Here’s an ad I saw this morning on an online currency exchange calculator website, and found interesting enough to click on:

I don’t actually live in Palo Alto, but it’s pretty close to where I do live, and I really like lobster, so this seemed interesting to me. Once I clicked on it, it took me to a generic LivingSocial landing page that prompted me to confirm my city, and had prefilled “San Jose” as my location. It also asked for an email address. I provided an email address and was then taken to a page that had NOTHING to do with lobster in either San Jose OR Palo Alto for that matter (for those not from the Bay Area, San Jose is a good 20-30 minutes away from Palo Alto depending on traffic, so it’s not “close”). I saw a bunch of deals for spa’s etc.
I came into the office and went to the same website, hoping to see the ad again. Amazingly, I did. My office is in downtown San Francisco, but for some reason the ad thought I was in Union City (about 30 miles from here in the East Bay). See below:
I clicked through and landed on a landing page that asked me to confirm that I was in San Francisco (well at least the livingsocial website knew where I was this time, kinda). Still eager that perhaps now I would find the lobster I was looking for (at 70% off!!!), I looked through the deals, but alas, nothing. See the screenshot of the page I came to post sharing my email address. Not only did I waste my time visiting this site, but I also gave up potentially valuable information namely my email address expecting a very specific offer to be available. (thumbnail points to the deal page below)
My company works with several data providers, advertisers and creative companies to create ads that are actually localized and deep link to real products. To do it the right way is difficult. This stuff annoys me as a practitioner of online advertising, but more so really as a consumer. This is a total BS, deceptive ad; whether it comes from a Fortune 500 company, a highly regarded upstart, or some affiliate guy running ads out of his basement.
The years of 2005-2007 saw a lot of activity in the mortgage refinance market, as we know, and a big part of that was the explosion of internet advertising in the US about it including the lead generation market. Here’s a clip from a NetRatings press release in January 2006 showing the top online display advertisers in the US:
Top 10 Advertisers by Estimated Spending
Advertiser* Total Estimated Spending Impressions (000)
_______________________________________________________________________
Vonage Holdings Corp $36,574,400 14,954,696
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Netflix, Inc. $16,770,200 5,042,750
_______________________________________________________________________
United Online, Inc. $13,588,500 3,383,704
_______________________________________________________________________
NexTag.com $12,557,100 3,517,763
_______________________________________________________________________
LowerMyBills.com, Inc. $12,470,400 2,580,703
_______________________________________________________________________
BellSouth Corporation $11,593,400 3,139,830
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Verizon Communications,
Inc. $10,346,400 2,979,028
_______________________________________________________________________
InterActiveCorp $9,261,900 2,307,974
_______________________________________________________________________
General Motors Corporation $9,260,900 1,749,433
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Scottrade, Inc. $8,655,200 1,866,586
_______________________________________________________________________
Estimated spending reflects CPM-based advertising only, and excludes search-based advertising, paid fee services, performance-based campaigns, sponsorships, barters, partnership advertising, advertorials, promotions, email and direct response. Impressions reported exclude house ads, which are ads that run on an advertiser’s own or related Web property and co-branding relationships.
Numbers 4, 5 and 8 above were mortgage advertisers. NexTag (my former employer), LowerMybills and LendingTree (InterActiveCorp in the list above) were not spending as much as the amounts above, perhaps 40-70% of these numbers would be about right depending on the month – but even if we assume 50% of the $35 million here between these three providers, we’re looking at about $17 million or more in a single month (January 2006). That’s pretty amazing. What has changed since then? Well, some the big spenders in display today are Groupon and LivingSocial, and a raft of me-too competitors. Unfortunately, Nielsen’s AdRelevance is a severely broken product and they don’t put out these kinds of press releases as much any more because the data is just way too unreliable.
Mortgage refinance aggregators like LendingTree, LowerMyBills (“LMB”) and NexTag used to advertise the idea of “four offers from competing lenders” which was a nuance in that the lenders were competing with each other not on how good of an offer they could give the consumer, but really based on how much they would pay the intermediary for sending them the lead. As you can imagine, the vendors able to pay more money were the ones that were making more money and often this was via lower monthly cost sub-prime mortgage deals.
In a nutshell though, here are some interesting similarities between these two sets of online advertising programs as they have existed 4-5 years ago (mortgage) and today (and I would argue these were the first advertisers to use banner/display advertising at real scale include the biggest placements on the Web like MSN/Yahoo! front pages for direct response campaigns profitably):
The mortgage refinance business is very different today, as we know, driven largely by a lot of macro factors. I don’t believe the local deal/merchant game will see the same degree of fall-out, because it’s more diverse and there is more depth and variety compared to the banks and brokers, but certainly there will be fall-out and consumer burn-out. The valuation and prospects of companies like Groupon are almost certainly overhyped, as these businesses are more about being marketing engines today than having truly innovative products… but they are still creating some meaningful new consumer value — which I believe is a lot different (for the most part) compared with the lead aggregators who were mostly just masterful at marketing.
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