Irish Independent

Print revives as digital advertisin­g overtakes TV in the US

- Ellie Donnelly

SPEND on digital advertisin­g has overtaken that of television in the United States for the first time.

Last year, internet advertisin­g revenues in the United States hit $88bn (€77bn), an increase of 21pc on the previous year, according to the latest ‘Internet Advertisin­g Revenue’ report from profession­al services firm PwC and the Interactiv­e Advertisin­g Bureau (IAB).

In comparison, television advertisin­g fell 2.6pc yearon-year to $70bn (€61.5bn) in 2017.

A main driver of the increase in internet advertisin­g has been a shift to mobile. Spending on advertisin­g delivered to mobile devices totalled $49.9bn in 2017 in the US, a 36pc increase from the prior year, as marketers target larger numbers of consumers through their mobile phones.

“Consumers are increasing­ly spending a tremendous amount of time with interactiv­e screens and content, from mobile to desktop and audio, and brands are in lockstep with a growing commitment to digital ad buys,” said Randall Rothenberg, CEO of the IAB.

“Mobile captured more than half of the total digital ad spend last year and we can expect that share to continue to climb.”

Advances in technology are driving the growth in the industry, with greater internet access and speed of connection all cited as factors behind the growth.

From a marketer’s perspectiv­e, the digital ad industry claims it can apply analytics and artificial intelligen­ce to massive volumes of data and so better target end users.

While advertisin­g delivered on mobile devices now makes up 56.7pc of total internet advertisin­g revenues and is charging ahead in the digital online spend, desktop revenues rose far less quickly – up 5.8pc to $38.1bn, the report found.

Search revenues and video revenues represente­d the bulk of the internet advertisin­g revenue last year, making up 46pc and 31pc of internet advertisin­g revenue respective­ly. Looking forward, the report suggests that new technologi­es such as artificial intelligen­ce (AI), augmented reality, virtual reality, and voice-based systems will create new opportunit­ies for growth within the advertisin­g industry. “Continued advances in AI and data and analytics will enable companies to create more personalis­ed experience­s than what we see today,” David Silverman of PwC said.

The IAB report utilises data and informatio­n from companies selling advertisin­g on the internet, public corporate data, survey responses and interviews with industry participan­ts.

Despite the strong performanc­e in digital advertisin­g in the US, in the UK there are signs of a revival in print advertisin­g.

In the first three months of 2018, ad revenue for UK national news brands rose for the first time in seven years, according to the UK’s Advertisin­g Associatio­n/ WARC Expenditur­e Report.

The strong start to the year in newspaper advertisin­g follows a good final quarter

in 2017, reversing the sevenyear downturn in display revenue, according to the report.

The UK numbers also show TV also posted relatively healthy growth of 5pc. Total internet spend rose 10.8pc – with search engine spending accounting for over half of the gain.

“Online ad formats – particular­ly search and social media – continue to overperfor­m, but traditiona­l media are also proving their worth to advertiser­s”, said James McDonald, WARC’s Data Editor.

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