In a week that broadcasters telling advertisers things aren’t as bad they might appear, a new survey from Optimal.com and Wells Fargo Securities says that for the online ad
industry, things could be worse.
This new report says ad blockers will reduce online and mobile ad revenue by $12.1 billion by 2020, to about $39 billion, nearly 24% less than the $50
billion estimate offered earlier by eMarketer.
By 2020 36.6% of U.S. users will be blocking ads at least monthly, according to this gloomy estimate.
And
that’s the story now that ad blocking, a real ad-world bogeyman for years, is still a relatively new wrinkle to many consumers. This report says that over 45% of its survey respondents
weren’t even aware ad blockers were an available (and often) free option.
So, a provocative point suggests, a great way to educate unaware consumers about ad blockers is for
publishers to create prominent online warnings against doing it.
"Given that ad blockers (including those of the highest quality, like uBlock Origin) are often
distributed to users without charge, the increase in awareness of ad blocking will be a major adoption driver, and it is possible that publisher action to curtail content to ad blocking users might
actually further increase consumer awareness of online/mobile ad blocking," a synopsis of the report states.
Optimal, headquartered in Boulder, Colo., has a dog in this race.
Since December,
Optimal has been pushing to allow consumers to pay a subscription
fee--that’s $5.99 a month. And in return, those publishers agree not to serve ads to those subscribers, and share in the proceeds from Optimal subscribers. Apparently it has not paid
out any cash yet, though its Website says, “We will soon have information here as to how publishers can claim their funds, but rest assured they are currently accruing for you.”
For online firms it is still true most of the ad blocking is going on via desktops--not smartphones--but that could/should change with time as more people access the Internet more often via
phones.
And here’s some bummer news about that: The Optimal/Wells Fargo survey shows consumers hate mobile advertising even more than they loathe TV ads. I’m always
suspect of “comparative loathing” stats, but here they are: Mobile pop-up ads are considered 3.7 times more bothersome than TV ads, and mobile video ads are 2.4 times more annoying.
In fact, 21.1% of the users aged 18-29 would be likely or very likely to agree to pay up to $9.99 a month for carrier-led blocking.
Wells Fargo and Optimal surveyed 1,700
consumers in April, specifically aimed at smartphone users because mobile is where users seem headed, fast.
The report says 11.7% of all online display ad impressions were blocked in
the U.S. last year. Things could be worse. That figure is 15.1% in Canada and 16% in the United Kingdom. On the European continent, ad blocking is quite the thing: in Germany, 22.8% of ads are
blocked, and in Poland, 31.2% are.
More shocking to me, and possibly indicative of problems far wider than blocking, Internet-related entities trail all others when consumers are
asked, “Which entities would you trust to protect your personal information?” Only 6.7% would choose Facebook, 11.7% choose Google, 14.9% choose their mobile carrier, and 17.1% trust their
phone manufacturer.
All of those are far below federal or state governments, employers or insurers. Tops on the trust list are banks, with 43.1% believing they can keep a
secret. And a significant sign of the times: 42.5% of respondents don’t trust that any entity would protect personal information.
pj@mediapost.com