- This decision by GroupM and its agencies shows just how powerful the idea of transparency is becoming online
- Mobile advertising expenditure will correspond to 15.7% of the total digital advertising market or 3.4% of the total global ad spend for all media.
Blog
Curns’ Ad Links for 20 December 2010
- The most important thing a user can do is pay attention to the information each app is requesting.
Curns’ Ad Links for 9 December 2010
- Zenith OptiMedia expects online ads and newspaper ads globally to attract almost equal amounts of ad spending in 2013.
- eMarketer has upgraded its online ad forecast for 2010, estimating that US online ad spend will now increase 13.9% to $25.8 billion for the full year.
- Ignore rates for online [advertising] display peaked at 47% among 18-34 year olds, and hit 46% where participants had graduated from college.
Curns’ Ad Links for 30 November 2010
- MediaTel tells us that forecasts suggest that total duration levels of traditional TV advertising will be transferred to digital TV viewing at some point. The 'at some point' is the cruical bit: when!
Curns’ Ad Links for 17 November 2010
- The online ad market is poised to grow by $50 billion as advertisers shift their money from offline to online, argues Morgan Stanley analyst Mary Meeker
Curns’ Ad Links for 16 November 2010
- Demand-side platforms have evolved tremendously but these are still the early days in the evolution of this space.
Curns’ Ad Links for 8 November 2010
- The proposed EU rules suggest the creation of an online "right to be forgotten." That would impart to users the power to tell websites to permanently delete personal data. The rules also mandate that users give explicit consent before companies can use or process their personal data in any way. The 20-page document also criticizes the companies' current privacy policies as opaque.
Curns’ Ad Links for 2 November 2010
- News Corp. has obtained a minority stake in Rubicon Project, a Web advertising firm, in exchange for its online ad group Fox Audience Network.
Curns’ Ad Links for 1 November 2010
- It shouldn't matter what you call it, social-media or not, surely companies should know what's being said about them?
Curns’ Ad Links for 7 October 2010
- Mobile data revenues in the U.S. approached $25 billion during the first half of 2010, up 27 percent in contrast with the first six months of 2009, according to new data issued by CTIA-The Wireless Association.
- As budgets are being scrutinised more closely than ever, the beauty of video is its measurability. It’s hard to quantify how many people actually saw your 30 second spot and didn’t use the time to grab a snack or take a potty break. In stark contrast, the insights marketers can glean from this new breed of video-based advertising are stretching the boundaries of what is technologically possible
- Sky and IAB prove branding effectiveness of online video in UK’s most in-depth ‘live‘ video industry study to date. New research shows that consumers want to investigate brands in their own time, and are more open to receiving ads around quality video content.
Last Week in Digital Advertising #7
And so to New York where Google predicted “mobile is going be the number one screen through which users engage with advertisers’ digital brands†That’s just one of the seven predictions that Google’s Neal Mohan and Barry Salzman are widely reported to have said at IAB’s MIXX.
Take a deep breath and breathe.
How do you begin this issue of “Last Week In Digital Advertising� It’s actually pretty hard as we’ve been on the wrong end of the fire-hose of industry announcements, news and comment through almost every channel imaginable thanks to New York’s Advertising Week. It’s an event where everybody seems to announce something. It would have been perfectly possible to spend the entire week reading comment about the event and not doing much else. This week I learnt that Twitter generates 12 terabytes of data. AdWeek, I imagine, produces many times that. Still, it was probably worse if you were actually there, right?
There was a follow-up on my mention last week of BIA/Kelsey’s research claiming that one in four local ad dollars would be spent with digital – across all digital channels – in the not too distant future. mocoNews.net reported that by 2014, U.S. mobile local ad revenues will have grown to $2.02 billion in 2014 from $213 million in 2009 (sourced from that same report). So is ‘local mobile’ where the money is? The AOP reported 60% of publishers agree that more local and ‘niche’ digital content is crucial (AOP Content & Trends Census 2010) to their success, so I guess we should stand by for launches of such content soon.
Fortunately, makers of Blackberry apps, even the local ones, can now monetise their apps nice and easily through the newly announced BlackBerry Application Platform which aims to aggregate ads from mobile networks to maximise the revenue. Looks like a very nice yield management tool for mobile app makers, don’t you think? We all know mobile is going to be big. eMarketer put that into perspective last week, reporting a ComScore report (albeit from June) suggesting smartphone ownership across the big western European countries had grown 41% between 2009 and 2010, to 60.8 million subscribers.
