Tag: mobile advertising

Mobile ad budgets rise by 75 percent

Companies are now expected to spend nearly double, this year, what they did last year.

According to the results of a recent study, global mobile ad spending is rising extremely quickly, as it had reached $17.96 billion in 2013, having more than doubled since the year before, and now it is expected to nearly double once again this year.

The growth in 2014 should reach about 75 percent, to bring itself to a worldwide total of 431.5 billion.

The mobile ad spend total for this year represents about a quarter of all of the spending that has occurred on digital advertising. The two companies that will be benefiting the most as a result of this growing spending are Google Inc. and Facebook Inc. Last year, those two companies took in over two thirds of the amount of money that was spent on mobile marketing ads.

The mobile ad budget and spending data for the report was assembled by Millennial Media Inc.

That company offers data analysis for advertisers to help to provide valuable insight and shed some light on industry trends. The report helps to better understand the goals of advertisers based on the spending for the channel that occurred last year, compared it to the year before, and made predictions for this year. The data regarding ad spending had been published last week by eMarketer.Mobile Ads Budget

Millennial Media reported that the leading five vertical markets in terms of spending over the mobile channel for advertising, last year were: entertainment, retail, telecommunications, finance, and computer goods, in that order. When compared to the year before, entertainment and retail switched places, and automotive spending’s position was taken by consumer goods.

The consumer goods mobile spending has grown by 134 percent in 2014 alone. However, the largest increase that was seen year over year was in sports advertising. That sector increased the amount that it was pouring into ads by almost 500 percent. One of the trends that increased by the largest amount in terms of popularity and spending was rich media and video ads, which managed to increase 350 percent in the auto advertising sector when compared to banner ads.

Mobile marketing share at Google being lost to Facebook

A recent news report issued by eMarketer has suggested that the social network is eating into the search engine giant’s share.

The size of the global mobile marketing share from Facebook, which had been just over $3 billion, last year, is now maintaining a steady climb and is expected to start to cut into the share that had previously been held by Google, said eMarketer in a report that it issued in recent news.

Combined, Google and Facebook make up more than 66 percent of the global mobile ad spend.

That figure is as of 2013, the latest complete year of data. That increased by more than double to reach $17.96 billion, when compared to the same statistic for 2012. At the same time, eMarketer’s mobile marketing report was quick to point out that “Google still owns a plurality of the mobile advertising market worldwide, taking a portion of nearly 50 per cent in 2013, but the rapid growth of Facebook will cause the search giant’s share to drop to 46.8 per cent in 2014, eMarketer estimates.”

Mobile marketing revenue at Facebook was worth 53 percent of Facebook’s overall ad revenue in Q4 2013.

This was a massive rise when compared to the year before. In fact, the portion of the mobile ad revenue rose by 23 percent from where it had been in the same quarter in 2012. Revenue from advertising, overall, had been 2.34 billion in the last quarter of last year.Mobile Marketing - Facebook Mobile

The report pointed out that the size of the market share at Facebook in particular is getting larger. In 2012, it represented only 5.4 percent of the worldwide ad market. Last year, that had risen tremendously, to bring it to 17.5 percent of the global advertising market. The prediction that the report made for this year was that it will reach 21.7 percent by the time that it comes to a close.

The speed with which smartphone based advertising has taken over the ad revenue for the social network is indicative of its future. In 2012, only 11 percent of the net global ad revenues at Facebook were over the mobile marketing channel. Last year, that ballooned to 45.1 percent.