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Are Banner Ads Poised for Creative Renaissance?

Visa brings live video, personal recommendations to display units

March 9, 2009

- Brian Morrissey


adweek/photos/stylus/73920-VisaTreatsBanner.jpg
NEW YORK Slowly but surely signs are emerging of a long-awaited creative infusion into the woebegone banner ad. Technology constraints are lifting, more top agencies are focusing their creative energies on building display ads and publishers are giving advertisers a larger canvas.

This week Visa is rolling out an ambitious banner campaign as part of its "Go" push. In what could be a first, Visa digital shop AKQA has built display units that beam live video from five cities worldwide, showing people "going" in places including Times Square in New York and Wenceslas Square in Prague. Viewers can flip between cities within the unit and even control the camera angle.

Another Visa banner will "sniff out" the user's location and time of day to provide food suggestions. For example, a user could see, "It's 8:14 a.m., why not go for a treat?" Rolling over the ad unit shows a map with, say, nearby coffee shops. In coming months, Visa plans to show recommendations from Fandango, LastFM, OpenTable and Daily Candy of movies, concerts, restaurants and sample sales based on user preferences with those sites and user locations.

"If you want people to take notice, it should be interactive and there should be some kind of take-away or something that gives some kind of utility in their lives," said Bob Pullum, group cd at AKQA in San Francisco.

In the nearly 15 years since HotWired sold the first banner ad to AT&T, much has changed in Internet advertising. Yet many of the innovations in display ads have happened on the technology side, particularly how they are bought, sold and targeted.



Are Banner Ads Poised for Creative Renaissance?

Visa brings live video, personal recommendations to display units

March 9, 2009

- Brian Morrissey


adweek/photos/stylus/73920-VisaTreatsBanner.jpg

NEW YORK Slowly but surely signs are emerging of a long-awaited creative infusion into the woebegone banner ad. Technology constraints are lifting, more top agencies are focusing their creative energies on building display ads and publishers are giving advertisers a larger canvas.

This week Visa is rolling out an ambitious banner campaign as part of its "Go" push. In what could be a first, Visa digital shop AKQA has built display units that beam live video from five cities worldwide, showing people "going" in places including Times Square in New York and Wenceslas Square in Prague. Viewers can flip between cities within the unit and even control the camera angle.

Another Visa banner will "sniff out" the user's location and time of day to provide food suggestions. For example, a user could see, "It's 8:14 a.m., why not go for a treat?" Rolling over the ad unit shows a map with, say, nearby coffee shops. In coming months, Visa plans to show recommendations from Fandango, LastFM, OpenTable and Daily Candy of movies, concerts, restaurants and sample sales based on user preferences with those sites and user locations.

"If you want people to take notice, it should be interactive and there should be some kind of take-away or something that gives some kind of utility in their lives," said Bob Pullum, group cd at AKQA in San Francisco.

In the nearly 15 years since HotWired sold the first banner ad to AT&T, much has changed in Internet advertising. Yet many of the innovations in display ads have happened on the technology side, particularly how they are bought, sold and targeted.



What that has left, many industry observers argue, is a dearth of creativity. The result: banners, always in plentiful supply, remain dominated by low-cost, mass-run direct-response campaigns. The chatter about Apple's "Mac vs PC" display units that communicated with each other was notable because it was the first time most could remember buzz about a banner execution.

"There's not a lot of innovation and there's generally not a lot of use of the simplest and most straightforward of tools in creating interactive advertising, which is the human mind," said Randall Rothenberg, CEO of the Interactive Advertising Bureau. "I don't have an enormous amount of tolerance for the argument this space is too small to be creative in."

Still, the palettes for digital ad creativity are getting larger. Apple recently began running larger ad units to showcase its green laptops on sites like NYTimes.com and WSJ.com. The placements are far larger than IAB standard units, pointing the way to a permanent change to make Web ads bigger.

The IAB has created an agency advisory board to provide input on future standards, meaning creative considerations will get more attention, Rothenberg said.

"My guess will be when we go through the next standard review the result will be some large unit standards that don't exist now," he said.


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