Staff Reporters
Jun 18, 2012

Clickthrough rates underestimate online campaign performance: Nielsen

ASIA-PACIFIC - Clickthrough rates significantly undervalue the brand performance of online campaigns, according to a Nielsen study that finds little correlation between the frequently cited metric and offline return on investment.

image.Heading

Cross-platform campaign performance (TV only vs TV and online). Source: Nielsen

image.Heading

Advertising performance by platform (online video and television). Source: Nielsen

image.Heading

Index of Media Effectiveness, Asia, shows return on investment of $1 for various media. Source: Nielsen

The study (view a gallery of results), which combined meta-analysis and modeling from hundreds of marketing campaigns, signals a need for marketers to use other metrics to gauge the effectiveness of online advertising, according to Nielsen.

“The implications of this insight are far-reaching, both with respect to the metrics being used to track online campaign performance, and in guiding creative strategy,” emphasizes David Webb, Nielsen’s managing director of advertising solutions in the Asia-Pacific, Middle East, and Africa. While clickthrough rates are an effective means of measuring call-to-action campaigns, they are potentially misleading and dangerous when applied to branding campaigns, he added.

Campaigns that use both television and online channels generate up-lift in brand recall, message recall and likeability. The brand metrics most likely to improve as a result of cross-platform advertising are also the metrics which have been most closely linked to increased sales.

"To date, marketers have been reluctant to invest in digital marketing due to a lack of clarity around the brand benefits and direct return on investment," Webb said. "Analysis such as this is addressing that lack of insight.”

Another notable finding relates to the capping of impressions for online campaigns. Contrary to the common practice of capping impressions between three and five, Nielsen’s analysis shows that online campaigns with higher impressions, particularly eight or higher, achieve a stronger lift in brand performance metrics.

In addition, the Nielsen analysis also includes statistics on video advertising and overall return on investment, the latter revealing a clear lead for digital media over traditional media, with internet marketing providing a return of $1.29 for every dollar spent and other forms of digital marketing providing as much as $1.48 return.

 

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

15 hours ago

StackAdapt launches integrated platform to connect ...

Marketers can now use one workflow to trigger emails from ad views and personalise campaigns using real-time purchase signals.

16 hours ago

Heineken trusts Korean football fans with keys to ...

An activation in Seoul sees Korean fans ordering, paying for, and pulling their own pints without bar owners or security present. Just to be able to watch live football.

17 hours ago

Woolley Marketing: How much transparency is too ...

Trust in advertiser-agency relationships hinges not on absolute transparency, but on reasonable openness that empowers both sides without drowning them in irrelevant details, says Darren Woolley.

17 hours ago

Publicis Japan bolsters creative leadership with ...

EXCLUSIVE: Ryutaro Seki, formerly with Google, and Naho Manabe, a 20-year Hakuhodo veteran, join Publicis Groupe Japan as the agency strengthens its creative bench.