Online advertising slowed growth in 2008 to 10.6%
Monday, March 30th, 2009
A study by Pricewaterhouse Coopers on behalf of the IAB shows a drop in the until-recently heady growth rates in online advertising. 2008’s 10.6% growth pales compared to 2007’s growth of 26%, and portends even lower (or negative?) numbers for 2009.
A breakdown by formats:
- The total market hit $23.4 billion in 2008, as previously mentioned a 10.6% increase over 2007’s $21.2 billion
- Search (including contextual) still dominates, with 46% of the market by Q4 2008; its share is equal to approx $10.5 billion annually. Search amounted to 42% of the online advertising market in Q4 2007.
- Display accounted for about $7.6 billion in 2008, or 33% of the overall mix. Q4’s $2.0 billion estimate represents a 4.3% decrease below Q4 in 2007.
- Performance-based advertising (CPC, CPA, CPL, etc) continued to outpace CPM advertising, comprising 57% vs 39% in 2008. In 2007, performance-based stood at 51% vs CPM’s 46%.
Overall, not too surprising. We’ve long expected that performance-based online ads, in their various forms, would weather the spending downturn far better that CPM-based ads, primarily display.\
eMarketer, in response to the results to the study and a possible admission that it overestimated the market (twice) for 2008, cut its growth predictions for 2009 in half, from 8.9% and $25.7 billion to 4.5% and $24.5 billion.

A study by Lightspeed Research and IAB UK
ValueClick Media, who’s in the (currently) unenviable position of trying to move display inventory, has
As part of its fifth annual Demo Fest, Microsoft’s 





Despite all the purported death knells we’ve been hearing, maybe we should drag ourselves back to the real world and realize the current economic downturn, and its concomitant slowdown in the online advertising market, will not last forever. Sure, weaker companies will be pruned away, there might be some consolidation, and those who make it through will have to pare back their growth projections, but only in the short term. The numbers simply point to strong future growth.
