UK ad viewability remains below 50%, costing advertisers
£154m a quarter
London, 20 October 2016 – For the second consecutive quarter, less than half of
online ads served in the UK met minimum viewability thresholds – costing
advertisers around £154 million, based on IAB/PwC’s Adspend figures published
last week¹.
Only 49% met the IAB and Media Ratings Council’s recommendation that 50% of the
ad was in view for at least 1 second. However, this was a marginal improvement
on 47% from the second quarter in 2016, according to the latest report from ad
verification company Meetrics.
Despite the improvement, the UK remains significantly behind other European
countries in terms of viewability levels: Austria is at 69%, France at 60% and
Germany at 59%.
Ever since launching back in 2000, Google Ads has been the most popular PPC (Pay Per Click) advertising platform by far. After introducing Consent Mode V1 in 2020 in a bid to find a balance between aggressive digital marketing and GDPR compliance, it introduced V2 towards the end of 2023 before making it a requirement from March 6th.
“To be honest, due to the attention and initiatives focused on addressing viewability, we’d expected a bigger improvement in the UK in the third quarter,” said Anant Joshi, Meetrics’ Director of International Business. “However, it seems that these efforts only just outweigh the impact of programmatic ad delivery and the amount of ad re-loading done by publishers to boost inventory levels. It’s still translating into about £615 million wasted annually on non-viewable banner ads alone.”
Viewability levels for video ads are better at 68%, however, this is against a measure of 50% in view for at least 2 seconds. Consequently, Joshi says, “advertisers should critically evaluate whether 50/2 is enough to have any form of impact. For example, if one considers a view-time of 10 seconds, which will have an impact, video viewability drops to 30%.”