About 15 million of those users were in the UK, where smartphone ownership leaped 70% between 2009 and 2010, the Internet Advertising Bureau UK (IAB UK) reported. Further, the IAB calculated that mobile access accounted for about a quarter of time spent online by UK web users in mid-2010. (Full Steam Ahead for UK Mobile Marketing)
Publishers are reacting to this, with that AOP census also reporting, “Year on year, 65% of publishers expect to increase their mobile content, whilst content delivered via apps will increase for 91% of publishersâ€. All of which might be helping drive Apple’s share of the mobile ad market, which Bloomberg Businessweek reported, will end the year at 21%of the market,
If much of that mobile advertising market is to be location-based then it’s reassuring for us in the business to read that the “Ad industry acts now to safeguard location marketing†as New Media Age ran with this week. It’s really the same story I’ve been noting week-in week-out here: tell users what you are doing and given them ways to opt-out. That doesn’t have to stop you explaining the advantages of sharing data. I know, you know this.
And so to New York where Google predicted “mobile is going be the number one screen through which users engage with advertisers’ digital brands†That’s just one of the seven predictions that Google’s Neal Mohan and Barry Salzman are widely reported to have said at IAB’s MIXX. You can, of course, get it from the horse’s mouth on the Google Blog. Publishers will be happy to hear their prediction that the digital advertising business will grow to be a $50 billion industry in five years. Are those US-only numbers? Context people! It’s everything in a global business like we’re in.
Another of G’s predictions included the suggestion that 50% of campaigns will eventually include video. Video will be bought on a cost-per-view basis that Google’s been suggesting means that “the user will choose whether to watch the ad or not, and the advertiser will only pay if the user watchesâ€. I get the bit about the advertiser only paying if the user watches the ad but I wonder if the ‘choose to view an ad’ is sustainable. I wonder what the broadcasters think? To be fair, it could be “choose to view one of a selection of advertisements” so it makes a little more sense. If you saw their presentation at Advertising Week, drop me a note for clarity.
So much video advertising is going to have an impact on broadcast television, surely. I was pointed to an article at Lucid Commerce last week that’s looking at this from the broadcast standpoint. Does television loose when a consumer takes some kind of action online because that action gets attributed to an online campaign (of course, the assumption here is that there is online activity running). The piece starts of with the assertion, “In general, online advertising systems are unaware of the offline advertising that is going on around them†and I think this is, generally, true but is – hopefully – built into the resulting research analysis. It is why I was quite interested to read a piece on MediaPost that began, “Electronic Arts (EA) plans to unveil Thursday a cross-platform reporting dashboard†but then disappointed to see it only covered online, console, mobile, email and social. I had thought they’d solved the true cross-platform conundrum. To be fair, many companies are trying to solve the cross-platform problem and I am sure somebody will get there, eventually.
Understanding how often somebody sees a message from a brand across all channels is important to enable us to really understand the impact of any marketing message, so any multi-platform reporting is to be welcomed. Direct Marketing News ran a piece titled, “Why finding the optimal ad frequency is difficult†that made it clear there was plenty of work to do on that front. I’ve been listening to Spoitfy while writing this piece and, really, there’s a high frequency to some ads there that – for some reason – seems much more annoying than high frequency rotations on broadcast radio. As an aside, I discovered last week that the IAB has a Digital Audio Committee that’s probably looking at this kind of thing as I type. I hope so.
Back Google’s crystal ball. I think many of the predictions were sensible and reflective of what we are all seeing in the industry. However, the concept that by 2015 75% of ads on the web will have some kind of social element is something that’s going to take some thinking about yet. I am not disagreeing but to achieve that will take a step-shift in the use of so-called social media within all advertising. That, in turn, is something quite difficult to envisage for 2015.
Talking social, I really think we’re too early to truly understand the role it plays in marketing & advertising. There are lots of possibilities but we need more data and not the kind of reporting that suggests the impact of social is small (“Twitter’s Impact On News Traffic Is Tinyâ€) without any true context. Yes, I commented on that story on the site, but it’s actually not unusual. Since I began writing “Last Week In Digital Advertising†I’m reading an increasing number of industry articles that don’t have any context in their reporting. Now, I understand sometimes this is the tease to get you to buy a research company’s report but I think the reportage needs a little more rigour.
