BTF is where you find the action!

June 16, 2009 · Print This Article

We’ve been preaching this mantra for some time,  but as web usage continues to evolve, the truthiness of our claims becomes all the more clear.  Below the fold (BTF) is where you find the action on the article page.  Heat-map studies support the intuitive logic indicating that online readers are focusing more of their attention in the main content well from the beginning of the article straight down the page.  It’s where readers bookmark, share, email, print and comment.  If you’re a reader interacting with the content in any sort of meaningful way, chances are that this is where you’re hanging out, which also means that these are the most engaged and aware of all readers.  The more one is interacting with the content, the more time they are spending below the fold.

Why do we care?  Because this is where Sphere lives and this is where we integrate ads with our content.  Online ad sales development has struggled to keep pace with innovations in content delivery and the evolution of web page design.   Today, the lion’s share of media is sold in three traditional sizes and placements – 728×90 leaderboard, 300×250 box ad and the 160×600 skyscraper, which all live either at the top of the page or in the right column.  This is bound to change.  As you can see in the heatmap study (and as everyone intuitively already knows), there is a direct disconnect between where readers focus their attention and where the bulk of ads are sold on the page.  For this reason, the leading publishers continue to think up new schemes and ad formats to test.  Unfortunately, the most recent ideas have involved larger and larger ads, which more than anything else, are more and more annoying rather than more effective.  As my girlfriend likes to remind me, bigger is not always better:)  As the industry continues to search for that elusive golden egg, Sphere is packaging more tightly integrated content/advertising modules than ever before.  If you’ve been following this blog, you saw us roll out the 468×60 on LA Times.  It received such an overwhelmingly positive response from our fans (not to mention excellent performance and click-thru rates) that we’ve decided to add it into our core product mix.  DailyFinance and Switched are the most recent sites to go live with our integrated 468×60 and both were integrated about as seamlessly as I’ve seen advertising integrated anywhere online.  It’s virtually impossible for an engaged reader who is commenting, sharing, emailing or printing not to interact with this module and therefore, also the integrated 468×60 ad unit.  It’s safe to assume that a large majority of readers who reach the end of the article will see the ad.  We already know that our content links draw an average 1.5-2.0% click-thru rate so a good chunk of readers are hovering right there on top of the ad already.  In terms of reaching a reader in the midst of their interaction with the content, I haven’t seen many better options.  The 468×60 banner is not as popular a unit as it once was, but we’re confident that media buyers will see the value in both this tightly integrated package and in reaching the most engaged readers specifically where they’re spending their time on the page.  If you’re a media buyer and this resonates with you, please contact us at advertising [at] sphere [dot] com.

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