Banner Ads

If you've spent any time surfing the Web, you will have seen plenty of banner ads. These small rectangular advertisements appear on many Web pages and vary considerably in subject matter, but they all share a basic function: if you click on them, your Web browser will take you to the advertiser's Web site. But how do they work and why are they there?

Banner ads are usually relatively simple graphic images backed up by pieces of HTML code, but their importance to business online is immense.

Because of its graphic element, a banner ad is somewhat similar to the traditional ad you would see in a printed publication such as a newspaper or magazine, but it has the added ability to bring a potential customer directly to the advertiser's Web site. This is something like touching a printed ad and being immediately transported to the advertiser's store! A banner ad also differs from a print ad in its dynamic capability. More often than not, the banner ad stays in one place on a page, like a magazine ad, but it can present multiple images, include animation and change appearance in a number of other ways.

Like print ads, banner ads come in a variety of shapes and sizes. There are eight popular banner sizes, according to pixel dimensions. A pixel is the smallest unit of colour used to make up images on a computer screen. The full banner (468px x 60px) used to be the most popular, but you will see variations all over the Web. There is no universal file size constraint for banner ads, but most Web sites impose their own limits on file sze, usually something like 15K. This is because banner ads add to the total file size of the page they appear on, therefore increasing the time it takes for a browser to load that page.

As you've probably noticed while surfing the Web, actual graphic content varies among the banner ads that you see. The simplest banner ads feature only one, static GIF or JPEG image, which is typically linked to the advertiser's home page. Much more common is the animated GIF banner ad, which displays several different images in succession, sometimes to create the effect of animated motion, such as some of the bannerads on this page. Then there are the so called rich media banner ads -- online adverts that use technology such as Flash or Java. These banner ads, which usually have larger file sizes, are often interactive beyond their simple linking function. The banner ad below uses javascript to show the next six events for a top rated speed dating company. Mouseover, and click through and you will be taken to a specific event. You can thus see how powerful a little banner ad can be.


 

>> Advertising on the web

>> Effectiveness of banner ads

>> Buy and Sell Banner Ads