UK Adspend Grows 7% in Q3; Paid Search Growth Down 12%

ExchangeWire Research’s weekly roundup brings you up-to-date research findings from around the world, with additional insight provided by Rebecca Muir, head of research and analysis, ExchangeWire. In this week’s edition: UK adspend grows 7% in Q3; Paid search growth down 12%; and 70% believe audience recognition will be key focus area in 2016.

UK advertising expenditure grows 7%

In Q3 2015, UK advertising expenditure grew 6.8% year-on-year to £4.6bn, according to figures released by the Advertising Association. Television spot advertising grew 10.8% to £1bn in Q3, in part driven by the Rugby World Cup.

Internet spend grew 13.2% quarter-on-quarter, with mobile internet spend increasing 40.2% quarter-on-quarter. Mobile spend accounted for just under one third (29%) of total internet spend, a 5.5% year-on-year increase. Out-of-home ad spend grew 5.1% in Q3, reaching £271m.

Tim Lefroy, chief executive at The Advertising Association commented: “This is the ninth successive quarter in which advertising growth ahead of GDP has helped to fuel the wider economy, and with growth of 5.6% expected this year, our adspend forecasts remain surprisingly strong.”

Paid search shows slowing growth

In 2015, Europe had the lowest global paid search growth rates, compared to last year (17% year-on-year versus 5% year-on-year), whilst North America saw growth slow from 5% to 3%, according to Adobe’s ‘Q4 2015 Digital Advertising Report.’

Mobile search spend increased 22% year-on-year, accounting for 38% of total search spend, just 3% less than mobile browsing (41%). Increased mobile spend led to a 35% year-on-year increase in traffic. Smartphones accounted for most of this change, with its share of spend increasing 8% year-on-year.

In 2015, phone-based CPCs cost 24% less than desktop, but delivered a 40% higher CTR in Q3 and Q4. In 2015, CPMs on smartphone were 58% higher than desktop, as advertisers were vying for consumers attention on mobile.

Facebook’s CTR increased 30% year-on-year, accompanied by a 6% increase in CPMs. Google’s CTR grew at a much faster rate than Facebook’s (291% versus 77%), which can be attributed to the adjustments Google made to their contextual placements for display ads and auto conversion of text to image ads.

Cross-device audience recognition key focus area

Globally, 70% of those working in ad tech stated that cross-device audience recognition will be a key area of focus this year. Just over half (58%) of respondents stated that cross-channel measurement and attribution will command significant time and attention in 2016, according to the IAB’s ‘The Outlook for Data: 2016 Snapshot'.

More than half (53%) of respondents stated that they will focus on emerging programmatic media buying formats, in 2016. In contrast, 43% stated that their time will be dedicated to already established programmatic buying.

Six-in-ten respondents stated that demand from customers was the most important factor in influencing data-driven marketing, followed by measurability (48%) and the availability of first-party data (47%).

Insufficient availability of technology (45%) and lack of internal experience at the operational level (35%) were cited as the two main barriers to adopting a greater data-driven approach. Patrick Dolan, executive vice president and COO, IAB commented: "While there are still technological challenges and a need for further workforce education, data-driven advertising is clearly front-of-mind for the industry."

anya: Anya joins ExchangeWire Research from the academic world, bringing with her a wealth of experience working with both first- and third-party research, using both quantitative and qualitative analysis to produce unique insights. She has also worked commercially, notably providing research into ecommerce best practices and data analysis of the performance of Topshop.com.
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