Online Advertising in Oman

December 27th, 2008 | Posted in Oman, Omani Websites

I was checking Business Today online after reading a post about it on Muscati’s, they seem to be having a special issue on branding. An aricle on online advertising in Oman grabbed my attention.

The article summarizes the problem by saying:

“the lack of quality local websites, reliable content and low penetration of the Internet. “

The article also says that Bank Muscat is currently undertaking a study of the local online market and has been profiling the average web users.

Yet all in all, I thought that the article was rubbish.

..

OK, that was not the nicest way of saying it, but talk about people who have no idea about what’s happening.

Why do companies think that they have to advertise on local websites to reach local users online?

Haven’t they heard of Google Adwords, Microsoft AdCenter, or even Yahoo Publisher.

Using any of these services you can advertise for people in specific countries on any of the partners of the advertising networks without the need to deal with anyone of the websites specifically.

This advertisement could be  contextual, so that it appears depending on the content of the page. For example, if I am checking my hotmail account from Oman, and a friend of mine asked me about the latest phone he bought, the service will automatically detect which country I am accessing the internet from and it will check if there are any advertisements relevant to major keywords in my message, example: mobile phone. If Oman Mobile selected “mobile phone” as a keyword to target then the Oman Mobile advertisement will show up.

The networks mentioned earlier are one of the most popular worldwide and it will impossible for you to browse an internet for one day without seeing an advertisement from one of these companies on a page.

The fact that Omani companies are not making use of these websites has nothing to do with “local websites or reliable content”, Omani companies are just stupid.

We all know that online advertising is the most efficient way of advertising as it provides endless tracking opportunities. You know exactly how many people viewed your website, at what time of the day, which of your advertisements were clicked and which were not, how many clicks converted into a sale, how many clicks were instant rebounds, how many seconds did the visitor stay on your page, and the list goes on.

I have seen advertisements by Oman Air and Nawras on the internet which were served through Yahoo Publisher and AdCenter I think. The article mentions that Nawras might be advertising on YouTube (Google AdWords). So as you can see some Omani companies know the right way for going about with this, which is a good sign I guess.

  • Oops, looks like you also had a problem with this Sangeetha, maybe they didn't get your name properly over the phone and then just said "what they hell, let's just put the ITA"! :P
  • Why would the author ask for a quote over phone and mention "....official" dicretely in the end of this article???

    I only wonder if I should respond next time.
  • suehutton
    Hi. Yes, I got a Disqus account and it looks as if it could be very useful. Well done you! Thanks for the headsup.
  • Two cents on online advertising:

    1. We have dud PR/advertising companies in Oman who advice their clients only to go for print advertising, and in the rarest of rare cases TV channels. Online is never in their scheme of things. I have interacted with Dubai agencies who understand the power of internet very well. Our (Oman) psyche is tuned to see ads only in the print only.

    2. Lack of internet penetration makes the situation even more horrible. Imagine just two percent of the population having access to broadband internet. The clients expect a decent ROI, which doesn’t happen most of the time. These days, ads are tracked by way of JavaScripts and always we get to hear that Oman market provides poor response to ad campaigns in the whole of GCC.
  • Guess what Sue, I got it to work!

    If you are using WordPress I suggest that you take a look at Disqus, I got this feature running through it!
  • suehutton
    I think you're brave trying to introduce it. I'd like to introduce it myself, but so far, can't find easily understandable information. Season's Greetings! Sue
  • Sorry about the Facebook Connect feature, it got introduced last week and I haven't gotten it to work properly yet.
  • suehutton
    You don't even need to advertise with Google to track website visitors. Just install Google Analytics. But it's true that you don't see Omani companies advertising online. For example, I can be served any number of adverts by foreign travel companies selling holidays in Oman online, but never an Omani company.
    PS I tried registering this comment via Facebook Connectt but got an alert about Invalid Argument with the way the service was set up.
  • Some companies aren't really advertising online to gain new customers or to even promote their brand. Take BankMuscat for example, they have recently sponsored Sablat Oman (omania.net). It is no different than sponsoring an event. It is a misguided attempt to show that they are "with it", I guess. The bank's new head of corporate communications used to head the same function at Nawras. Maybe that's why there will be more of an emphasis on online advertising in the future.
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