the compulsion to show people ads at all times and in all possible locations really is bizarre. how is that, of all things, what continually drives massive businesses? it's so meta and empty and undesirable to so many people, how has that become the norm?
@bob it does not work, though. advertisers want you to believe it does, but that's what advertising is for!
@bob yes, as someone who has written software for marketing firms and has reviewed articles for marketing journals, I'm definitely naive
@bob @boneidol everyone says this and thinks it's intuitive.
but I've seen actual data. multimillion dollar ad campaigns that might have moved sales up by 1%, maybe. a figure well within the margin of error of how these data are collected, and laughably unscientific anyway.
so go on with your superstition, I'll stick with the facts I've seen.
I think it does, and I think it's naive to assume that advertising doesn't work.
Years ago when I started blocking ads more seriously I noticed that I also wasn't buying so much gadgety stuff or paying attention to fadish things I didn't really need. It's only when you cut that out of your life that you notice how much it was influencing you previously.