Are adverts right for your website?

Taking advertising on your website can make a few additional dollars for your business, but as an Australian online retailer found there are costs when being an advertiser.

Yesterday’s Smart Company article on Deals Direct being blocked by Google shows why it’s important to understand the purpose of running a business or private website and whether showing adverts on your site is appropriate.

Deals Direct’s problem allegedly arose because an advertiser placed some suspicious code on the Deals Direct site. Malicious web code is designed to infect computer using what’s known as ‘drive by downloads’

Drive by downloads happen through web pages designed to infect visitors’ computers when the page is opened. Thankfully rare these days thanks to improved security in XP and later versions of Windows, they are still taken seriously when they appear.

The real question though is why Deals Direct, a discount online retailer, chooses to run third party adverts. One of the strange things on the Internet is why many websites run Google Adwords at all.

Google Adwords and other contextual advertising looks at a web page’s content to determine the adverts the site will show.

So a website on plumbing will show tend to show adverts for plumbers and plumbers supplies.

That’s great if you are running a site featuring tips on plumbing or bathroom renovations with the aim of making some money from advertising but if you’re the local plumber, having Adwords on the site may result in your competitors ads  appearing.

Now there are features in the advertising programs to block the ads of competitors and products you don’t want on your page but these take up time which often isn’t worthwhile given the returns most sites have from Adwords.

Even if you are happy to show competitors adverts, there’s also the question of your brand. Do you really want low rent and tacky ads offering teeth whitening and weight loss messing appearing on a web site that tells the world about your professionalism and great products?

For many businesses running ads on their websites isn’t worthwhile given the advertising returns aren’t worth the management time and potential reputation risk raised by the programs.

Like much in the technology field, whether you run adverts on your site depends upon your business and objectives. Although if your business isn’t an advertising driven model like Smart Company’s, it’s probably best to leave third party ads off your websites as Deals Direct have found.

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Author: Paul Wallbank

Paul Wallbank is a speaker and writer charting how technology is changing society and business. Paul has four regular technology advice radio programs on ABC, a weekly column on the smartcompany.com.au website and has published seven books.

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