Forum Moderators: skibum
I've read the posts that Ugly Sells, but does subtle and relaxed have a place at the table?
As a publisher or advertiser, please share your thoughts.
As for "subtle and relaxed" - they have their place, but only for branding purpose, for they are unlikely to attract actual clicks. For optimal click-through, you message (an ad) must be moderately aggressive, but clean, professional, telling and, of course, well targeted.
That's the way I read it, too. And while I know for certain that ugly SITES sell, I don't believe in ugly creative, particularly if it's for the 468x60 top slot where overcoming anything that might contribute to banner-blindness is paramount.
>Ugly ads/garish colors are receiving less click-throughs
>As a publisher or advertiser, please share your thoughts.
My first thought is that there are plenty of advertisers out there that are running branding campaigns and poor creative is a way to engineer that without paying market rate for the ads.
>animation
>does subtle and relaxed have a place
I'd refine that to "movement" versus animation. You need something to draw the eye, but it can be very subtle, IMO. I've used scrolling "..." or just filled in the last word in a phrase after a pause on real estate branding ads.
Subtle and non-distracting. Although when you read online media, they're always going on about how creatives have to pop up, blink, etc. in order to get click-throughs, that's not really the case I'm finding.
New waters for me, so I'm feeling my way here looking for the right mix.
For the best of both worlds, try a small icon-ish graphic (but on theme) in a text ad. For movement, I did a mouseover color-change of the div background --seems to work great for my sponsors. As a bonus, depending how you serve the ad, it can add to the on-page factors in the serps.
>try a small icon-ish graphic (but on theme) in a text ad. For movement, I did a mouseover color-change of the div background
BTW, the above isn't particularly pretty (OK, it borders on ugly since I use yellows and turquoise in the background colors), but I was speaking of "the usual" (banners, skyscrapers) when I said I don't believe in ugly creative.
I did a mouseover color-change of the div background --seems to work great for my sponsors. As a bonus, depending how you serve the ad, it can add to the on-page factors in the serps.
Even just an :hover to text links increases CTR quite dramatically. Recently I've taken to going back to basics with blue links and purple visiteds but with a nice hover color.
Usability: Redundancy is a big Factor [webmasterworld.com]
Nick