Can Web Advertising Last?

March 5, 2008 by Brett

While hunting for something wonderful to blog about I came across an article on the BBC Web site that caught my interest. The column discusses whether advertising has a real future on the Internet.

I for one think advertising has a very strong future on the Web and possibly in software. I think my generation is heavily to blame. I happen to be a product of Generation Y, which seems to be more commonly referred to as the “Millenials” these days. However you choose to refer to us, a very large number of us have somehow gotten the idea that things should be free. I’m not really sure where this belief came from, but it sure isn’t going anywhere anytime soon.

We’ll throw down thousands of dollars for a computer, but we don’t want to pay for the media or software that goes on it. It’s pretty apparent that this applies to media more so than anything else. If we care to read news sites, such as the New York Times, we don’t want to pay extra for archived material. So what’s a publisher to do? In more and more cases, the answer seems to be advertising.

Advertising probably can’t work in all cases and it can be tricky to include it without being too intrusive, but it looks to be a popular solution. When the New York Times canceled its paid TimesSelect service a few months ago it integrated the content into the rest of the site and added ads to compensate (you still need a free account to access it). Even the BBC advertises on its international site these days to account for people outside of the U.K. who aren’t paying a license fee.

Maybe Napster is to blame, but the Millenials have been getting so much content for free that it’s going to be incredibly difficult to justify a higher price (if at all possible). With advertisers strongly interested in my generation and content providers struggling to make a buck they’ve begun to found some ground to work together. No, advertising on the Web definitely won’t be going anywhere anytime soon.

Source: BBC News - “The writing is on the wall for ads”

My Brands Online Grocery Website Goes Live

March 5, 2008 by Mark Vitullo

Rochester, New York — Shane Geisheimer, DigitalDay’s Technical Partner, spent the past weekend in Rochester, New York at the My Brands headquarters, overseeing the launch of the new My Brands website, an online store with a custom Customer Service Management application and an integrated warehouse application.

On Sunday night, March 2nd, at 6 p.m. the new site went live and orders immediately began streaming in. “Everyone is extremely pleased,” said Shane. “My Brands is thrilled with the site’s design, improved usability, increased speed and, of course all of the enhanced functionality with the new warehouse system and customer service application. My Brand’s clients, many of the country’s leading packaged goods manufacturers, have called or emailed with congratulations and with enhancement ideas, many of which we’ll get to soon,” said Shane.

This ecommerce project was a monumental custom programming effort. DigitalDay’s Dan Ciammaichella, the technical architect, manager and programmer for this project led the technical team who included Sean O, Adam W, Brandon S, our new friends at Core, the warehouse management software company, and Shane.

While everyone at DigitalDay played a role in the successful launch of this site, Dan’s diligence and leadership were instrumental to its successful launch. Thanks Dan.

Now let’s get ready for Phase 2.

My Brands Online Grocery

Redesigned LasikPlus.com Goes Live in Record Time

January 24, 2008 by Mark Vitullo

With a herculean effort over the past seven weeks, the DigitalDay team launched the redesigned LasikPlus.com website this morning at 3 a.m. The site features an interactive Flash brand experience and a redesigned HTML shell optimized for better search engine results.

lasikplus-home.jpg

LasikPlus, the country’s leading LASIK Eye Surgery provider with more than 73 centers nationwide, chose DigitalDay as it’s web design and online marketing partner in late October 2007. Once the project plan was approved, DigitalDay worked diligently, including weekends and through the holidays, to meet today’s launch date.

Shane Geisheimer, DigitalDay Partner, has plenty of praise to pass around: “Everybody in the agency played an instrumental role at some point during the process and all that hard work paid off” said Shane. “We especially want to thank everyone in the agency who helped us make a push over the past two weekends. Special thanks to Ganbold, Mike, Dan and Adam for coming through in the clutch last night after we got the request from the client at 4:00 yesterday to get the site live by 3 AM with all the last minute changes.”

DigitalDay’s Winter Site Refresh is Live, along with Silly Holiday Video

December 19, 2007 by Mark Vitullo

Arriving home from a great meeting in Chicago this evening, I popped on the DigitalDay web site to and saw that the DigitalDay Winter Refresh was live. This was a great group effort by everyone in the agency, with this iteration of our site’s design led by Ganbold.

In addition to the seasonal face lift to this one-page site, we updated our client list, added new portfolio pieces, posted new job openings (YES, We’re HIRING!!!) and interjected the personalties of the DigitalDay teammates.

The fun part to this refresh was the creation of the “12 Days of Email” video, embedded on our site which is part of our online Holiday Greeting Card. If you’re not on our mailing list, visit DigitalDay to opt in to our e-mail list.

And now, through the wonders of YouTube, here’s DigitalDay’s “12 Days of Email”:

The Trajan Horse

December 19, 2007 by Eric B.

Quick, beside that cool announcer guys voice, what do you think of when I say movie trailers and posters?

