Why Google Is Against Interstitial App Install Ads

What Happened
Back in April, Google started prioritizing mobile-friendly websites in its mobile search results with a tweaked algorithm, which means sites without a mobile version got demoted in search ranking. Now, Google is gunning for sites with disruptive app-install interstitial ads, announcing its plan to start demoting those site in mobile search results starting November 1. It’s a curious choice on Google’s part to target only the app-install ads, presumably due to the fact that Google would prefer users to stay within mobile web, where it gets most of its ad revenue from and has more control over, instead of dispatching into various apps.

What Brands Should Do
Regardless of Google’s agenda, the fact stands that disruptive full-page pop-up or interstitial ads are annoying and detrimental to the user experience, especially so on the limited screen space of mobile devices. Therefore, brands need to make sure the app-install ads they serve are up to Google’s standard, so as not to be penalized in mobile search results. In the long run however, as mobile web continues to decline and users spending more and more time in apps, brands and digital publishers may need to consider alternative content distribution channels, such as Facebook’s Instant Articles or Snapchat Discover,  or even developing their own apps in order to reach and engage with consumers on mobile.

 


Source: TechCrunch

Neiman Marcus Adds Visual Search To Its App For Better Discovery

What Happened
Luxury department store Neiman Marcus has teamed up with Slyce, a product-discovery platform, to allow users of its retail app to search for items with images instead of texts. Shoppers can either upload a photo from their phone or snap one of a certain product, and Neiman Marcus’ branded app will serve up both the exact item and some similar ones that the retailer carries.

What Brands Should Do
Visual search has long been a great breakthrough point for retail and ecommerce brands seeking to connect their physical and digital assets. A recent example would be Amazon’s great “Firefly” feature on its poorly-received Fire Phone, which promises to identify any object in the real world and facilitate buying through Amazon. For retailers, visual search could lead to better product discovery, boosting sales while also providing customers a better in-store experience.


Source: Digiday

Livestreaming Continues To Evolve With Branded Streams And Mirrativ

What Happened
Mobile-based livestreaming continues to gain momentum as eight brands – including Taco Bell, CoverGirl, Verizon, and Pepsi – sponsored branded Periscope streams for this Sunday’s VMAs on MTV channel. Though not the first time brands have sponsored a livestream, this is definitely the largest one in scale so far.

While existing livestream apps such as Meerkat and Periscope captures their feeds from the phone’s cameras, Japanese mobile game maker DeNA is looking to flip the script by allowing easy streaming of one’s screen display. Last week, the company announced Mirrativ, an Android-based livestreaming platform that essentially brings Twitch’s interface to mobile, as it uses the phone’s camera and microphone to capture the stream host’s face and voice while also capturing what’s on the screen’s display.

What Brands Should Do
As livestreaming continues to evolve as an emerging media platform, we expect to see more brand opportunities and content formats arise as experiments continue. Mirrativ, while positioned as a game livestreaming app, could easily be repurposed for live app demos or customer services a la Amazon Fire’s real-time Mayday tech support. And branded livestrreams during big media events offer brands a great shortcut to get their content in front of a mobile audience in real time. Therefore, brands that wish to stay connected to today’s mobile-first consumers would be wise to start exploring the vast potential this nascent media platform holds today.

 


Source: AdWeek & VentureBeat

Instagram Finally Allows Non-Square Photos & Videos

What Happened
After years of sticking with its signature square format for all posts, Instagram has finally added native support for photos and videos of other aspect ratios, allowing users to post vertical or horizontal posts without the unsightful margins created by third-party apps, which some used to employ in order to post uncropped photos. Brands such as New Belgium Brewing and Disney’s Star Wars were already spotted testing the new formats.

What Brands Should Do
While the loosened restriction on post format gives brands more creative freedom to deliver content without compromises, brands need to be mindful that Instagram grants much more screen space to vertical posts than horizontal ones. And given the inherent mobile nature of Instagram and that users tend to prefer a one-handed, vertical orientation, it’d be smart to choose the vertical over other formats in order to achieve maximum visual impact.


Source: AdWeek

Yahoo Adds Support For Native Video Ads On Third-Party Apps

What Happened
Yahoo will start helping developers add native video ads into their apps, the company announced on Wednesday during its Mobile Developer Conference in New York City. Mobile developers will soon get tools on Yahoo’s ad platform necessary for integrating video ads that fit their apps’ design.

What Brands Should Do
According to a recent study by Nielsen and Sharethrough, native video ads perform better than other video ads including pre-roll ads. For brands that wish to spread its branded video content in the increasingly app-centric mobile ecosystem, Yahoo’s new addition could be helpful in increasing the reach while simplifying the process.


