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| CulturalTravels.net - Home | More Editorials |
Volume 5, March 2003 |
ISSN 1538-893X |
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Editorial by Patrick Totty |
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Over the past three years we’ve been told more than once
that we are old-fashioned, behind-the-times fuddy duddies for insisting that
we’d never allow pop-ups or other irritating ads on our web site. Now, even the New York Times has seen the light and
come over to our way of thinking. (More about that in a bit.) The conventional wisdom said that the way to get readers to
respond to online ads was to make the ads as intrusive, irritating and obnoxious
as possible. The fact that they would turn off a majority of readers was beside
the point: Just as telemarketers bet that one out of every 100 people they
pester might buy something, online marketers played the percentages. The problem is that those percentages began rapidly declining
two years ago. People trying to do routine work or research on the Internet
found themselves constantly interrupted and assaulted by pop-ups. They soon
began routinely closing the ads each time one would pop up, not even bothering
to read them. Rather than step back and examine their approach, online
advertisers created ads that not only popped up but imposed themselves on
viewers’ screens for 20 or 30 seconds. There was no way to turn them off until
the time ran out. Other ads were programmed to skitter around the screen, like a
puppy trying to avoid a bath, so that a viewer couldn’t catch them and close
them. The result? More irritation on the part of consumers and
less-than-stellar performance by the ads. So the great minds of Madison Ave.
went frantically looking for the Next Big Thing, wringing their hands and
wondering where the magic might lie. We told them where the mojo was three years ago when we
introduced this web site. We said then, and have repeated it gently and
consistently since, that our financial and format model is the magazine. Like
any magazine, we try to offer content that will attract a certain kind of reader
and we support the magazine by accepting ads from people who’d like to do
business with our readers. After that, we leave it up to the readers and the
advertisers to get together. Slowly but surely, our approach has proven itself. People
have learned that they can enjoy themselves on our site because they don’t
have to worry about being importuned to buy something. What a concept! In the
meantime, our advertisers enjoy a “click-through” rate 12x to 30x greater
than any conventional pop-up or interruptive generates. People respond to their
ads because they are genuinely interested and in the market. Who would have
thought? Others are catching on. The New York Times announced
recently that it plans to abandon pop-ups and their ilk entirely in its online
travel section and move over to gimmick-less ads like the ones you see on
Cultural Travels. When an institution as venerable (and profit-oriented) as the Times
decides to take a page from our book, we feel gratified. If you’re like many Americans who have put their overseas
leisure travel plans on hold until the situation in Iraq is resolved, that
doesn’t mean you have to abandon the idea of taking an interesting trip. You
can still take an exotic – even a foreign – trip in your own backyard, North
America. Here are a few of them: Quebec – The people speak and cook French, and Montreal
and Quebec are two of the continent’s prettiest cities. This is the alternate universe where North America has a Gallic flavor. Mexico – This country is a world unto itself, with dozens
of cuisines and ethnic groups, a fascinating history and a growing sense of
itself as an important player on the global stage. With its deserts, attractive
beaches, tropical rainforests, volcanoes, mountain towns and megalopolises,
Mexico is varied and complex enough to require a lifetime of exploration. St. Pierre and Miquelon – Located off the coast
of Newfoundland, these two islands are legally a part of France. If you step on
either, you are on French soil. That means bring your passport and pay in Euros
while shaving 3,000 miles off your trip. Costa Rica – A little tropical country that
disestablished its military 55 years ago and decided to spend the money on
education. The result is a thriving democracy that lacks the extremes of wealth
and poverty found in most Latin American countries, and a real sense of optimism
and opportunity among the people. From rich forests in the lowlands to its
perpetual-spring climate on its central plateau, there’s an abundance of
things to like here. Victoria, BC – If you go to Quebec to sense a
Frenchness to things, you go to Victoria to feel Englishness. This city’s
public buildings, flower baskets, pots and beds, and low-rise architecture all
have a distinctly English look to them. The weather, which is much like San
Francisco’s, is fine, too, especially in summer. Navajo Country – The Navajos, related to the
Aztecs, live on the largest Indian reservation in the United States. Within that
vast area (25,000 square miles) is some of the most beautiful scenery in the
world, including Canyon de Chelly, Monument Valley, Marble Canyon and Lake
Powell. Technically, the Navajos are a nation within a nation. Though you
don’t need a passport to visit their reservation, you are, in many respects,
in another country when you’re there. Monterey Park, CA – Thousands of Taiwanese and southern Chinese have settled in this city a few miles east of downtown Los Angeles. Hankering after the cuisines they left behind, they’ve attracted entrepreneurial chefs who’ve opened up modest little restaurants in the strip malls that dominate this city’s commercial landscape. The result is a concentration of the best Chinese food in the world outside of East Asia. |
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