iPhone a winner for mobile advertising

The iPhone’s screen still appears to be the most prominent real estate for mobile advertising according to figures released this week.

James Middleton

November 24, 2009

1 Min Read
iPhone a winner for mobile advertising
Mobile advertising opportunites are growing globally

The iPhone’s screen still appears to be the most prominent real estate for mobile advertising according to figures released this week.

Mobile advertising network AdMob, which recently caught the eye of web giant Google, said that 50 per cent of ad requests from smartphones in its system in October were from the Apple mobile OS. Symbian, which dominates the smartphone market in terms of platform, was only responsible for 25 per cent of requests, followed by Android with 11 per cent and BlackBerry with 7 per cent.

Interestingly however, new devices from RIM are generating an increasing percentage of the total number of requests for the platform, with the recently launched Tour and new versions of the Curve (8900 and 8520) gaining traction.

Meanwhile, Android, which is a relative newcomer, has seen worldwide requests increase 5.8 times since April in the AdMob network. The HTC Dream, known as the G1, has continued to experience strong growth over the past six months and the launch of new devices is driving significant incremental growth in Android traffic.  The Motorola Droid already represented 24 per cent of all Android requests in AdMob’s network two weeks after it launched.

admoboct.jpg

admoboct

Earlier this month, Google strengthened its presence in advertising with the acquisition of AdMob for $750m. According to Google, the deal will bring new innovation and competition to the nascent mobile advertising market, and will lead to more effective tools for creating, serving, and analysing emerging mobile ads formats. Google and AdMob currently specialise in different areas, with Google’s focus on mobile search ads, while AdMob’s focus is mobile display ads and in-application ads.

About the Author

James Middleton

James Middleton is managing editor of telecoms.com | Follow him @telecomsjames

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