Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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Native ads to make up 63% of mobile display ad spend by 2020, Facebook/IHS study finds

Native ads to make up 63% of mobile display ad spend by 2020, Facebook/IHS study finds | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

A new study on native advertising from Facebook and IHS Inc. accompanies new stats from Facebook on its Audience Network — the mobile ad network that recently branched out from in-app to mobile web publishers.


According to the new report, by 2020, media buyers will spend $84.5 billion on mobile advertising with mobile accounting for 75.9 percent of all digital ad spend globally. Native will be as significant driver of mobile ad growth.


Native in-stream ads will drive 63.2 percent of all mobile display advertising at $53 billion by 2020. The study anticipates third-party in-app native advertising (ads not running on Facebook) will be the fastest growing ad format in digital advertising and will grow at 70.7 percent compound annual growth rate between 2015 and 2020 to account for 10.6 percent of mobile display ad spend....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Facebook releases interesting new stats on native advertising on its Audience Network.

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The Shifts In Consumer Behavior Driving Google’s Maturation

The Shifts In Consumer Behavior Driving Google’s Maturation | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

While at Google’s offices recently, I had the pleasure to hear a Google Product Manager present the company’s view of how information retrieval has changed with the rise of mobile and smartphone adoption.


They are calling it “micro-moments,” the premise being that as smartphone adoption and use continues to skyrocket, consumers increasingly have small bursts of interaction with their phones across search, social, video and email, as opposed to prolonged periods in front of a desktop.


This viewpoint represents a shift from the linear “sit, search and act” desktop mentality that characterized the early days of the internet, in which research and action were typically performed in one sitting while in front of a connected internet device.


These days, according to Google, more searches are done on mobile than on desktop in many countries, including the United States, Japan and United Kingdom.


Google’s micro-moment perspective posits that discovery and action are decoupled as discovery comes in multi-session bursts, across channels, on a mobile device, while action (conversion/purchase) often takes place later on a larger screen, a laptop or tablet device....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Columnist Nathan Safran takes a look at where Google is heading -- and what challenges it faces -- in the age of mobile.

Diana Andone's curator insight, August 18, 2015 3:24 AM

Good insight in what online micro-moments mean