At Ad:tech London there was some discussion from the publisher side about ‘data leakage’ (which is far too complex to explain in a trivial column like this so I could mis-characterise the whole things a data theft and let people moan back at me). Good to see, then, that in New York PubMatic announced a tool allowing websites “to determine not only how many tracking tools the site itself is installing, but also how many tracking tools are being installed by advertisers without the website’s knowledgeâ€. I’ll be watching that one with interest.
With all this tracking, as we’ve been reading for weeks, there’s a constant stream of data being collected, analysed and stored somewhere. This caused Eric Porres at iMedia Connection to ask “Is audience data more valuable than advertising inventory?†Certainly, the data could be the most valuable asset for a lot of publishers, agencies and advertisers.
OK, to end, some digital advertising facts and figures we learnt this week. Nice to hear that by 2014 nearly 42% of online ad dollars in the U.S. will be spent on branding, compared to just 35.7% today (“Branding Grows as Online Ad Objective†via Reuters) but it doesn’t seem like big growth to me. Also in the ‘good numbers category, I saw that, through Real Time Bidding systems you can see “click-through rates improving by up to 135%, conversion rates up 150% and cost per action up 145%†(“Real Time Bidding: The Sleeper Ad Technology Growth Story†via Marketing Vox) while retargeted display ads gave a 1,046% lift in searches on brand terms within four weeks after exposure (“Retargeting Used by Marketers for Cost-Effective Brand Lift†via eMarketer). In the UK, 38.4 million folks accessed the internet during August, according to the latest data from UKOM (“UKOM Data Report: August 2010†via MediaTel Newsline) which means there’s a lot of people out there so see this ad stuff!
And so we get to the end of another week. Lots of stories not covered here, lots of companies not mentioned. Still if you fancy trying to understand the business then there’s an updated version of the digital advertising technology landscape diagram. You can get it here. And then spend a week trying to work out how it really does all fit together before coming back to read next week’s review of this week’s advertising news.
Curns’ Ad Links for 1 October 2010
- Seriously, a cesspool?
Curns’ Ad Links for 29 September 2010
- Lucid Insiders talk about how online advertising systems are unaware of the offline advertising that is going on around them, although when one drills down into the online data it is apparent that them. What to do about television driving a spike in demand through an online sales channel?
- The online ad industry is rushing to introduce self-regulation for location-based marketing to allay privacy concerns around the billion-pound sector
- UK online use sees 38.4 million people using the internet in August; almost 20% of which comes from London
Curns’ Ad Links for 28 September 2010
- The number of smartphone owners in the EU-5 (UK, France, Germany, Spain and Italy) grew 41% between 2009 and 2010, to 60.8 million subscribers, according to a June 2010 report from comScore.
- Technology start-up PubMatic is launching a new tool to help websites determine how many tracking files are being installed on users’ computers.
- Hot on the heels of recent news about local display advertising, here's some news about local mobile. Guess what? Somebody predicts this market is growing to grow.
- Are bigger ad formats the way to go? I have been thinking about this for some time and i think fewer but bigger and better ads is the way ahead from premium display. Am I right?
- iMediaConnection.com reporting that there is evidence suggesting that audience data collected over the course of a campaign on a major site or network could be five to 10 times more valuable than the actual messaging or creative on which it is based.
- Some interesting points about managing frequency in digital advertising and a note that advertisers are still not demanding audience reporting.
- Smart move from Blackberry – pooling app inventory and passing to partner ad networks is a good way to get monetisation quickly.
Curns’ Ad Links for 27 September 2010
- Interesting to see what the UK publisher market thinks are important innovations in both content and technology,
- This is the latest version of the display advertising landscape diagram. Lots of companies, lots of players and much consolidation to come?
- eMarketer reports that retargeted display ads gave a 1,046% lift in searches on brand terms within four weeks after exposure. 4 weeks seems a long period – or is that just me?
- BusinessWeek suggests that Apple's share of the mobile advertising market will be 21% by year end. I have to assume that's on revenue and not impressions or any other volume measurement because this article doesn't really make it clear.