The Future of Advertising: Everything, Everywhere, All the Time

Advertising has always been a cat-and-mouse game between the companies trying to get shoppers to pick their products and consumers desperately trying to go about their lives and read, watch or listen to their preferred content without having to endure a sales pitch.

Humans, as we do, have generally adapted to stay one step ahead of the advertisers. Television commercials became the time to use the bathroom, to fix a snack or a drink, or, heaven forbid, talk to your family. As remote controls made channel-surfing easier, avoiding ads became as simple as pressing a button. DVRs and streaming all added to the ways in which we could essentially watch content for free, without having to watch the annoying spots that actually paid the bills.

But nothing has disrupted advertising experience quite like the explosion of smart phones/tablets. The typical modern television viewing experience for most people involves a device other than a television. This Second Screen Syndrome should be familiar to all of us now, whether it involves triaging work emails, looking up where we’ve seen that actor before, finishing that article you were reading on the train or creating a playlist for your workout — we all have a phone or similar device handy and active while we’re watching TV. Most of the time, this not only keeps us from watching the commercials but even the show we’re ostensibly tuning into in the first place.

Despite this behavior becoming both commonplace and common knowledge, despite all reason, advertisers continue to pour billions of dollars a year into television. Research firm Strategy Analytics predicted in January that 2015 advertising spending in the U.S. would total $186.6 billion, with television spending accounting for almost $79 billion of that, or more than 42 percent.

Countless hours of footage for sodas, burgers, cars, political candidates, erection pills, depression pills, blood pressure pills, dating sites and more erection pills are filmed, aired and largely ignored. Think about the legions of creative workers, commercial actors, voice-over actors, camera men, editors, set-builders, copywriters, jingle writers, lighting directors and ad salesmen all working to create a product that has been completely reduced to background noise in the modern world — an economy of futility, kept in place simply because that’s what they’ve always done.

This is hardly a phenomenon limited to television. Digital ad spending may be growing, but user experience designers will tell you that decades of Internet use has trained us to not really make eye contact with right rails of websites or banner advertising, which is why those ads are so often chock full of pretty people, dancing GIFS, freaky animals or plastic surgery mistakes — anything to draw the viewer’s eye to a place we’ve been trained to ignore. And that’s assuming the viewer hasn’t installed ad blocking software.