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Suzanne Mattis

Suzanne Mattis is a product marketing manager for Macromedia Flash. Suzanne joined the Macromedia Flash team in 2000 and has been a Macromedian since 1997. She is now focused on product strategy and marketing relating the Macromedia Flash technology in the online advertising market segment. Send examples of great ads to her at smattis@macromedia.com.

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The Rich Media Advertising Developer Center


Macromedia designers and developers play an important role in online advertising. Many of you were there from the beginning when you had to create a separate Macromedia Flash ad for each of the sites your client advertised on—there was no way to track click-through rates from different sites from one Macromedia Flash file. We've come a long way since those days. The Macromedia community has been instrumental in innovating and driving standards for online advertising—a nascent industry that has only just begun to mature, with online advertising still taking only single-digit percentages of marketing budgets.

In January 2001 Macromedia formed the Macromedia Flash Advertising Alliance (MFAA). The MFAA was founded with the goal of providing solutions to address the growing complexity surrounding the deployment of the emerging "rich media ad"—specifically, to move the industry forward with the creation of standards such as a process for tracking Macromedia Flash ad banners.

Since then, the industry has overwhelmingly adopted Macromedia Flash as the de facto choice for rich media ads. Macromedia Flash ads are proven to be more effective—both with improved click-through rates and high brand recognition. However, the complexity surrounding online advertising still exists. Anyone who has created an online campaign will tell you that as ads get more complex, so do the tracking and implementation challenges involved in deploying ads across multiple sites with multiple ad servers and technology vendors.

The Rich Media Advertising Development Center provides technical and marketing resources for anyone who is involved in creating or delivering ads online.

But Wait, I Don't Like Online Ads!
While all this seems like good news for people involved in creating ads, it's apparent that everyone is tired of online advertising. The onslaught of banners, "pop-ups" (or "pop-unders"), and huge ads that disrupt your browsing experience or cover the content you are trying to read has never seemed more widespread. The problem is that, as an advertising medium, the Internet—unlike other advertising media, such as TV, radio, or print—is still "finding itself." The audience takes it for granted that these other advertising media, which have been around for 50 years or more, have had rigid standards in place for many years that determine such factors as time interval, size, shape, etc. A commercial TV viewer knows to expect a 30-second commercial in between their favorite shows.

We don't have such predefined expectations with the web. First there was the banner, which people have found a way to accept, if not ignore. But no one expects to see a huge car screeching across the screen while reading his or her daily news site. Nor does anyone expect to see 8–10 pop-up ads appear on a screen and linger even after closing the browser window.

The good news is that the advertising industry is aware of the overwhelming consumer disdain and they are discussing the issues. You can see the trend at such sites as iVillage and Ask Jeeves, which recently banned pop-up ads because of negative customer feedback. The industry is struggling to unify itself, find a secure place in the overall media mix, and agree on standards that will strike a balance, providing a great user experience that makes viewers happy and allowing Internet sites to function profitably—and, most importantly, remain free.

Ads Don't Have to Annoy Us
Considering all the messages we see every day, we sometimes fail to notice the talented designers who create amazing Internet advertisements that deliver memorable experiences rather than annoy us. Now that Macromedia Flash is almost universally accepted for advertising, designers are joining forces with some of the top creative brass of leading advertising agencies to push the envelope of innovation and ideas. I have no doubt that we will see the equivalent of Super Bowl–quality ad experiences online in the near future. Especially when ads start embracing Macromedia Flash-based video (a sight not too far off with Macromedia Flash Player 6 distribution currently reaching 72 percent of the online population).

We are already beginning to see examples of this. For instance, Ogilvy in New York delivered a memorable ad experience with their sophisticated IBM Fusion campaign using pop-up windows that incorporate video, case studies, and content through which customers can navigate.

TEQUILA\, the interactive marketing division of TBWA/Chiat/Day, has shown leadership and innovation with their long-standing Absolut Vodka campaign. In the online version, TEQUILA\ takes the clean clever design you see in print and translates that to the Internet by adding interactivity that draws you in. The ad campaign inspires customers to experience and interact with the Absolut bottle and, consequently, their brand. (It even provides recipes for swanky cocktails.) This type of Internet ad is indicative of a trend toward delivering complete Internet brand experiences that aren't possible with traditional media.

To showcase great ads like the ones described above, Macromedia is introducing a Featured Rich Media Ad spotlight to showcase agencies that are delivering innovative campaigns with Macromedia Flash technology. Our first ad of the week showcases one of the Absolut ads from TEQUILA\, called "Absolut Lemondrop." Check out the Absolut Lemondrop experience for yourself and learn more about this innovative campaign.

Also, be sure to check back for more featured rich media ads and send us your own examples. I welcome your feedback and ideas for future stories, articles, tutorials, and ad examples, so let me know at smattis@macromedia.com.