Search engines and Web publishers are bleeding billions of dollars in lost ad revenue from ad blocking, the act of installing browser tools that identify and remove advertisements. In fact, Google
lost $6.6 billion last year due to ad blocking, according to one estimate.
Lost revenue should send a signal to brands, wrote Doc Searls, president at The Searls Group, in a comment to an article published in Search Marketing Daily. He believes
it's the price advertisers and their agencies pay for not getting the message that ad serving and tracking technologies are not okay with the marketplace. The "messages coming from the marketplace
could hardly be more clear — or less deserving of blame by those not listening," he wrote. They say "'stop tracking us,' 'quit slowing page loads to a crawl,' 'quit creeping us out with unwanted
personalization,' 'quit abusing our privacy' and other useful input."
Ed Papazian, president of Media Dynamics suggests the industry either needs to instill strict rules about how much ad
clutter to allow per page, how ads are displayed, what constitutes visibility, realistically, and stop enabling ad avoidance, or he fears the growth in ad dollars -- especially from branding TV
advertisers -- will slow dramatically.
"Already, upwards of 30% of the most desirable consumers use ad blockers and cannot be reached by a branding advertiser, no matter how many Web sites or
GRPs are used -- nothing like this put offish situation exists in any of the 'legacy media,'" Papazian wrote.
Across Google's display and video ads, businesses ad blockers can seamlessly block
YouTube ads and ads on network members' Web sites using AdSense or DoubleClick. Its ads in search are also blocked by AdBlock Plus users who have not opted to view "white listed ads," which Google
pays to circumvent software from companies like Adblock, explains Johnny Ryan, head of ecosystem at PageFair, a Dublin, Ireland, startup that measures blocked ads.
Ryan explains it this way:
Google's traffic is likely to match the average ad-blocking rate in each market. The U.S.
ad-blocking rate is about 16% according to PageFair data. Being white-listed is effective against 48% of
Adblock users in PageFair's experience. So the effective ad-blocking rate on Google.com is about 8%. Google U.S. revenue were $17 billion in 2014. Globally, ad-block rates vary, and are higher in
Europe. Most of Google's revenue is also non-US. Google search revenue estimates per region would provide a solid global estimate.
Although Ryan said PageFair doesn't have data that
definitively shows the growth in ad blocking due to malvertising, the company does know that related factors -- such as seeing inappropriate advertising, suffering from installations of ransom ware,
and a general and well-founded unease about where one's data -- are drivers of ad blocking.
"When I was at The Irish Times, a newspaper where I was chief innovation
officer, there was much hype about RTB," Ryan said. "Malvertising, it seems, is one of the downsides, when even premium sites leave their ads slots unregulated to the point that malvertising can
feature, it is unlikely that blockers will change their behavior."