Selling more video ads opens a new revenue opportunity for Amazon's advertising division, which mostly sells space featuring brand logos, product photographs and descriptions that are the equivalent of digital billboards. Video ad spots are similar to television commercials and can deepen the power of promotion.
Brands will spend nearly $16 billion on mobile video advertising this year, up 22.6 per cent from 2018, according to EMarketer. Advertisers are shifting their spending to follow the growing number of people watching videos on mobile devices and are making brief video snippets to appeal to people on the go. Such ads are common on YouTube and in Facebook streams.
For years, Amazon refrained from selling advertising space on its site for fear of disrupting the shopping experience. Instead, it used price, product descriptions and consumer reviews to determine which products were most prominent on the page. The site is increasingly a pay-to-play platform, with the top of the page dedicated to the highest bidder, a shift that has helped boost Amazon's profits.
Amazon began adding more product-related videos to the site two years ago to prevent shoppers from defecting to YouTube and Instagram to watch video demonstrations and testimonials from influencers not found on Amazon. Many of those video posts on other platforms feature links to sites other than Amazon, where shoppers could buy products. Amazon's lack of video content revealed a weakness in shopper engagement and product discovery other sites were providing better.
The latest video ad push is a continuation of that effort to put more product videos on the platform. Amazon is requiring a $35,000 ad budget to run the spots at 5 cents per view to run the ads for 60 days, one person said. Prices can vary by category, said another person, and not everyone pays a fixed rate.
Selling video advertising on smartphone apps expands a product Amazon developed for its own devices like the Fire TV streaming device and Kindle e-readers to non-Amazon devices like Apple smartphones, which more people use for shopping, said Collin Colburn, analyst at Forrester Research.
"They roll out these new experiences slowly to see if it disrupts the shopping experience and see if it's something advertisers want," he said. "This creates a new format for them and another way to sell space on the platform."
- Bloomberg