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High-impact digital display ads ‘amplify standard media’

September 19, 2018

High-impact digital display ads such as pageskins generate an amplification effect for standard media, according to new research.

The research released today by Inskin Media and Lumen Research used a large-scale audience eye-tracking study. It indicates that that high-impact formats, such as pageskins, can help draw consumers’ eyes to standard formats for longer.

Key stats from the research include:

  • Standard display ads shown after a high-impact format are 27% more likely to be looked at than those preceded by another standard display format
  • Users exposed to high-impact formats look at subsequent standard display ads for 39% longer
  • Standard display ads looked at for one second or longer increases by 140%

The UK study, in partnership with Mindshare, carried out 3,160 eye tracking experiments and revealed that, within a browsing session, standard display formats, such as MPUs, shown after a high-impact format, are 27% more likely to be looked at than those preceded by another standard display format.

This attention boost, dubbed the ‘amplification effect’, also shows that users who had been exposed to high-impact formats looked at the subsequent standard display ads for 39% longer. Similarly, the percentage of those standard display ads looked at for one second or longer, increased by 140%.

Attention to display advertising is extremely scarce, with data from Lumen’s UK eye tracking panel showing that only 12% of served display ads ever get looked at, with only 4% looked at for a second or more.

These results are significant, as longer visual engagement time with ads is known to drive brand recall: when prompted, 50% of users were able to recall the advertised brand after 1-2 seconds of visual engagement time, vs 35% after 0-1 seconds.

The research found that brand recall is strongly linked to business KPIs, such as improved brand perceptions and purchase intent, especially for non and lapsed customers.

The study, which factored in exposure frequency to avoid overestimating amplification effects, also showed that these effects weaken over time, with incremental attention decaying if not stimulated again by an amplifying format.

The implications for media planning are significant. Attention is a scarce commodity: this research will allow marketers to better plan for visual attention and optimise investment more effectively.

Dominic Tillson, Head of Insight, Inskin Media commented: “There is an ever-increasing amount of evidence that links visual attention to relevant business KPIs, from brand metrics to sales. We have long known that certain high-impact formats can perform very well on critical measures like attention, but until now we didn’t know how they can be used strategically to make standard ads work harder for brand advertisers. This study is a big step in making this a reality.”

Heather Williams, Account Director, Mindshare added “This piece of research has important implications for optimising digital impression distribution. These learnings have the potential to inform planning and buying strategies that will help realise maximum value and impact for our clients’ ad campaigns.”

Methodology

From May – July 2018, Lumen Research conducted over 3,000 eye tracking experiments amongst UK adults, making use of attention technology that captures users’ visual interactions with advertising via their webcam. The exploratory quantitative study involved three brands and three types of digital display formats (Inskin’s Pageskin Plus, Billboards and MPUs), served to the respondents in a variety of combinations over the course of two exposure sessions with a minimum time gap of 24 hours between exposures. Beyond eye tracking data, the controlled exposure methodology allowed for the collection of brand metric data.

Ads, Content advertising, brands, media, technology, UK

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