Home Gaming Advertisers Aren’t Playing Around On Facebook – CPMs Are Up More Than 500%

Gaming Advertisers Aren’t Playing Around On Facebook – CPMs Are Up More Than 500%

SHARE:

CPMsThe gaming/Facebook love affair is showing no signs of cooling off.

CPMs among gaming advertisers on Facebook were up 548% year over year in Q3 2014, according to Facebook ad partner Nanigans in its most recent benchmark report. To put that into perspective, e-commerce advertisers saw a 255% year-over-year increase in CPMs.

On average, CPMs on Facebook desktop and mobile increased by 80% between Q2 and Q3 among Nanigans customers – which include eBay, Rue La La, Rosetta Stone and gaming behemoth Zynga – to $2.98. That’s up from $1.95 last quarter.

Mobile, as expected, is a major driver behind the growth, said Cheryl Morris, director of market development at Nanigans.

“It’s no secret that consumer time spent is increasingly shifting to mobile,” Morris told AdExchanger. “Gaming companies have followed suit in investing more heavily in developing games [and] on user acquisition and reengagement for them.”

But cost isn’t the only metric on the rise in the gaming industry. Nanigans also noted concurrent increases in click-through rate – a 298% year-over-year growth – and in cost-per-click, which rose slightly from last quarter to $0.55.

In other words, costs are up, but engagement is there, too. That jibes with data from VivaKi’s most recent AOD benchmark report, which found that mobile is 2.3 times more engaging than desktop, resulting in lower cost-per-engagement on mobile (about $0.55) versus desktop ($1.09).

Gaming companies are clearly pouring cash into the Facebook ecosystem. But Nanigans VP of west accounts Sambou Makalou, who heads up the company’s gaming division, said the CPM increase is partially a result of a simple law of economics – supply and demand.

“Demand is outstripping supply growth right now, so prices are going up,” Makalou said. “Facebook has been pretty judicious about not going too crazy with ads in the news feed, so there are fairly limited ways to grow their inventory. Really, it’s just like trying to get tickets to a Giants game.”

Makalou sees the current CPM as relatively affordable, all things considered. It’s logical to spend more on targeting customers with higher lifetime value (LTV) potential, and right now, Facebook is where those people play – literally. Gaming companies are more than willing to shell out cash up front if they know they’ll see a return down the line, Morris said.

“[Gaming companies] represent some of the best-in-class performance advertising talent in the world, which makes sense when you think about how these companies monetize their games,” Morris said. “Most offer their games for free and monetize through in-app purchases, which means they live and die by the lifetime value of their users as compared to the cost of acquiring them. Online acquisition and remarketing is a top strategic imperative as a result, much like e-commerce and other Internet verticals, and Facebook continues to deliver great lifetime value and ROI for them.”

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

Get our editors’ roundup delivered to your inbox every weekday.

It’s a trend that Jesse Pujji, CEO and co-founder of mobile ad buying platform and Facebook preferred marketing developer partner Ampush, has also observed.

“In Q3, LTV and user quality increased, while CPIs [cost-per-install] were relatively steady, [which] drove a significant increase in spend for most of our gaming customers,” Pujji said. “We’re seeing most of our mobile gaming customers shift spend towards mobile native platforms like Facebook and away from the exchanges.”

Although gaming companies are all about digging deep for high-performing mobile ads on Facebook, Facebook itself wants to show that its mobile ad revenue comes from more than just the gaming guys. During Facebook’s Q2 2014 earnings call, COO Sheryl Sandberg somewhat pointedly said, “Sometimes people think mobile app installs ads are the great majority of revenue. They’re not. Mobile ad revenue is broad-based. We have large-brand advertisers, small SMBs and developers.”

Facebook’s Q3 2014 earnings call is scheduled for Tuesday, Oct. 28, at 5 p.m. ET.

Must Read

Comic: He Sees You When You're Streaming

IP Address Match Rates Are a Joke – And It’s No Laughing Matter

According to a new report, IP-to-email matches are accurate just 16% of the time on average, while IP-to-postal matches are accurate only 13% of the time. (Oof.)

Comic: Gamechanger (Google lost the DOJ's search antitrust case)

The DOJ And Google Sharpen Their Remedy Proposals As The Two Sides Prepare For Closing Arguments

The phrase “caution is key” has become a totem of the new age in US antitrust regulation. It was cited this week by both the DOJ and Google in support of opposing views on a possible divestiture of Google’s sell-side ad exchange.

create a network of points with nodes and connections, plain white background; use variations of green and grey for the dots and the connctions; 85% empty space

Alt Identity Provider ID5 Buys TrueData, Marking Its First-Ever Acquisition

ID5 bought TrueData mainly to tackle what ID5 CEO Mathieu Roche calls the “massive fragmentation” of digital identity, which is a problem on the user side and the provider side.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

CTV Manufacturers Have A New Tool For Catching Spoofed Devices

The IAB Tech Lab’s new device attestation feature for its Open Measurement SDK provides a scaled way for original device manufacturers to confirm that ad impressions are associated with real devices.

Comic: "Deal ID, please."

The Trade Desk And PubMatic Are Done Pretending Deal IDs Work

The Trade Desk and PubMatic announced a new API-based integration for managing deal ID campaigns built atop TTD’s Price Discovery and Provisioning (PDP) API, which was announced earlier this year.

How Agentic Advertising Platform Aimy Uses Comcast’s Universal Ads API

On Monday, Brand Networks announced that Universal Ads would now be buyable through the company’s agentic ad buying platform, Aimy Ads.