By Clare Saliba E-Commerce Times
08/22/01 4:33 PM PT
Online travel site Orbitz says it sees online advertising as the
foundation of marketing efforts that occur '24 hours a day, 365 days a year.'
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Propelled by a multimillion dollar pre-launch online advertising campaign, travel
Web site Orbitz opened for business in
early June and was soon swamped by a
deluge of customers,
topping the company's own expectations and forcing it to
more than double its customer service staff in the following weeks.
Chicago, Illinois-based Orbitz, which is backed by a consortium
of the nation's largest airline carriers, says the hallmarks of
its marketing approach are maturity and accountability, and
describes promotions implemented by many
now-defunct dot-coms as "teenage marketing." The company
has said it plans to spend "competitively" on its marketing
campaigns against those of other travel sites, some of
whose campaigns are estimated to total US$100 million annually.
In a recent interview with the E-Commerce Times, Michael Sands,
vice president of marketing for Orbitz, discussed the benefits
associated with marketing efforts on the Internet, where a
campaign's performance can continuously be evaluated.
Far from being a "dead" medium, Sands asserted, online
advertising remains far ahead of the marketing curve and
holds a number of important lessons for its offline counterpart.
Continuous Change
ECT: What advertising advantages does the Internet offer that
other media do not provide?
Sands: The answer is pretty simple: accountability. One of the
things our investors expect from us is accountability in our marketing
dollars, and that forms the foundation for everything we do.
ECT: What steps, or series of steps, do you take when planning
an online advertising campaign?
Sands: We take a different approach. Rather than looking at it
as a campaign per se -- since a campaign implies that there is a
beginning and an end -- we actually look at online advertising
as the foundation of our marketing efforts that occur 24 hours
a day, 365 days a year, for as long as the company will be in business.
We go through a process of rapid iteration where we're constantly
putting new creative into the mix, pulling old creative out, and
turning on and off deals that we have. There's no beginning and
end, just a process of continuous improvement every day. We have
a team of experts here that do nothing but monitor our online
advertising efforts and improve the creative and our partnerships
according to the resulting metrics.
Gauging Performance
ECT: Should an online advertiser choose many sites on which to
advertise -- or spend the same amount for a larger buy on one site?
Sands: We've found that you need to approach it almost like a
funnel by starting very broad, finding out the sites that work well and
then pursuing deeper relationships with those sites. One of the things
that we're very proud of is that we will do a deal with anyone that
works within our economic parameters. I would recommend going broad
at first and then narrowing those partnerships as you move forward.
ECT: What process do you use to determine how much of your overall
advertising budget is allocated to a particular site?
Sands: Our budget gets allocated to the sites that perform
well for us. It's very straightforward and all the sites know
they're working against the same metric. Those that perform
get rewarded. With those that don't perform, we either test
other solutions or we shake hands and part company.
Don't Get Married
ECT: What are the biggest challenges of marketing via interactive media?
Sands: The constant pace is something people have to get used to.
Those who grew up in a traditional marketing environment aren't accustomed
to being as accountable as this medium commands you to be. It requires
constant change and you can't get married to one idea or one theme.
You have to be willing to constantly iterate and test new thoughts.
The idea of sticking with one campaign for a number of months or
years just doesn't apply. We'll test multiple creative approaches
and placements on a site within a very short amount of time and
then make quick decisions on how to move forward.
Sticking to the Core
ECT: How well suited is the Internet for branding campaigns
as opposed to lead generation?
Sands: All advertising is ultimately going to become more
accountable, so saying that one medium is good for branding and
another is good for direct response simply doesn't wash with me.
You have to ask yourself whether all the messages you're putting
forth on the Internet are consistent with your core brand message.
If they are, every impression that you serve online and every
customer that you bring to your site from a clickthrough
is helping to build your brand.
You have to be consistent with your core messages. As long as you're
doing that, then the online medium can certainly be used for brand
building. Conversely, you can't let your offline campaigns off
the hook by saying that they are just brand building campaigns
and that you don't expect them to perform as well. That's a cop-out.