Impressions are when an advertisement or any other
form of digital media renders on a user's screen. Impressions are not
action-based and are merely defined by a user potentially seeing the
advertisement, making CPM campaigns ideal for businesses intent on
spreading brand awareness.
Impressions In Digital Marketing
Digital
marketing has made impression tracking significantly more quantitative
than offline advertising. For example, a billboard owner has no concrete
way of estimating the number of impressions his platform grants
advertisers. Impression-based online campaigns, on the other hand, can
measure impressions concretely, and are generally sold in terms of cost-per-thousand (CPM) impressions.
Impression tracking is a common metric for measuring the performance of most types of online marketing campaigns, including:
- Pay-per-click impressions, measured against actual clicks
- Number of times a meme appears on social media
- On-site views of internal calls-to-action
- Access of graphic materials through third-party sites, such as Pinterest or Google Image Search
Impressions generally come in two forms: served and viewable.
Served Impressions
The
current standard for tracking online impressions is based on served
content: whenever a marketing-related file is accessed and transmitted
that activity counts as an impression. This is extremely easy to track
as it relies on pure server data to count the impressions.
Counting
impressions based on served content still has the 'billboard' problem,
in that it's difficult to tell how much impact the content had without
deeper data analysis. Also, in some cases files can be accessed without
being viewable by the consumer.
As a result, ecommerce businesses
purchasing impression-based advertising such as display ads have urged
the adoption of more accurate systems for measuring impressions. The new
viewable impressions standard seeks to address this need.
Viewable Impressions
The
viewable impressions method uses data gathered from a user's device to
refine the impression count by excluding cases where, in all likelihood,
the content was not seen.
Viewable impression tracking can identify user behaviors which prevent ad viewing, including:
- Ad-blocking software
- Screen resolutions too small for the ad to appear onscreen.
- Users browsing scrolling down before the requested ad has loaded.
- Broken plug-ins preventing content display.
- Mobile incompatibilities such as desktop-only websites.
- Minimized browser windows.
- User movement between different applications.
- Pages loaded in background tabs then never accessed.
- Non-user interference, like malware cloaking ads
The
benefits of viewable impression tracking are twofold. First, a company
receives more accurate information on the number of actual impressions
made. Secondly, the data collected is highly actionable and suggests
improvements which can ensure greater rates of content delivery.
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