Campaign UK

Brand-safety concerns fail to harm tech giants’ results

- By Emily Tan

Google and Facebook’s forecast-smashing first-quarter ad revenues suggest the duopoly is only going to grow as they diversify, despite brand-safety fears from advertiser­s.

Google parent Alphabet posted ad revenues of $21.4bn (£16.48bn) in the first three months of 2017, up 18% year on year. Meanwhile, Facebook reported ad revenues of $7.9bn in the same period, up a staggering 51% from the first quarter of last year.

“The ongoing issues around brand safety have had minimal impact on Google and Facebook because there is nowhere else for advertiser­s to go to find that scale and size in digital,” Jitendra Waral, a senior research analyst at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce, said. “But these fears could be delaying the exodus of TV ad dollars to video.”

Google and Facebook are too big to fail at present, according to Bill Fisher, a senior analyst at emarketer. He said: “Our estimates put [Facebook’s] worldwide monthly active users at 1.44 billion and this is expected to reach 1.69 billion by 2020. When you have that many users, it’s difficult for advertiser­s to stay mad at you for too long.”

For Google, Fisher said a lot of its ad revenues derive from search and predicted: “We do see a plateau coming.”

He continued: “Search will account for 44.9% of total digital adspend this year, but that’s going to start falling to 44.4% next year and, the year after, 44.2%.

“Google has diversifie­d. It’s gone into video and display and, despite all the controvers­y, it has a huge user base. Brands are looking for audiences and video is going to be a big word. This is why we may not see a plateau of Google despite the pending plateau of search.”

Waral explained that the growth areas for Facebook are Whatsapp and Messenger but it has “yet to crack” how to monetise these platforms.

He added: “Advertisin­g market share should be steady for both [Google and Facebook] as integratio­n of artificial intelligen­ce techniques, coupled with control over data, means they would be able to provide better ROI longer term versus the competitio­n.”

Although Twitter has avoided brand-safety concerns on the scale of Google and Facebook, it has not performed as strongly as its rivals in terms of ad revenues. In the first quarter, Twitter posted an 11% drop to $474m.

However, Waral and Fisher agree that Twitter’s video push may turn its prospects around. The platform announced earlier this month that it has signed 14 exclusive video content deals with Bloomberg, Buzzfeed and the NFL, among others.

Emarketer projects slow but continued growth in Twitter’s active user base from 255.3 million this year to 275 million in 2020.

Waral said: “Twitter is seeing momentum in daily active users with product improvemen­ts and are pivoting towards live video. This could help longer term, but we need a few quarters of evidence to validate the effectiven­ess of [these changes] in stemming revenue declines.”

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