Mobile advertising is growing at a fantastic rate, and according to a new report mobile ad revenue will overtake desktop ads by 2017.
Search and shop
The study from eMarketer predicts the mobile takeover will be spearheaded by search advertisements, which have largely been responsible for mobile revenues rising from 2 per cent of all search ads in 2010 to 22 per cent in 2013.
According to eMarketer this figure will triple to 60 per cent by 2017.
Display
Mobile ad revenues will also be powered by display ads, which cover everything from banners to to Facebook's Sponsored Stories and Twitter's Promoted Tweets.
Email, classifieds, SMS and lead generation ads aren't expected to grow over next three years.
Video
While video remains smaller than search or display it is the fastest growing format when it comes to mobile and desktop – with the sector tipped to increase from US $4.1 billion this year to US $9.2 billion in 2017.
Shifting sands
The report concludes that mobile ad revenues will more than double to US $8.5 billion this year.
While mobile ads currently command less revenue than their desktop equivalents, these figures suggest mobile advertising is becoming an increasingly important part of digital advertising spends.
To find out more visit emarketer.com.
Check out SMK’s upcoming industry leading training courses in: Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, Perth, Canberra, Auckland, Adelaide and Wellington.
Also, browse through hundreds of online social media video tutorials on eSMK Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube and more!!
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU
Meta’s New App “Edits” Takes On CapCut
Meta is making a calculated move into the video…
Meta is making a calculated move into the video…
[NEW STUDY] Google Organic & Paid Traffic Falls
The search landscape is shifting fast, and marketers can…
The search landscape is shifting fast, and marketers can…
[NEW STUDY] Instagram Brand Engagement Down 28%
Social media engagement is becoming more challenging as competition…
Social media engagement is becoming more challenging as competition…