Source: TechCrunch

Twitter Expands Promoted Tweets And Videos To Other Apps

What Happened
Following Facebook’s announcement last week to expand its mobile ad platform, Twitter is also expanding its ad offerings on mobile, allowing promoted tweets and videos ads to appear in other apps. Previously, Twitter’s Audience Platform only offered app-install ads in mobile apps outside of Twitter.

What Brands Should Do
This move means that brands now can use Twitter’s platform, which operates across a network of thousands of apps, to extend the reach of their promoted videos and tweets, using new ad formats. By employing some of these new high performance ad formats, brands and marketers may find a way to figure out new, efficient ways to reach consumers in today’s mobile-first world.

 

Source: AdAge

Facebook Extends Autoplay Video Ads And More To Mobile Ad Platform

What Happened
Facebook continues to diversify its mobile ad offering by bringing its autoplay video ads to third-party mobile apps that utilize its mobile ad network, Audience Network. Moreover, the social network is also extending its slideshow-like carousel ads that first debuted on Instagram to non-Facebook apps, as well as its dynamic product ads that allow retailers to target shoppers who had previously browsed on their ecommerce sites.

What Brands Should Do
Mobile ads, especially those in the mobile web, have been widely criticized for dragging down access speed and undermining the mobile experience. By employing the new in-app ad formats, brands and marketers may find a way to skirt around some of the common issues plaguing display ads in mobile web, while also discovering new, efficient ways to reach consumers in today’s mobile-first world. As of right now, Google’s mobile ad network doesn’t support autoplay video ads or other high performing ad units that Facebook offers.

 

Source: Marketing Land

Ad Blocking in iOS 9 Safari: What You Need to Do

Ansible and Magna Global contributed to this report.

Fast Forward is your guide to tech-driven changes in the media landscape by IPG Media Lab. A fast read for you and a forward for your clients and team.

  • iOS 9 will allow ad-blocking extensions for Safari, distributed through the App Store
  • Ad delivery and data tracking abilities will be impacted for a significant number of users who opt in
  • Brands and publishers can adapt with native advertising or partnering with data owners that don’t rely on ad network tracking


What Happened
Important details have recently emerged about a new feature in Apple’s default web browser in iOS 9, Safari. Apple promises developers a “fast and efficient way to block cookies, images, resources, pop-ups, and other content.” That means that ads and ad-network tracking scripts will never get delivered to some portion of iOS 9 users. Recent tests removing ad-tracker javascript with a pre-release version of iOS 9 reduced page loading times by as much as 80%, from 11 seconds to 2 seconds.

How Media Owners Should Respond

  • Deliver the best possible experience in a native app. Ads delivered in your app are unaffected as this only affects web ads and trackers.
  • Tests of your ability to serve highly-targeted and engaging advertisements on the web have been accelerated as Apple has pushed forward the timetable.
  • Integrate with Apple News and Facebook Instant Articles and others that own the user data necessary for precise targeting without hopping all over the internet to get it.


How Advertisers Should Respond

  • Focus on in-app advertising, either through a network like iAd or through direct sponsorships.
  • Look for more ways to integrate native advertising into your plans.
  • Consider significant new investment in media properties that own enough user data that they can sufficiently target without going through an ad exchange. Seek out Facebook Instant Articles or Apple News. Google, Verizon, Yahoo and publications with niche audiences and direct ad sales are the other beneficiaries here.


Market Impact
As digital ad revenue has transitioned from desktop to mobile, most has found its way to in-app ads instead of on the web. This nearly matches attention. Whereas 81% of time spent on a smartphone is in-app, only 76% of ad spend is in-app.

Screen Shot 2015-08-11 at 3.16.02 PM
We expect these new ways to block mobile web ads to more than close that gap, especially because of the importance of Safari. As the default web browser on iOS devices, Safari accounts for roughly 40% of mobile web traffic worldwide and more than half in the US.

Screen-Shot-2015-08-10-at-6.03.28-AM-800x492
Ad-blocking extensions are appealing to users because they can better protect their privacy, improve webpage load times, save battery life, as well as blocking the pop-ups and banner ads that disrupt basic browsing experience. Ad-blocking on the desktop is used by about 25% of users worldwide and the most popular extension for the desktop version of Safari is AdBlock.

Therefore, there is little doubt that such extensions would catch on with a significant number of users, especially when aided by the ease of App Store distribution. Ads blocked in this way on both the desktop and in the future on mobile aren’t billed to the advertiser, and will have a bigger impact on publisher revenue than on advertisers. Wide adoption could lead to a devastating impact on web publishers and ad tech providers, as an extension can shut out most ad views and cuts off the resulting ad revenues and tracking data.

