Fair Communications Pakistan
the neXt GOLD RUSH !!! <$BlogRSDUrl$> -->

Thursday

Rich Media and Larger Ad Units Maintain Growth Levels
by Newswire Report


DoubleClick Inc. on Wednesday announced results of its Q2 2003 Ad Serving Trend Report, which reveals that rich media usage continues to grow quarter by quarter, while larger ads have surpassed the smaller options in popularity. The report also suggests that marketers, having mastered direct response on the Web, are now perfecting the art of online branding and creating more memorable ads that leave lasting impressions. This is evidenced by declining click-through rates -- the lowest in six quarters -- and higher view-through rates (assessed when a user takes some action on an ad within 30 days of viewing, but not clicking on it).

"Building on the success of online direct response, marketers are starting to really take advantage of the Web as a branding medium," said Doug Knopper, Vice President and General Manager, Online Advertising Solutions, DoubleClick. "As DoubleClick's latest report shows, click-throughs are being de-emphasized and we're seeing more memorable ads that will have a latent impact on the user. Rich media, which has shown massive growth, promises to play a central role in these branding strategies."

Rich Media and Larger Ad Formats Gaining
Rich media, defined as dynamic ads that fly across web pages, pop-ups, and any ad that includes Macromedia Flash creative technology, increased from 17.3% of all ads served in Q1 of 2002 to nearly 32% (31.7%) in Q2 of 2003. While on average, it has been increasing 10% per quarter, it increased 14% from Q1 2003. Flash accounts for the largest percentage of rich media served and is now nearly 14% of all ads served.

Rich media also continues to display stronger conversion rates than non- rich media (GIFs and JPEGs). Rich media generates higher rates of post- impression activity per impression (.76% vs. .55% for non-rich media) as well as post impression sales per impression (3.07% vs. 1.02% for non-rich media).
In terms of ad size, the standard banner (468 x 60 pixels) still accounts for a substantial portion of all ads served (42%), but it has been losing ground to other, larger sizes. Since Q2 2002, the standard banner declined in volume by 23% and the button is down 43%. Larger ad units, however, like large rectangles (both 300 x 250 and 336 x 280) increased 257% and 117%, respectively. Skyscrapers, which are now the 2nd most popular unit, accounting for 9% of total volume in Q2, grew 55% from Q2 2002 to Q2 2003.

Newer large units are performing well. The leaderboard, a wide unit (728 x 90) that often appears at the top of web pages, is now the fastest growing size at 562% growth from Q2 2002, and is now the fourth most common size served by DoubleClick. Half-page ads (550 x 480) had the second highest response rate at .90%. Click-Throughs vs. View-Throughs Suggest Growing Use of Online

Advertising for Branding
The report notes that click-through rates have declined to the lowest in six quarters, while view-through rates have continued to rise, surpassing click-throughs (.63% vs. .52%). View-throughs assess some action observed within 30 days of a consumer viewing an ad (post impression impact). These metrics are part of the larger picture of the effectiveness of online advertising: click-throughs assess immediate response, while view-throughs reflect the latent impact of that online ad.

Average click through rates for ads served by both advertisers and publishers declined 14% from Q1 to .61% in Q2 2003; the rates had remained constant in the previous five quarters at an average of .70%. The decline of click-throughs and the growth of post impression metrics like view-throughs could reflect growing use of online advertising for branding: more creative executions designed to have impact over time rather than solicit immediate response.

Online Advertising Volume Increases
DoubleClick Ad Serving volume has increased to its highest level since Q2 2002 and is currently at 149.8 billion ads delivered for the quarter. This is a 5% increase over Q42002 and a 10% increase over Q1 2003.


Comments: Post a Comment
Your E-mail:

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?   Listed on Blogwise   Listed on BlogShares         

Blog designed and maintained by

Rate us
the best pretty good okay pretty bad the worst help?





Contact



ARCHIVES
  • May 25, 2003
  • July 20, 2003
  • July 27, 2003
  • August 03, 2003
  • August 10, 2003
  • August 17, 2003
  • August 24, 2003
  • August 31, 2003
  • September 07, 2003
  • September 14, 2003
  • September 21, 2003
  • September 28, 2003
  • October 05, 2003
  • October 12, 2003
  • October 19, 2003
  • October 26, 2003
  • November 02, 2003
  • November 09, 2003
  • November 16, 2003
  • November 23, 2003
  • November 30, 2003
  • December 07, 2003
  • January 04, 2004
  • January 11, 2004
  • January 18, 2004
  • January 25, 2004
  • February 01, 2004
  • February 15, 2004
  • February 22, 2004
  • February 29, 2004
  • March 14, 2004
  • March 21, 2004
  • April 04, 2004
  • April 25, 2004
  • May 23, 2004
  • June 06, 2004
  • June 27, 2004