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Home » Digital Ad Revenue Jumped 35% in the U.S. Last Year, Biggest Gain Since 2006

Digital Ad Revenue Jumped 35% in the U.S. Last Year, Biggest Gain Since 2006

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Advertising has followed shopping online during the pandemic at a breathless rate. The ad spend was concentrated—78.6%—at just 10 top digital publishers and platforms and the proportion is creeping higher.

Digital ad revenue in the U.S. jumped 35% to $189 billion last year as marketers chased consumers spending ever more time on online media and shopping, according to a new report from the Interactive Advertising Bureau and PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP.

The rise was well above the 12% growth rate of 2020, which was briefly hobbled by an early-pandemic dip. The year-over-year growth in 2021 was the highest the digital ad market had seen since 2006, when it rose at the same rate, the online-ad trade group said.

A flood of new businesses across the economy contributed to the growth in digital ads, said IAB Chief Executive David Cohen. A record 5.4 million new business applications were filed last year, up from 4.4 million the previous year, according to U.S. Census Bureau data.

“They use digital for finding new consumers, delivering products and services,” Mr. Cohen said.

Advertising on digital audio—podcasts and streamed music and radio—grew faster than any other category, up 58% to reach $4.9 billion.

But audio was just a speck of all digital advertising, at 2.6% of the total. Though marketers are interested in podcasts and other audio formats, measuring results can be difficult compared with other types of digital marketing.

In 2021, 10 digital publishers and platforms took the lion’s share—78.6%—of total digital ad revenue, up from 78.1% in 2020, according to the IAB, which doesn’t identify the companies. But last year, research firm Insider Intelligence forecast media behemoths Google, Facebook and Amazon would siphon up 64% of digital ad budgets in the U.S. in 2021.

E-commerce, now a cornerstone of the economy, will continue to drive ad investment to digital channels, the report said. A growing part of that investment will go to so-called retail media networks. Consumer-facing businesses, among them DoorDash Inc., Walmart Inc. and CVS Health Corp. , are increasingly offering advertisers more ways to reach consumers using retailer data, often by letting brands buy ads on retailers’ own websites or apps.

“Advertisers want to be where these transactions are happening,” said Chris Bruderle, the IAB’s vice president of research and insights. “You’re going to see that come to life across all forms of digital media.”

But digital advertising is at the mercy of…

Read The Full Article at The Wall Street Journal

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