Extreme Reach, the complete creative asset management solution for the ad industry, today released its 2018 Q4 and full year Video Advertising Benchmarks report that highlights the transformative impact of connected television (CTV) platforms on the advertising industry.
The report, based on metrics from the company’s platform, AdBridge, and specifically its proprietary video ad server, provides the strongest evidence yet that the migration of media consumption from linear TV to connected devices like Roku and Apple TV, as well as ad-supported streaming services such as Hulu, are enhancing advertisers’ ability to reach and engage audiences.
Growing Share of Impressions for CTV Pushes Mobile to Second Place
This most recent analysis of data on click-through, completion and viewability rates for video ads served on desktop, mobile, tablet and CTV, shows that CTV has not only overtaken other devices in the quantity of impressions served, but is also leading in performance metrics as well.
While mobile dominated video ad impressions in 2017, peaking with a 39 percent share in Q4, CTV has gained every quarter since. In Q4 2017, just 16 percent of impressions were served to CTV. By year end 2018, that number had increased by 193 percent, accounting for 44 percent of impressions in Q4 2018.
Desktop and Tablet devices have continued the downward trend for overall impressions served in every quarter since Q1 2016. Extreme Reach’s video benchmark metrics show declines from Q4 2017 to Q4 2018 of 36 percent and 54 percent, respectively, for Desktop and Tablets.
CTV Impacts Multiple Metrics for Premium Publishers
As viewers turn increasingly to Connected TV, premium publishers are moving there too. In Q4 2018, these publishers ran more than half of their impressions on CTV platforms, an increase of 154% from the 21% that ran on CTV in Q4 2017. CTV is having a halo effect on other areas, including increased ad length, lower rates of General Invalid Traffic and higher video completion rates for premium publishers.
While the first two quarters of 2018 made 6-second ads appear to be the wave of the future, the declines in mobile and desktop consumption drove a 78 percent decrease in impressions for 6-second spots from Q4 2017 to Q4 2018. Instead, as first noted in Q3, the rise in CTV is driving the resurgence of longer ads, with 30-second spots increasing their proportion of impressions and more than doubling from Q4 2017 (28%) to Q4 2018 (58%). 15-second spots, which held the majority of impressions throughout 2017, also declined by 43 percent from Q4 2017 to Q4 2018.
For advertisers, directly-bought CTV provides a brand safe environment that remains relatively insulated from the high frequency/outlier and bot activity found in other digital channels. Video Completion Rates are also very high on CTV which speaks to viewers being committed to the content they’ve chosen to watch and that they generally do not have the option to skip the ads.
With 30-second ads taking the lion’s share of impressions, the average time spent with video ads has increased by 35.3 percent, from a low of 17-seconds in Q4 2017 to 23-seconds in Q4 2018.
Based on these findings, Extreme Reach projects that more major media companies will enter the competitive CTV market via new launches, partnerships and acquisitions and that 30-second ads will continue to grow in share of impressions, perhaps fueling a rise of even longer ads.
“It’s astonishing how quickly the video advertising landscape has moved from a mobile to an OTT focus, and almost entirely driven by the changing habits of consumers,” stated Mary Vestewig, Senior Director, Video Account Management at Extreme Reach. “After such dramatic changes throughout 2018, it’s difficult to predict just how much more transformation connected platforms will catalyze this year, but all signs point to the changes having an overall positive impact for audiences and advertisers alike.”
“It’s becoming increasingly clear that the time is now to simplify the creative asset workflow to ensure the flawless execution of campaigns that more and more are landing back on the ‘big screen’ via IP-based methods,” said Matt Timothy, Chief Revenue Officer at ER. “The promise of advanced TV for brand building is exciting but we have to make the execution of those innovative strategies easy from a creative asset standpoint and that’s what we’re focused on every day.”
Source: Extreme Reach
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