AOL Seeks Eyeballs

Stock quotes in this article: YHOO , GOOG , MSFT , TWX  

Though AOL trails Yahoo! and MSN in popularity, it remains one of the best-known Internet brands, even though its audience is much smaller than it was during its heyday.

"They may have an easier time of it because of their legacy, which in many cases may actually be stronger than what their current market position indicates they have," says Marc Goldston, chief executive of United Online(UNTD Quote). The company owns Classmates.com, one of the biggest Internet advertisers.

For AOL to succeed, it will not only have to convince users of rival sites to check it out. The company will also need to get those users to stay for as long as possible so it can assure advertisers that their marketing messages will be seen.

That's not going to be easy, since AOL members with broadband access are no longer tied to the site through monthly fees. However, some AOL features, including the investment information blog Blogging Stocks, are gaining in popularity.

During the first quarter, Nielsen Monitor-Plus estimates that spending on Web ads excluding search rose 46%, more than triple the next-highest category, Spanish language media, which gained 14%, according to an estimate of the latest available data released July 17.

There shouldn't be much of a slowdown in online advertising, even among companies that are looking to cut costs because of worries about the economy. Web advertising would probably be the last to face cuts, since it's so efficient, observers say. Majestic Research estimates that the so-called return on investment, the key metric for advertisers, is roughly five times better on the Web than offline.

"Budgets are coming out of television and print to go into the digital space," says Starcom MediaVest's Marshall. "We continue to see that growing aggressively."

Foster's Beer recently decided to quit advertising on television altogether and focus its spending in the U.S. solely online so it can more effectively reach target demographic of men 21 and over, says Peter Marino, a spokesman for SABMiller, the beer's U.S. distributor.

Earlier this year, Burger King began advertising a promotion for video downloads. More than 86,000 people have signed up to be "friends" of the company's King mascot.

"We are very pleased with the results that we've seen," said Gillian Smith, the chain's senior director of media and interactive, in a recent interview. "It's due to the fact that we are in such a targeted venue and we know our creative content resonates."

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