Smartphone Spending Overtakes Tablet Spending; Programmatic Ad-buying is Set to Soar in 2018

ExchangeWire Research’s weekly roundup brings you up-to-date research findings from around the world, with additional insight provided by Hugh Williams, senior data analyst, ExchangeWire. In this week’s edition: Smartphone spending overtakes tablet spending; Programmatic ad-buying is set to soar in 2018; and Fraud and transparency leading concerns. 

Smartphone spending overtakes tablet spending

In 2017, UK retail e-commerce purchases made via smartphone will overtake that of tablets for the first time, according to eMarketer’s latest retail e-commerce forecast.

This year, UK retail e-commerce purchases made by using a smartphone will be worth nearly £18bn, representing a 49.7% share of all retail m-commerce sales. By comparison, purchases made via tablet will account for 49.4% of mobile outlays, with the remaining, fractional portion assigned to sales made via feature phone. By 2021, retail e-commerce purchases made via smartphone sales will represent 56.0% of m-commerce sales.

This shift in spending habits is mirrored in overall mobile usage habits in the UK. Tablet penetration in the country has been one of the highest in Europe; but growth has leveled off in the past couple years as people increasingly choose large-screen smartphones as their primary device – which has subsequently impacted e-commerce behaviour.

Programmatic ad-buying is set to soar in 2018

Programmatic ad-buying in Europe is set to soar in 2018, finds a survey by Adobe. Almost nine-in-ten (86%) brands and 89% of agencies plan to spend more on this form of advertising this year.

The findings also reveal that 100% of brands are looking to take some (38%) or all (62%) of their programmatic ad-buying in-house by 2022. Meanwhile, 78% of agency marketing professionals agree that some elements will move in-house.

With programmatic ads being a key part in building customer experiences, the findings suggest that brands and agencies need to collaborate more closely to understand their roles.

Over half of both audiences (52% of brand and 56% of agency respondents) believe programmatic ads will overtake TV as the most important part of their advertising strategy in three-to-five years. When it comes to the most pressing goal, 33% of brands cite access to data for personalisation and 33% of agencies cite effective measurement.

Fraud & transparency leading concerns

In contrast to the above research, 22% of UK brands say they plan to decrease their programmatic advertising spend because of concerns over cost and performance, according to QueryClick.

Additionally, 41% of advertisers admit they have lost trust in programmatic advertising as a result of ad fraud. Only 40% of major advertisers believe that more than half of their adverts placed online in the last 12 months have been seen by people, while just 7% say they think the proportion viewed by humans rather than bots was 80% or more.

As a result, brands admitted to planning to decrease their programmatic ad spend with just under half (46%) having said they blamed the lack of alternative technology options (alternative ad-buying platforms or DSPs) in the market. Two-fifths (41%) blame a lack of transparency over how much the programmatic ads cost, and 39% say that it is due to a lack of transparency on which sites their ads will be placed.

Hugh Williams: Hugh Williams joined ExchangeWire in July 2016 as senior data analyst. He works on the ExchangeWire Research product, which was launched in 2014. Hugh helps oversee all research projects, from survey design to data analysis, and is the author of ExchangeWire’s Now & Next feature. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in History and Business from the University of Newcastle.
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