We expect two main groups to be heavy adopters of these new content blockers, for different reasons. First, the higher-income, early adopter crowd is a prime candidate to incorporate these extensions, as they are more likely to know about them. Second, because content blockers have a large impact on page data size and battery life, consumers with low data caps or electricity concerns, particularly across Africa and India, are also likely to install a content-blocking extension sooner than later.

We expect the biggest tech companies and especially social networks to benefit, as they can deliver ads with sufficient targeting without relying on ad network trackers. Though Facebook’s Instant Articles has had a slow roll out, these ad-blocking extensions will accelerate publishers’ incentive to partner with Facebook. Similarly, the new Apple News is the carrot to balance the ad-blocking stick. Few other media owners can target as well as Google, Facebook and Apple, but that list includes Verizon/AOL, Yahoo, Pinterest and Twitter.

In the short term, Google’s revenue from web ads makes them unlikely to offer similar functionality in Android, but this could change if content blockers become a key selling point of iOS. Now, ad blockers are allowed on Android but are stand-alone browsers and do not integrate with Chrome, the default web browser.

For More Information
Please contact Engagement Director Samantha Holland ([email protected]) at the IPG Media Lab if you would like more detail or to schedule a visit to the Lab to discuss how the feedback loop on this could play out over the next couple years.

For previous editions of Fast Forward, please visit ipglab.com. Please reply with any constructive criticism or feedback. We want these to be as useful as possible for you and your clients, and your feedback will help us immensely.

 

For Additional Reading:

Paul Hudson:
This should also show you how Apple has managed to introduce content blockers without compromising on privacy: apps tell Safari the kind of content that should be blocked, but they do it indirectly and the communication only ever flows one way: apps have no knowledge of any user behavior whatsoever.

Ben Thompson:
[A]rguably the biggest takeaway should be that the chief objection to Facebook’s [Instant Articles] offer — that publishers are giving up their independence — is a red herring. Publishers are already slaves to the ad networks, and their primary decision at this point is which master — ad networks or Facebook — is preferable?

Jean-Louis Gassée:
As users, we understand that we’re not really entitled to free browsing; we pay our bills with our selves: When The Product Is Free, We Are the Product. The problem is that we feel betrayed when we find out we’ve been overpaying.

Joshua Benton:
A report from 2014 found that adblock usage was up 70 percent year-over-year, with over 140 million people blocking ads worldwide, including 41 percent of 18- to 29-year-olds.

Apple Adds Ad-Blocking Extension To iOS 9 – IPG Media Lab

Apple’s Support of Ad Blocking May Upend How the Web Works – Wired

Safari Content Blocker, Before and After – Daring Fireball

Ad Tech Is Killing The Online Experience – The Guardian

 

 

MediaBrix Updates Mobile Ad Platform For Better Timing

What Happened
MediaBrix, a New York-based ad tech startup that specializes in connecting with gamers at key moments of gameplay, debuted the third version of its Breakthrough Moments mobile ad platform, which combines biometric data, consumer interests and other behavior data to determine the right moments for delivering mobile ads. A handful of big-name brands including Coca-Cola, BMW, Nestlé, and CoverGirl, are already using the system, which MediaBrix says will become programmatic within a few months.

What Brands Should Do
For brands looking to send out personalized offers with real-time value, choosing the right ad platform would be imperative to the goal. “The future of mobile advertising needs to focus on user receptivity,” Ari Brandt, CEO & co-founder of MediaBrix says. “In order for users to be receptive to brand messages on mobile devices, the brands must identify and understand the important moments during the user journey, then contextualize and be additive to the moment.”

With the increasing usage of mobile apps, as well as the rising popularity of ad-blockers and their potential influence on mobile, it is becoming crucial for brands that wish to reach potential consumers to step up their mobile ad game. Leveraging the updated ad platform by MediaBrix to capture the attention of audiences at the most effective moments would be a good way to do so.

 

Image courtesy of www.mediabrix.com

Google To Bring Beacon Interactions To iOS Via Chrome

What Happened
Google has updated its iOS Chrome app to integrate Physical Web content into the “Today” view within the iOS Notification Center, where developers can make customized widgets for easier access and controls. While most beacon implementations are focused on notifications and require either a partnership with an app with wide reach or settling for a small audience, Google is attempting to broaden the uses of beacons and gather additional offline data. They want to do this without risking users turning off notifications on an app that relies on them like Google Now. Combined with Google’s newly announced beacon platform Eddystone, it seems clear that Google is determined to push into the Internet of Things.

What Brands Should Do
Physical Web uses Eddystone-URL, which Google’s beacon technology uses to send information to end-user devices, to integrate with its end-to-end beacon platform. Brands, especially those invested in the hyperlocal spaces, should take advantage of this deep integration to get more native-like proximity functionality out of their apps.

 

Source: 9to5Google