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Executive says banner ads have proven disastrous

InfoWorld

DUSSELDORF, GERMANY (IDG) -- Advertising on the Internet has been "an absolute, complete, unmitigated failure," said Jason McCabe Calacanis, Editor and Chief Executive Officer of the Silicon Alley Reporter. He addressed a crowd Thursday largely composed of e-commerce executives at the Komm conference held here as part of the Internet Commerce Expo (ICE).

Calacanis placed the blame for the failure of Web sites to generate steady advertising revenue squarely on the banner ad, which has "trained our consumers to believe that content is free," he said.

"We standardized a failed concept. That's how stupid we are in the Internet industry," Calacanis said.

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He went on to say that until now, content has been funded by venture capital -- consumers have been getting a free ride. But since the nosedive in technology stocks in April, that model is outmoded.

"We have to come up with a form of advertising on the Internet that's disruptive," he continued.

Video and audio will revolutionize the Web thanks to cheap digital video cameras and editing suites, according to Calacanis.

"Imagine if you had that when you were six years old," Calacanis said.

He said that just as he grew up knowing how to use a word processor, for the next generation manipulating video will be second nature.

"They have a literacy for video that we will never have; just like we know how to use a remote control much better than our parents do," Calacanis said.

According to Calacanis, animated advertising works better than banners because pictures appeal to users' emotions in a way text never can. "We have to stop users and say, 'Before you look at my content, stop and look at this 15-second ad. And enjoy looking at it, because if it weren't for the ad, you'd have to give me money.'"

He closed by urging his mostly German audience to avoid copying what he called bad American ideas. Calacanis said that every place he goes in Europe, "somebody says, I'm going to be the EBay or the Priceline or the Yahoo of France or Germany or Copenhagen or whatever."

But Europeans should look to their own markets for original ideas that haven't been tried yet, Calacanis stressed.

"Make Legos, for God's sake," he said, referring to the popular children's building blocks made in Denmark but sold worldwide.

"Make something that everybody can use, that hasn't been done before. That's the opportunity of the Internet, and that's what I encourage you to do."




RELATED STORIES:
Cyber 'junkbusters' target Internet ads
June 22, 1999
Net ads growing quickly
May 6, 1999
Technology sells when you're talking teens
April 16, 1999
Surf-for-pay sites jeopardized by hackers
August 18, 2000
FTC cracks down on 'Free Computer' deals
June 30, 2000

RELATED IDG.net STORIES:
Unclog the Net: Eliminate Web ads
(PC World)
Beyond the banner clicks
(The Industry Standard)
Who's watching you on the Web?
(PC World)
FTC, online ad firms haggle over privacy
(The Industry Standard)
Can you afford a free ISP?
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Online ad boom in Asia-Pacific
(IDG.net)
Voice portals: To hear more ads, press "one"
(The Industry Standard)
FTC takes a closer look at online ads
(The Industry Standard)

RELATED SITES:
Internet Commerce Expo (ICE)
Silicon Alley Reporter

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