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Writer's pictureFahad H

Why Meeker sees e-commerce, digital ad revenues slowing down

New data from famed internet analyst Mary Meeker suggests online advertising and e-commerce growth may be slowing, but that doesn’t make these channels any less important for marketers to maximize.

Online Advertising

According to Meeker’s Internet Trends 2019 report, year over year growth in internet ad revenue on the top US platforms — Google, Facebook, Twitter, Amazon, Snapchat and Pinterest — has been slowing since the first quarter of 2018.

Mary Meeker Internet Trends Report | Source: Company public releases & Morgan Stanley estimates. Includes Google, Facebook, Twitter, Amazon, Snapchat and Pinterst.

Google still reigns supreme — by a wide margin — in terms of ad platform revenue, with Facebook following in second. Ad revenue on smaller platforms — Amazon, Twitter, Snap and Pinterest — has been growing faster and making a small dent Google and Facebook’s in share of the pie. Combined, the three have increased revenue by 2.6x since the first quarter of 2017, compared to Google’s 1.4x increase and Facebook’s 1.9x increase.

Programmatic ad buying has seen rapid adoption, growing from 10% of ad spend in 2012 to 62% in 2018. Meeker said the growth in programmatic has put downward pressure on ad display ad pricing.

Meeker pointed to specific factors driving ad share for Facebook (audience customization for targeting), YouTube (machine learning-powered Bumper Machine), Pinterest (shoppable catalogs) and Twitter (high-relevance promoted tweets).

E-Commerce

Although e-commerce sales now account for 15% of all retail purchases, Meeker reported that the growth rate is slowing down when stacked against previous years. E-commerce as a whole saw revenue growth barely inching up year-over-year, with the first quarter of 2019 showing a 12.4% growth rate – as opposed to the 12.1% growth rate of last year.

Mary Meeker Internet Trends Report | Source: St. Louis Federal Reserve FRED database.

E-commerce continues to see faster growth at 12% year over year than phsyical retail which grew by 2% in 2018.

Direct -to-consumer brands are capitalizing on rich consumer data with deeper personalization, resulting in more innovative strategies and a higher consumer satisfaction than ever before. But even so, the cost of customer acquisition is climbing to unsustainable levels.

Still crucial, despite slowing down

Despite flattening trends in ad spend and revenue growth, make no mistake: e-commerce (and digital advertising, by extension) will still remain a crucial factor in the marketing mix for brands and retailers. In our connected digital ecosystem, new technologies, innovative media, and the rise in global internet adoption means more fragmentation across the consumer spectrum, which ultimately amounts to less concentrated growth.

Audiences and business goals vary from brand to brand, but e-commerce marketers and advertisers should still be looking at long-term strategies through the lens of the online trends as a whole.

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