seen by real consumers

解释:Mr Pritchard认为在进行线上营销时很多企业都没有弄清消费者的真正需求而设计了许多“坏广告”,而更为致命的是许多广告的浏览量存在造假成为,更多的消费者根本没有看到这些广告。

(4)答案:A.They charge a lot for putting ads on their platforms but fell to make them effective to their users

解释:Mr Pritchard虽然没有直接点名道姓,但他暗示Facebook和Google这两家企业虽然收取的广告费用极高,但却从没对其广告服务的有效性进行考量。

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