The Pervasion of Disrespectful Marketing

Question: What's the best way to lose potential customers?

Answer: Piss them off.

Yet, that's exactly what many Internet marketers are doing...pissing off potential customers. How? By using disrespectful marketing methods. Unfortunately, there seems to be a pervasion of intrusive and disrespectful marketing on websites across the Internet.

So, why is this happening? Well, mainly because we're letting it happen. By not protesting loudly or often enough. And also because, as much as I hate to admit it, intrusive marketing works. After all, if it didn't work, Internet marketers would have long ago abandoned this controversial and disrespectful method of marketing.

Okay, so intrusive marketing works...so what? What about the moral aspect? Don't we as Internet marketers have a moral obligation to always be respectful to website visitors? I mean, just because something works doesn't mean that we should use it, right? After all, steel-jaw animal traps are also very effective, but they've not very humane. Sometimes the end result doesn't justify the means.

I Was in the Mood to Buy, But...

Studies have shown, the majority of U.S. households have some sort of pop-up blocker on their computer. Do you understand the full import of that statement? Do you know what it means? No? Let me explain it to you.

Since 204.3 million people in the U.S. have access to the Internet, according to a Nielsen/NetRatings survey. That means tens of millions of people don't like intrusive marketing. And can you really blame them? Just imagine for a moment that you're alone with your spouse, and you're both in the mood for some long overdue intimacy...and so the sensual foreplay begins...

Suddenly the telephone rings...or the baby starts crying. Kinda kills the mood, doesn't it?

Well, that's exactly what intrusive marketing does. It pours cold water on your prospects buying mood. It kills their desire to buy from you. Here's what marketing expert Joseph Carrabis wrote in his article, Intrusive Little Windows or "DeBranding Made Easy":

"Imagine yourself in that buying mood. You've made up your mind you want something, you've done your research, you've found it, you want it, you want it right now, you want to spend money and there it is right in front of you and one click from now you can rest assured you'll have it...

...and then an intrusive little window shows up, right between you and what you want."

That intrusive little window is the equivalent of a telephone ringing, or a baby crying. Either way, you just lost a potential customer.

Let me ask you a question: Knowing there are tens of millions of consumers out there who don't like intrusive marketing, why on earth would you ever utilize it on your site? Why risk pissing off and losing even one prospect, if you can avoid doing so?

People Don't Hate Advertising; They Hate Bad, Intrusive And Annoying Advertising

Here's what blogger and marketing expert Mike Masnick wrote on his Techdirt blog, in a post titled, People Don't Hate Advertising; They Hate Bad, Intrusive And Annoying Advertising:

"More than half of U.S. households use some kind of ad-blocking technology, such as a spam filter or a pop-up blocker. However, that hardly means that people hate advertising. It just means they hate totally annoying, intrusive and unwanted advertising."

Is Intrusive Marketing Disrespectful?

Look...don't get me wrong, I'm all for aggressively marketing your products and services, as long as you do so legally. That's called free enterprise, and aggressive marketing is perfectly acceptable.

And there's certainly nothing wrong with using various marketing tricks and techniques to try to get visitors to stay on your site a little longer. After all, research has shown, the longer you can get visitors to stay on your site, the greater your chances of converting them into customers.

That being said, at what point do aggressive marketing methods cross the line? At what point does it become disrespectful?

By now, it should be obvious to anyone reading this article, I don't like intrusive marketing. And I would never consider using it on any of my sites. Morally speaking, I consider intrusive marketing to be disrepectful, and I would never dream of disrespecting my visitors in that manner.

Conversely, if I choose to visit your site, I don't want some intrusive floating window requesting my subscription to your newsletter, the moment I land on your site. At least give me the opportunity to look around your site a little first to see what you have to offer.

Perhaps, after I've done that, I'll subscribe to your newsletter, or request your free report, if I like what your website has to offer. But don't get in my face!

Hey, Advertisers! How Do You Close This Darn Thing?

And it's not just Internet marketers who are guilty of disrespecting their visitors in this fashion. Corporate websites are equally culpable.

For example, the other day I was reading an article on The Huffington Post website, when suddenly, a giant advertisement opened up like an accordion and literally started pushing the article I was reading further and further down the page. I couldn't believe it.

Now here's the diabolical part. The way the ad was designed, I couldn't figure out how to close the darn thing. As a result, the ad just kept getting larger and larger and larger, until it finally closed itself. But only after it was done playing.

Think about that for a second. The ad was intentionally designed to be difficult to close. That's what made it so diabolical. True, it was only a 30 second ad, but that's not the point. The point is the ad was forced upon me. It was intrusive. It interrupted my reading enjoyment. I have a problem with that.

About.com received so many complaints from it's customers about intrusive advertising, they were forced to reduce the number of intrusive advertising on its sites. That should be a lesson to us as consumers, as well.

Perhaps, if more of us complained about intrusive marketing methods, other websites might follow suit and reduce or eliminate intrusive marketing on their sites. Writing this article is my way of doing just that.

In closing, I think marketing expert Frank Reed probably said it best, when he recently wrote on his Frank Thinking blog in a post titled, Hey Advertisers! I Can’t Find the Close Button Fast Enough!:

"I don’t care enough to look at your ad, especially because you are trying to trick me into seeing it. That’s pathetic. Get creative and make me care about your brand. Steamrolling your way through my web experience will not get you a customer. Instead, you’ll get "reviews" like this one."

About the author

David Jackson is the owner of http://reviews-by-customers.com - the Internet's hottest new business directory.

Comments

Um, well, speaking of

Um, well, speaking of disrespectful, might it have been possible to write this post without "piss" in the post?

I did not read the whole post because that opening seemed disrespectful.

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