Wednesday, June 05, 2013

Mobile Ad Revenue Growth

The below article really highlighted for me the growth we're going to see in mobile ad revenue over the next few years. According to one article, online ad spending grew 16% last quarter, which is impressive in it's own right, but the fact YouTube is now seeing 40% of all videos in the US being viewed on a mobile device points to how quickly revenues may shift from traditional online search to mobile devices.

As tablets, including iOS, Android and Windows 8 continue to grow over the next 12-36 months, I think we're really going to see a huge shift in digital marketing to mobile devices. This also reinforces for me the genius strategy by google of making Android a free platform to be able to corner that ad market as well.

http://paidcontent.org/2013/06/05/youtube-mobile-40-percent/

Mobile is quickly becoming the new normal for YouTube, and it’s starting to pay off: 40 percent of all of the service’s video views in the U.S. are now coming from mobile devices, a YouTube spokesperson told GigaOM on Wednesday. Worldwide, mobile is now responsible for 25 percent of all of YouTube’s video views.
This, and the roll-out of new mobile apps, has helped YouTube to triple its mobile ad revenue in the past six months, according to Bloomberg, which got YouTube VP of Sales Lucas Watson go on the record about the mobile growth.
Bloomberg is also guesstimating that “as much as $350 million in sales probably came from mobile video ads” in Google’s last quarter alone. However, that number isn’t coming from Google, and it’s based on a few assumptions from analysts, so I would take it with a grain of salt.
Still, even without a firm mobile revenue number, tripling mobile ad revenue in a six-month time frame is impressive, and it seems to be the direct result of YouTube launching its iPhone and iPad apps late last year, as well as rolling out a full-featured mobile web experience across all platforms. Previously, iOS users were accessing YouTube through an app built by Apple, and YouTube wasn’t able to monetize any of those views.

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