USA TODAY US Edition

Money from mobile remains elusive

Still, smartphone, tablet ads expected to grow rapidly

- By Jon Swartz USA TODAY

SAN FRANCISCO — Mobile ads are the Holy Grail of revenue for anyone with a social-media plan.

The market for the ads that dot smartphone and tablet screens is expected to soar to $10.8 billion in U.S. sales by 2016, from $2.6 billion expected this year, according to research firm eMarketer. That’s a tiny slice of the $169.5 billion market for media ad spending in the U.S.

Yet mobile ads are crucial to the growth of many companies, including newly public Facebook, though few businesses have been able to capitalize on the promise.

Some speculate that the popularity of such devices, in part, comes from their lack of ads. Others think the larger screen expected on Apple’s forthcomin­g iPhone is a concession to demands for extra space to accommodat­e content and ads.

“It underscore­s the importance of real estate on (mobile) screens,” says John Faith, senior vice president of mobile at Whale Shark Media, a leader in online coupons and deals.

Mobile Web traffic is up 35% in less than a year, while all Webbrowser use on Windows-based PCs declined 10% in a six-month period from 2011 to 2012, says market researcher Chitika Insights. About 20% of traffic comes from tablets and smartphone­s, it says. Retailers such as Target, Best Buy and Macy’s have noticed, and are charging into mobile ads, which will become staples as millions ditch PCs for smartphone­s and tablets, ad experts say.

“Everyone ‘gets’ the implicit contract that free content comes with ads,” says Raghu Kakarala, senior vice president of technology at Engauge, which has helped create mobile app features for Coca-Cola’s MyCokeRewa­rds and Chick-fil-A.

Sites such as Forbes have “opti- mized the mobile experience” with clean ads at the top or bottom of the screen, with content in the middle.

Google has the early lead in the U.S. in monetizing mobile, with 51% of the market, largely due to its success with mobile search ads, says Noah Elkin, an eMarketer analyst. Phone numbers embedded in mobile ads on Google’s click-to-call feature, for example, generate about 15 million calls per month.

Facebook barely registers yet, though the company has the potential to rake in $2.54 billion from mobile advertisin­g, according to Chitika. Facebook Sponsored Stories — an ad that appears on a member’s Facebook page, and generally consists of a friend’s name, profile picture and an advertiser the person “likes” — now appears in a user’s mobile news feed.

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