Long-form video content is the most friendly environment for digital advertisers.
Despite being bombarded by an unprecedented fusillade of advertising,
consumers of digital video content continue to display a high tolerance
for sponsor messaging.
According to a new report
from the video monetization firm FreeWheel, the online video
environment is increasingly mimicking the experience of the age-old
television ad model, as the standard pre-roll spot is giving way to a
far more comprehensive break structure.
Upon serving up 10.1 billion video ads in the second quarter of 2012, FreeWheel concluded that long-form content is the most desirable environment for advertisers. Not only are spot loads on the rise—in the three-month period that ended June 30, long-form video content was studded through with eight ads on average, up 167 percent from three in the year-ago period—but viewers are also remarkably tolerant of the interruption.
Despite the heavier spot loads, users viewed 91 percent of the ads
slotted within full-length episodic programming, a classification that
includes 22-minute sitcoms and scripted dramas. Not only does that mark
an improvement from 81 percent in the second quarter of 2011, but the 9
percent avoidance rate is superior to that of broadcast. Per Nielsen C3
ratings data, viewers of the Big Four nets skipped 13.5 percent of ads served during the 2011-12 season.
Total ad views in short-, medium- and long-form content were up 68
percent year over year. And while viewers of short video clips (sports
highlights, music videos, etc.) once again demonstrated the least
tolerance for ads, the Q2 acceptance rate of 69 percent eclipsed the
year-ago 59 percent.
So long as consumers continue to accept the inherent tradeoff of
ad-supported content—after all, a few sponsor messages are worth the
price of admission for what would otherwise be offered as premium
content—content providers are more than happy to simulate standard TV
loads in the digital realm. And while pre-roll remains the dominant
paradigm, mid-roll is on the rise. Not only did FreeWheel serve up 159
percent more secondary pods in Q2 than it did a year ago, but mid-roll
spots now account for about a third of all available online video ads.
While the online space evolves to take on the characteristics of the
dominant TV model, there of course is an event horizon beyond which it
is impossible to add any more ad content without exasperating the
consumer.
Of course, that’s a trick that TV still hasn’t wholly worked out to
anyone’s satisfaction, 70-year head start to the contrary. (Anyone who
subscribes to basic cable can attest to the skull-clutching tedium of
the Saturday afternoon movie—there’s nothing quite like investing
two-and-a-half hours in a comedy with a 90-minute run time.)
Along with videos streamed on PC platforms, FreeWheel also monitors
usage patterns on mobile devices (tablets, smartphones, et al.). Video
views on handheld/non-PC devices doubled in Q2, accounting for 8.2
percent of all such consumption. (Thanks to the Olympics,
Q3 deliveries are expected to soar even higher; through Monday, the
NBCOlympics.com mobile site had been accessed by 6.8 million unique
users.)
Viewing on a PC or laptop increases throughout the day, peaking at 2
p.m. before gradually declining throughout the evening. Mobile and
tablet views peak at around 10:30 p.m.
The FreeWheel report aggregates usage data for its clients, a roster of
content providers that includes NBCUniversal, CBS, Fox, Turner
Entertainment, Discovery Communications, A+E Networks and Univision
Interactive Media.-Anthony Crupi, Adweek
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