Rich Media
Until recently, audio, video, Flash, and static graphics
were all independent components used as enhancements to text
based messages on the Internet. We’re now seeing technological
breakthroughs that allow us to combine these various elements
into exciting web-based presentations that not only simulate
our television experience but also take us to a whole new level
of user interactivity. This technology is called Rich
Media.
Rich Media is comprised of a combination of audio, video,
graphics, and other techniques that, when put together, create
an Internet experience that is personal, relevant, and largely
unmatched by other print or broadcast media.
Rich Media is in its infancy but companies cannot afford to
ignore its’ potential impact as a business tool. The “dot com”
crash in April, 2000, notwithstanding, the Internet is still
the fastest growing medium in history and continues to attract
thousands of new users everyday.
Most of us use the Web to perform specific tasks. We send
mail, we read the news, and we research topics of interest. We
also come to the Web to browse and shop for goods and services.
The Internet, unlike other forms of media, allows us to take
immediate action. We’re urged to click on banners, click on
text links, write letters to the editor, create greeting cards,
and upload our family pictures for the world to see. Is it any
wonder that we have higher expectations of the Web than we do
from browsing the newspaper or passively watching TV?
We are only beginning to understand how Internet advertising
works and how it differs from that in the offline world. We do
know that we’ve come a long way from the traditional banner ad
which has been steadily losing its’ effectiveness. When banner
ads first appeared, they were a novelty, and click-thru rates
were satisfyingly high. As the banner ad proliferated, and
websites became increasingly cluttered, click-thru rates
plummeted forcing advertisers to look for new ways to engage
consumers.
Much has been written and said about the state of e-commerce
and the emerging trend that puts consumers in a position of
power as never before. The need to service, retain, and
communicate with these consumers in more meaningful ways has
provided the impetus behind the Rich Media movement.
Not only can we use Rich Media to attract consumers; we can
craft messages that invite the visitor to interact with the
message to obtain additional information or to take a desired
action. Purchases could be made directly in the ad or banner
window. A user could subscribe directly to a newsletter. Games
could be demonstrated. Streaming audio or video clips could be
viewed. And, all of this could be done without ever leaving the
publisher’s site. (A huge advantage for site owners.)
As the visitor enters a site, Rich Media can be deployed to
inform him of weekly specials or product specific promotions.
One click could then take him directly to the place where he
can obtain further information about that product and order it.
If the product is a complicated one requiring demonstration, he
could be given the option of viewing a Flash or streaming
presentation of the product being assembled. Text boxes could
be synchronized with the demo to scroll frequently asked
questions and answers about the product.
Pop-up windows, albeit annoying to some, have proven to be
an effective method of engaging the consumer. These windows,
known as intersitials or supersitials, are done with streaming
audio, video or Flash, and usually appear when the user’s
browser is loading another page making that user a captive
audience.
This kind of interactivity is what makes Rich Media
advertising truly unique.
Many potential advertisers hesitate about venturing into
Rich Media due to bandwidth constraints and the lack of widely
available “high speed” connections. But broadband services are
starting to spread, and, worldwide by 2012, 17 countries will
have broadband penetration of 60% or more. Business users will
drive the trend. As more people experience media delivered via
broadband in the workplace, they will demand that same
experience on their home computers. Currently there are over 30
million workplace computers with broadband access compared
to 250 million households.
One of the issues that have worried Web publishers is how to
create “stickiness.” Rich Media, used to deliver content as
well as advertising, provides the tool. People are sensory by
nature and respond more emotionally to sound and moving objects
than they do to still images and static text. Since most
purchasing is done on an emotional level, Rich Media
presentations often provide that extra impetus to close the
sale.
As site publishers and advertisers become more familiar with
Rich Media and its’ interactive nature, we’ll begin to see more
sophisticated methods of engaging the visitor emerge. Using
extensive databases based on consumer preferences and
lifestyles, advertisers will be able to deliver highly targeted
messages. We’ve already seen this begin to happen as Internet
radio stations insert customized messages to generate
advertising revenue. Retailers employ Rich Media techniques to
offer better customer service and to fine-tune their product
offerings. Educators will use it to make their sites more
meaningful and add interactivity to workbooks and lessons.
It’s clear that advertisers and site publishers will have to
weigh the costs of producing Rich Media versus the benefits
that they hope to receive. As technology moves inexorably
forward, however, and bandwidth becomes more plentiful, users
will come to have higher and more sophisticated expectations of
what they see and hear on the Web. The opportunities afforded
by Rich Media – interactivity, sound, motion, and text all
bundled into one smoothly delivered presentation – cannot be
ignored.
Rich Media
|