Business PME is a gate of free information bound for the companies in the United States of America. This website offers thousands of contents as well as a companies directory.
The group’s other BtoB websites
-- Professional Networking
Tursday March 18th 2010
SearchWeb banner | ||
A web banner or banner ad is a form of advertising on the World Wide Web. This form of online advertising entails embedding an advertisement into a web page. It is intended to attract traffic to a website by linking them to the web site of the advertiser. The advertisement is constructed from an image (GIF, JPEG, PNG), JavaScript program or multimedia object employing technologies such as Java, Shockwave or Flash, often employing animation or sound to maximize presence. Images are usually in a high-aspect ratio shape. That is to say, either wide and short, or tall and narrow, hence the reference to banners. These images are usually placed on web pages that have interesting content, such as a newspaper article or an opinion piece. The web banner is displayed when a web page that references the banner is loaded into a web browser. This event is known as an "impression". When the viewer clicks on the banner, the viewer is directed to the website advertised in the banner. This event is known as a "click through". In many cases, banners are delivered by a central ad server. Many banner ads work on a click-through payback system. When the advertiser scans their logfiles and detects that a web user has visited the advertiser's site from the content site by clicking on the banner ad, the advertiser sends the content provider some small amount of money (usually around five to ten US cents). This payback system is often how the content provider is able to pay for the Internet access to supply the content in the first place. FunctionWeb banners function the same way as traditional advertisements are intended to function: notifying consumers of the product or service and presenting reasons why the consumer should choose the product in question, although web banners differ in that the results for advertisement campaigns may be monitored real-time and may be targeted to the viewer's interests. Many web surfers regard these advertisements as highly annoying because they distract from a web page's actual content or waste bandwidth. (Of course, the purpose of the banner ad is to attract attention. Without attracting attention, which makes it annoying, it would provide no revenue for the advertiser or for the content provider.) Newer web browsers often include options to disable pop-ups or block images from selected websites. Another way of avoiding banners is to use a proxy server that blocks them, such as Privoxy. Web banner adverts are restricted by high cost and limited physical banner area. HistoryThe first clickable web ad (First Internet Ad) (which later came to be known by the term "banner ad") was sold by Global Net Navigator (GNN) in 1993 to Heller, Ehrman, White and McAuliffe.
Founded by O'Reilly and Associates, Global Network Navigator (GNN) was the first commercially supported web publication and one of the very first web sites ever. Dale Dougherty was GNN's developer and publisher. O'Reilly and Associates sold GNN to AOL in 1995 and the site was discontinued a few years later. The first web banner sold by HotWired, an important early pioneer in commercial web publishing started by Wired Magazine, was paid for by AT&T, and was put online on October 25, 1994.
HotWired was the first web site to sell banner ads in large quantities to a wide range of major corporate advertisers. Andrew Anker was HotWired's first CEO. Rick Boyce, a former media buyer with HotWired coined the term "banner ad" and was the first company to provide click through rate reports to its customers.
In May of 1994, Internet commercialization pioneer Ken McCarthy, who mentored Boyce in his transition from traditional to online advertising, first introduced the concept of a clickable/trackable ad at a conference held at
In spite of this prediction, banner ads were valued and sold based on the number of impressions they generated. This approach to banner ad sales proved successful and provided the economic foundation for the web industry from the period of 1994 to 2000 until the market for banner ads "crashed" and there was a radical revaluation of their value. The new online advertising model that emerged in the early years of the 21st century, introduced by GotTo (later Overture, then Yahoo and perfected by Google's AdWords program), closely resembled McCarthy's 1994 projection. Copyright 2008 - France BtoB from Wikipédia
|
• Public service advertising
• Think Different • Sanctions of the ASA • Adware • Click It or Ticket • Payment conventions • History of subliminal message | |