Facebook said earlier this year that advertisers should only have to pay if an ad is actually seen, not just served to a user
San Francisco: Facebook Inc is providing a new option for its more sceptical advertisers.
Marketers can now choose to pay Facebook only if their ads have completely passed through a user’s news feed and been seen by a human being. Separately, any advertisers who want to verify video views can get reassurance from a third party, Moat Inc, the social network said Thursday in a blog post. Facebook plans eventually to use Moat for other types of newsfeed ads and for the social network’s Instagram app.
Facebook said earlier this year that advertisers should only have to pay if an ad is actually seen, not just served to a user. But Facebook’s definition of an impression may not have been enough for some customers. An advertisement counts as “viewed” as soon as one line of pixels can be seen — the point at which Facebook feels an ad has enough value to measure. Any advertiser who doesn’t think that’s enough now has an option that might provide more confidence that marketing dollars are well spent on Facebook. Viewability standards
Soon, ad buyers may ask the same of other companies that sell Web ads.
“What we want is quite simple: Ads that are actually seen by real people,” Rob Norman, chief digital officer at media and advertising company GroupM Worldwide, said in a statement. “We want viewability standards across clients and publishers that honour that position, and we want publishers to be held accountable by independent third parties.”
Facebook’s change may move the industry closer to a standard that helps justify spending money on video ads, Norman said. In the marketing world, there have been debates about what should be considered “viewability,” because it’s done differently on Facebook compared with Google Inc.’s YouTube or Hulu LLC.
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