Ads within smartphone applications such as
the popular puzzle game Angry Birds are turning into a key driver for
mobile advertising, as apps become the main distribution method for
media on mobile phones, according to a report.
In-app spending
by advertisers in the United States and western Europe, where there is a
high concentration of smartphones owned by affluent consumers, is set
to overtake spending on display ads on mobile websites this year,
research firm Strategy Analytics says.
The economy in apps, many of which are free, has taken time to
establish itself since Apple (AAPL.O) first launched the App Store for
the iPhone in 2007. Google (GOOG.O) also has a thriving app store for
its Android phones.
At first it seemed that most developers would have a hard time making
enough money from their small software programmes, which were made for
anything from playing games to checking the weather or recognising
songs.
But advertisers are now increasingly using them to reach the
consumers of those apps. Strategy Analytics estimates that advertisers
will spend $2.9 billion on in-app advertising this year, while consumers
will spend $26.1 billion buying them.
The number of apps downloaded globally is expected to grow 38 percent to more than 32 billion this year.
“Advertisers chase eyeballs, so the fact that brands spend more on
in-app advertising than the mobile Web is a clear sign that apps are
what consumers are glued to for an increasing range of activities,” said
David MacQueen, the firm’s director of wireless media strategies.
In less affluent economies, consumers tend to use more basic phones
that may not have access to app stores, but browse the Web instead.
Figures from InMobi, the world’s largest independent mobile ad
network, confirm that mobile advertising is taking off, after grappling
for years with the small screen size and perceived invasions of privacy
on phones.
Source: KT
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