The Future of Display? Better Ask Google

By g_concannon + September 29th, 2010

Google’s making some big predictions about their future role in online advertising.  With the recent growth we’ve seen from key competitive players such as Facebook, the Yahoo-Bing alliance, and AOL’s new display ads; it’s no surprise that Google is refusing to fall into the backdrop.

Twelve years ago this week, Google became officially incorporated and began its creation of the Web search industry as we know it today. On Tuesday, the company re-emphasized its recent enthusiasm for shaping the future of online display advertising, something worthy of all Web professionals notice.

Google has been increasingly vocal in recent weeks about its perceived future of the display ad industry, and about the company’s intentions to be a major part of it.

Predicting that display advertising is about to experience the “biggest and most important revolution in its history”, Google highlighted seven reasons why it wants to be leading the charge. Then it shared four of the new technologies that will help it achieve that goal.

We will quickly summarize all of those points below, but it seems that some of the questions most pertinent to the ad industry were left unanswered. First, here are Google’s seven predictions about where display advertising will be in 2015:

•    A $50 billion industry
•    50 percent of total display ad impressions will have rich media formats
•    Mobile will be the primary method for users to engage with advertisers
•    75 percent of ads will be social in nature (able to be shared, commented on, etc.)
•    50 percent of ad campaigns will include video bought on a cost-per-view basis
•    50 percent will be bought using real-time technology
•    Clicks will not even be in the top five most important metrics for advertisers

And, some of Google’s methods that it hopes will shape the future of display:

•    New video ad formats called TrueView (testing on YouTube)
•    New real-time technology called Teracent
•    New mobile viewing technology called Google Goggles
•    New rich media ad formats/technologies

But how much of this is vital information for professionals buying and selling advertising on the Web, and how much is just another platform for Google to hype its latest technologies? Did the company really explain its sudden, enormous interest in display, except to say that it believes it will be a $50 billion industry by 2015?

One thing is for sure, and it’s that we won’t get our answers unless we’re paying attention. Judging from the past 12 years, when Google talks, it’s better to listen than to ignore.

For more information about online display advertising, contact us at StreamCompanies.com

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