Mobile contributing to declining ad viewability levels
Non-viewable ads costing advertisers
around £750 million
The rise in mobile advertising spend is contributing to a decline in ad viewability levels, according to the latest quarterly benchmark report from ad verification company Meetrics.
In the first quarter of 2017, the proportion of banner ads served that met
minimum viewability guidelines dropped from 49% to 47% – the lowest level for
nine months. Based on the recent IAB/PwC figures, this suggests around £750
million per year is wasted on non-viewable ads.
Declining viewability is partly driven by mobile now accounting for over
half of display ad spend but tending to have lower viewability rates than
desktop for various reasons,” said Anant Joshi, Meetrics’ commercial
director UK & Ireland. “Obviously, the smaller screen size can mean more
page scrolling and, thus, more chance of ads being missed lower down a page,
plus slower network connection speeds can cause ad loading delays. There’s also
the legacy issue of desktop ads served on mobile which don’t format properly,
despite the use of responsive design.”
Joshi says these issues are compounded by the increasing amount of mobile
content consumed via apps, in which ads are more likely to be at the bottom of
a page so don’t always get enough attention. However, he’s keen to point out
these “aren’t just UK issues, we’re seeing them across all markets.”
Germany saw a three percentage point decline in viewability to an all-time low
of 55%, Austria dropped a single point to 67%, while France rose three points
to 60% – all still significantly ahead of the UK’s 47%.
He concludes: “Unfortunately, we’re still seeing a lot of talk but not the
required intense effort to increase viewability and improve campaign ROI. This
needs to change.”
Ads are deemed viewable if the meet the IAB and Media Ratings Council’s
recommendation that 50% of the ad is in view for at least one second.