Home Commerce Amazon Advertising Raked In $17 Billion During Q4, And It’s Still Speeding Up

Amazon Advertising Raked In $17 Billion During Q4, And It’s Still Speeding Up

SHARE:
Comic: New Normal

Amazon Advertising is plotting its move to grab upper-funnel ad budgets.

The advertising services group earned $17.3 billion in Q4 2024, up 18% year over year.

“We remain pleased” with the steady double-digit growth of the ad business, now coming off a “very large base,” as CEO Andy Jassy put it to investors during the company’s quarterly earnings report on Thursday.

The company is also “quite pleased” with the first year of Prime Video with ads, Jassy said.

Expanding its streaming ad business has “made it easier to do full-funnel advertising with us,” he said. Amazon already had the ad units and data close to the point of sale. Now the company can consolidate the upper-funnel video and branding budgets.

The ad business has now reached a $69 billion annual run rate, he added.

For most ads businesses, multiplying the holiday season by four is hardly indicative of an actual annual run rate. Q4 is usually disproportionately stuffed with ads budget.

But there’s everyone else, and then there’s Amazon Ads. Amazon came darn close to catching its Q4 2023 run rate during its full-year 2024 earnings – a couple billion dollars shy on a $56 billion total.

Speed to action

Amazon is also spending heavily to continue speeding up its delivery rate and  increase the products and places where online sales can be delivered within an hour, a cost Jassy justified to investors on the call.

“We have not yet seen diminishing returns of being able to continue to improve the speed of delivery,” Jassy said. And Amazon has tested the matter closely, including testing the other end of the barbell with services like Amazon Haul, which launched in Q4 and offers very cheap merchandise at slower overall delivery rates (i.e. its version of Temu).

Jassy said Amazon tested the effect of speedy delivery guarantees on its product pages. But Amazon also looks at “what we see downstream from customers once they bought with a fast promise, and what they end up buying throughout the year.”

In other words, customers who shop for things when they need it fast end up becoming much more regular purchasers across categories. The pharmacy business has proven the importance of speedy delivery in particular, Jassy said, since those shoppers accrue more of their purchases over the year to Amazon.

Some people take advantage of offers to package and deliver purchases over a week – a more environmentally sustainable option, though slower.

“Time in and time out, we see that people choose to buy from us more frequently when we’re able to deliver to their homes or wherever they are much more quickly,” Jassy said. “And they’re actually using us for more of their everyday purchases.”

Tagged in:

Must Read

CIMM Is Out To Prove That All Media Isn’t Equal

An upcoming paper from CIMM doesn’t just demonstrate that differences in media quality can be measured. It also argues that tying media value to short-term outcomes has perpetuated longstanding industry challenges.

TikTok On Why Brands Can’t Buy Its New Ad Formats Programmatically

Not unlike last year, the mood during TikTok’s NewFronts presentation last week felt like cautious optimism, if not outright relief.

Meta’s NewFronts Message To Advertisers: Embrace The Noise

Can a good sales presentation offset the impact of a very bad news week? That’s a question for Meta, which collected two guilty verdicts in court this week for failing to protect children and creating additive products.

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

AI Helps Manscaped Trim Social Chatter Down To The Bare Essentials

Meet Clamor, a new social listening product that pulls cultural insights from online conversations in real time. Clamor helped Manscaped freshen up its marketing, including for this year’s Super Bowl.

A man talking to a robot

How Red Roof Is Bringing In More Customers With Zeta’s Voice-Activated AI Agent

Hotel chain Red Roof is using Zeta’s new voice-activated AI agent to guide its campaign creation, deployment timing and audience development.

Jean-Paul Schmetz, Chief of Ads, Brave

Why Ad-Blocking Browser Brave Introduced Its Own Ads

Brave’s chief of ads Jean-Paul Schmetz on competition in the search and browser markets, the fallout from the Google Search antitrust ruling and whether AI search will help smaller upstarts compete with Big Tech.