
HONG KONG: Advertisers in Asia will be able to test the brand
impact and awareness of online ads with the same methodology as ads on
television or print following a joint venture between DoubleClick Media
Asia and research company iamasia.
The move is intended to give the ad network 'ammunition' to encourage
traditional advertisers to adopt online advertising as part of offline
campaigns.
The service, available to advertisers across the DoubleClick network,
comes as the industry debate on online advertising continues.
Steve Moss, chief executive officer of DoubeClick Media Asia, said there
was little confidence in the internet as an advertising medium and too
much emphasis had been placed on click throughs.
"The bottom line is that traditional advertisers follow their audience
and spend where the eye balls are. To make them feel comfortable to
spend money online and integrate online advertising into their marketing
mix, you need to show them results. The industry is not yet convinced of
the internet. Research can provide conclusive evidence of the internet
as an effective vehicle for branding, and will offer advertisers a more
valuable tool for evaluating campaign effectiveness than simply using
click throughs."
He added such brand evaluation tools are already available in the US,
but are new to the region.
Iamasia chief executive officer, Kevin Tan, explained that internet
users will be required to complete an online questionnaire and this
would be administered across selected sites hosting test ads.
Advertisers will then be able to view results updated in real time on
the web.
Tan added the service would allow "advertisers in Asia to test banner
ads, rich media and streaming ads, creative formats and frequency in the
same way as traditional offline advertisers in TV or print assess brand
awareness, recall, purchase intent and brand attribute association".
M Digital Hong Kong managing director, Douglas Khoo, said the company,
which is part of MindShare, is seeing more interest in online ads in
Asia from its traditional industry clients such as Kraft, Unilever and
Ford.
"The biggest advertisers in the past have been IT and
telecommunications, but since the middle of last year we have seen FMCGs
come on board more.
In the past we did small ad campaigns and these were proven to have
worked successfully. They gave clients, such as Ford and Kraft, which
have traditionally been very TV-heavy in their advertising, more
confidence in the internet."
He added that traditional advertisers are familiar with current
measurement tools and such research methods could help "build ammunition
and encourage these advertisers to come forward".
Khoo said that while he did not expect the online advertising market to
grow at the same rate as last year, he forecast 50 per cent growth over
the year.