From Developer to Designer
While looking through some free Wordpress templates for a niche blog that I am starting, one made me question the designer’s choice of ad blocks. I am wanted to eventually sell ads on this blog so I am looking for themes with ad blocks already built in. This particular one is a very nice theme but it has three 100×100 ad blocks. At first that didn’t seem like such a big deal, but the more I thought about it I realized that it probably wasn’t a very wise move to go down from the de facto 125×125 sized blocks. Here’s why.
Standard - Your advertisers possibly run multiple ads on various blogs. You are less likely to get an advertiser if they have to alter their preexisting ads to suit your blogs needs.
Space - When I was first getting into doing web pages I did banner ads for my Uncle’s site. Although the copy text he wanted was often the most verbose, infomercial-like stuff such as “lightning-fast shipping”, “super duper savings”, or “call with in the next 10 minutes to get twice more for only double the price”, I quickly realized how important every pixel was. Going any smaller than 125×125 can really make a different between an effective ad and a forgettable one.
Alternatives - Until a blog has a well-established readership, advertisers are going to be slim. So instead of having four empty ad blocks you can put in alternative forms of advertising already formatted for the 125×125 dimensions. I know Google Adsense and Amazon Associates have banners that can be placed in those spots along with many affiliate programs.
Who knows who came up with the 125×125 parameters but in my opinion it’s probably unwise to stray from it until some of the bigger bloggers start to move on to something else.
A young man's strange, not so erotic journey from developer to designer. Jeremy Adam Davis is starting to spread his wings to start becoming a freelance web designer. Look here to find updates as my freelance web design evolves, along with articles about SEO, making passive income, and web design best pracices
Naomi Dunford
February 10th, 2008 at 6:06 pm
I think the use of a standardized ad format simply eliminates one more buying barrier. When one of my regular readers contacted me to advertise on his site, I was just about to say no and then thought, “What the hell. I’ve got a banner right here. I may as well.”
Having 125×125 didn’t make me come beating down his door, but if he’d asked me to do an ad redesign, it would’ve been enough to make me say no.
Cool site, btw. Like the top blogger analysis.