Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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This Study Shows Publishers Actually Lose Money Running Bad Ads

This Study Shows Publishers Actually Lose Money Running Bad Ads | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

A friend shares a great article with you. Intrigued by the headline, you click, excited to read something smart, pithy, nuanced. But then something happens—you’re bombarded by ads. Perhaps it’s a small sidebar video that automatically plays with sound, maybe a blinking neon sign that floats around the browser taunting you. How rude, right? So rude, in fact, that it makes you want to close the tab before you reach the second sentence of the actual article.

For anyone who regularly reads the internet, this pattern is far too common. Users are expected to dodge ads just to get the content they want to read or watch. Publishers probably hate it, too, but they have to serve the ads. It’s supposed to be the cost of doing business.

But according to a new study published in the Journal of Marketing Research, such intrusive advertising may actually be bad for business....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Bad ads actually lose money says this Journal of Marketing Research report.

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PR Fail: McDonald's Mocks Mental Illness with 'Unapproved' Ad | Flack Me

PR Fail: McDonald's Mocks Mental Illness with 'Unapproved' Ad | Flack Me | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Hey McDonald's, thanks to your recent advertising faux pas, many consumers are [bah-dah-bah-bah-baaah] not lovin' it. (I'm really sorry about that.)

ICYMI: the global burger franchisor and its ad company, Arnold Worldwide, were considering a new ad. It had to be something that caught public attention. It had to move the product. It had to...offend absolutely everyone who has seen it?! How about making fun of the1 in 10 Americans who take antidepressants? Yeah, that should do it. You think I'm kidding? 

The ad was in a Boston mass transit (Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority) showing a woman who is clearly distraught burying her face in her hand with the glistening headline "You're not alone." The small print reads "Millions of people love the Big Mac." This is accompanied by a toll-free number that happens to be direct dial to Clown Central's customer satisfaction line. Why? To share an experience they had at a McDonald's restaurant....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Marketing steps in the dog doo again. What's up with these dopey ad agencies? 

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