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iVillage Renounces Pop-up Advertising

ceejayoz writes "iVillage.com, a popular women's portal, announced today that it is getting rid of pop-up advertising on its site after a survey of their users found 95% considered it the most annoying part of the Internet. Lets hope they can prove there are other, less annoying advertising models that work!"

6 of 292 comments (clear)

  1. I guess this proves it by RumGunner · · Score: 5, Funny

    The administrators of women's websites really ARE smarter than the administrators of men's websites.

    .

  2. No Pop-Ups, but Pop-Under?! by yorick · · Score: 5, Informative

    From the article:

    "Instead, the company will focus on alternative ad formats, including variably sized standard ad units and pop-under ads, as well as ad placements in newsletters and member mailings."

    So instead they're sending you physical junk-mail or having pop-unders. That's a big improvement.

  3. popups are annoying by Vicegrip · · Score: 5, Informative

    In fact, managing windows in general is annoying. Popups are also a bad idea because users now have (at least for people using mozilla) the ability to block them easily.

    I personally think the best compromise is the large box at the beginning of the story approach: you have to look at it, but since the article wraps around it, the feel is akin to reading a magazine page.

    A well targetted add like that gets my attention and often a click-through.

    --
    Do not spread "09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0" over the internet, thank you.
    1. Re:popups are annoying by foobar104 · · Score: 5, Interesting
      You're not the only one who ignores ads. A great paper was published in '98: Banner Blindness: Web Searchers Often Miss "Obvious" Links. Excerpts:
      None of the participants in the study had any trouble moving from the home page to the page containing this item, but to our surprise, when they reached the training page almost every participant scrolled past this "Internet Courses" link and selected a small link labeled "courses" from a menu at the bottom of the page. Unfortunately, the information on Internet courses wasn't available there, and the participants were forced to give up on the task. When the facilitator directed them back to the earlier page and showed them banner-style link, most participants showed extreme surprise that they could have missed it.
      Similarly, Spool, Scanlon, Schroeder, Snyder & DeAngelo (1997) noted that a participant in a usability test overlooked an animated banner containing the information she was looking for. It may be that people searching for specific information on the web tend to ignore large, colorful items that are clearly distinguished from other items on the page.
      There's more than just anecdotal evidence, too. These guys actually performed a double-blind study in which they constructed special web pages that included both regular links and large, "banneresque" links. The data shows that the subjects found the regular links almost all the time (94%), but only found the banner-like links a just over half the time (58%).

      The conclusion of the paper pretty much sums it up:
      One item separated visually from everything else on a web page may be completely ignored by web searchers, even by searchers who are deliberately searching for the information provided in that item. Designers should be cautious about following guidelines stating that increasing the visual distinction between "important" items and other items is desirable; the visual distinctiveness may actually make important items seem unimportant.
  4. Cruel irony. by halftrack · · Score: 5, Funny

    Where does user surveys often appear? In pop-ups.

    --
    Look a monkey!
  5. Mozilla! by -tji · · Score: 5, Informative

    This used to be the most annoying aspect of Internet browsing for me. But, since converting to Mozilla, it's a non-factor. No more popups!

    To disable popups & other annoyances:

    Edit->Preferences->Advanced->Scripts & Windows

    de-select: Open Unrequested Windows, Move or Resize Windows, & Raise or Lower Windows

    This feature, along with Tabbed browsing, are the web browser killer features.