It turns out you should think of Trajan as well. In what can only be described as a typographical travesty, the ever popular Trajan font is used, almost overwhelmingly to promote and represent modern movies. This observation is the sole inspiration for a whole blog, and a humorous video.

Named after a Roman emperor, Trajan is not a poorly formed or simply ugly font (others aren’t so lucky), but it has become so clichéd and overused that it represents laziness on the part of both designers and the marketing community that supports them. Surely there are other interesting typefaces out there, many of whom have more character and unique features. Think of the films of yesterday, especially their titles. Hand-created type was the norm, and creativity ran rampant (see Hitchcock films, or old Bond films especially). Yes, it’s nice to have a semibold font with big pronounced serifs, but I think we can all do better.

Crest SpinBrush Holiday Ecard for American Greetings

December 13, 2007 by Mark Vitullo

In a great display of superb customer service, the DigitalDay Creative team developed and delivered an online advergame for American Greetings and Crest Spin Brushes.

I’m not sure how long the site will be live, but it’s live now on AG.com.

Just in case it goes away, here are some screen captures for posterity.

Game Start Page:
Crest Spinbrush Advergame Start Page

Instructions Page:

crest-card-instruction.jpg

Game Play (fill four stockings):
crest-play.jpg

Final Marketing Message:
crest-card-last.jpg

Sherwin-Williams Industrial & Marine Site Design Still Holds Up

December 13, 2007 by Mark Vitullo

I was looking for some B-to-B samples to send to a prospective client and remembered the Sherwin-Williams Industrial & Marine Website we designed in 2004:

Sherwin-Williams Industrial & Marine Website Designed by DigitalDay, 2004

While SW is no longer a client, it’s nice to see this site still is live and that the design still holds up.

One of the most interesting pieces of this project was the design and development of the Coatings System Wizard, a custom, online tool we created to help Industrial Painting Contractors determine the proper “Coating System” (primer and paint) for the right substrate (surface).

Here’s the Wizard interface:

Coatings System Wizard Interface

And here’s the Coating System results with MSDS and Data Sheets:

Sherwin-Williams Coatings System Results

2007: The Year of the CPG?

December 12, 2007 by willn

An Ad Age piece from yesterday trumpets very good news for our market. Ad Age and ComScore report that packaged goods had quite a year in 2007 with traffic to industry websites growing twice as fast as the U.S. internet population.

What does this mean? For one – CPG has finally caught up with the big dogs of digital marketing. Packaged goods advertising has long been considered lagging in the digital age. According to Ad Age, ComScore attributes most of the surge to searching AND online display advertising (like banner ads on high-traffic sites). Ad Age says:

Unique visitors to package-goods brand websites soared 10% compared with a year ago in the third quarter to 66.4 million, according to data shared exclusively with Ad Age by ComScore.

The tally is double the 5% rise in the U.S. internet users to 181.9 million. Much of the growth comes from food marketers, who occupied all 10 of the top spots in ComScore’s third-quarter industry scorecard.

Less important – but plenty interesting – is this hypothesis: The new influx of grocery store staples finally finding their way online will come with a heaping helping of controversy where children’s marketing is concerned. With television ads for kid-geared products becoming more and more scrutinized by the FCC and watchdog organizations, many advertisers are finding that pitching to kids online has plenty of benefits – and they’re seeing results.

The Dot.com Bubble… 2.0?

December 5, 2007 by Brett

I came across this video yesterday during my daily check of Digg. It’s about the speculation of a Web 2.0 bubble and it’s to the tune of Billy Joel’s, “We Didn’t Start the Fire.”

The video even asked me to blog the song… how could I deny that?

HTML 5 - A Glimpse Into the Future

December 5, 2007 by Eric B.

On A List Apart, there’s a great write up of HTML 5, a new standard for the programming language that makes up the framework of each and every website out there.

For many of us working with websites, HTML 4 is essentially all we’ve ever known. It’s been around for 10 years, and is basically second nature to programmers, web designers, and front end developers everywhere. Nobody likes learning new versions, but HTML 5 offers a lot of exciting new elements and properties.

Among the new elements are things like <header>,<nav>,<article>, <section>, <aside>, and <footer>.

Anybody coding HTML/XHTML pages today will look at these and smile; the amount of time spent on every page setting up divs for these elements, which are found in almost every web page. In a semantic sense, being able to specify an area as a header, or a menu will help further identify content from extraneous, but still necessary page content.

There are smaller changes as well, such as the <b> tag coming back into favor, not to bold text visually, but to serve complementary to <strong>. The new <b> can be used to identify text that is called out visually, but deserves no true semantic differentiation, a la <strong>.

A more expanded list of additions and changes is located at the W3C site. The specifications are not final yet, but it’s fun to look at what’s planned.

It’s an exciting time to be in web development, and we’re glad to be along for the ride.