VivaKi study determines the best Tablet ad formats

The three best ad models for tablets are: banner to full-page rich media, pre-roll with overlay, and rich media interstitial.

This is according to The Pool, a 14-month long research initiative from VivaKi that featured participation from 26 major advertisers and publishers, including Bank of America, Coca-Cola, GM, ABC Television, Crackle, Scripps, Tremor, and Yahoo.

The study uncovered that the three aforementioned ad models “significantly outperformed” their respective benchmarks on at least one of three behavioral metrics (engagement rate, click-through rate, or time spent), and those who engaged with the models saw lifts on all six attitudinal metrics (unaided awareness, aided awareness, mobile ad awareness, message association, brand favorability, and purchase intent).

For example, pre-rolls with an overlay, which the study determined worked best with video content (obviously), generated a 3.3% increase in time spent when compared to a traditional pre-roll video.

Vivaldi study identifies the best Tablet ad formats

The three best ad models for tablets are: banner to full-page rich media, pre-roll with overlay, and rich media interstitial.

This is according to The Pool, a 14-month long research initiative from VivaKi that featured participation from 26 major advertisers and publishers, including Bank of America, Coca-Cola, GM, ABC Television, Crackle, Scripps, Tremor, and Yahoo.

The study uncovered that the three aforementioned ad models “significantly outperformed” their respective benchmarks on at least one of three behavioral metrics (engagement rate, click-through rate, or time spent), and those who engaged with the models saw lifts on all six attitudinal metrics (unaided awareness, aided awareness, mobile ad awareness, message association, brand favorability, and purchase intent).

For example, pre-rolls with an overlay, which the study determined worked best with video content (obviously), generated a 3.3% increase in time spent when compared to a traditional pre-roll video.

Apple leads tablet and smartphone web usage

Smartphones and tablets are now responsible for slightly more than 20% of web traffic in the US and Canada, according to new findings from online ad network Chitika. Specifically, smartphones account for 14.6% of web traffic and tablets take up 5.6%.

Looking further into the tablet category, the report finds that the iPad has a dominant share of web traffic among tablet devices (95%). The report also finds that Apples share of web traffic in the smartphone category is 72%.

Microsoft still has a sizeable lead when it comes to desktop computers, as Windows accounts for more than 85% of web traffic (the Mac is responsible for 13%).

Tablet Usage Occurs Primarily At Home

Tablet owners in America use their devices inside the home 74% of the time, according to a study from Viacom covering Q1 2012, per an eMarketer report.

96% of those who use a tablet at home said they use it in the living room, and 94% said they use it in the bedroom; this supports the idea that the tablet is being used for entertainment purposes, such as watching content or playing games.

Of note, 75% of respondents indicated they use the tablet inside the home office. As for outside the home, the report found that the airport/airplane (80%), coffee shop (72%), outdoor public place and appointment (64% each), work (59%), and public transit (58%) were the most common places where tablet owners used their device. Interestingly, the store was only cited by 36% of respondents.

69% of Tablet Owners use their device with the TV on

The ubiquity of the Internet and the normalization of device-based connectivity in all aspects of American life have been chipping away at the old presumption that younger demos were the most feverishly connected.

You can put aside most notions of age, gender and Internet use when it comes to tablets. According to Nielsen’s latest data drop from its State of the Media survey, the demographics of tablet use while watching TV are remarkably even. Overall, Nielsen finds that 69% of tablet owners are using their device with the TV on at least several times a week, with 45% working the two screens at once every day.

Email checking generally on tablets during TV time (61%) is the prevalent activity, but for the 35- to-54-year-old and 55+ segments it spikes to 65%. Sports score lookups (34% of all tablet owners) were also popular, with 44% of males and only 24% of females checking on games.

Nielsen’s stats suggest that the connection between tablet activity and the content on the TV screen is encouraging for programmers and advertisers. They found 22% of tablet users looking up coupons or deals they had seen on TV, with the highest amount of that activity (29%) occurring among the 18-34 segment.

The good news for advertisers is that 27% of tablet owners say they have looked up product information for an ad they saw on TV. Indeed, that behavior is higher (27%-29%) among the 13-54 range, falling off only among 55+ users (22%). Women are slightly more likely to do product look-ups than men (28% vs. 25%).

The prospects for tandem programming seem bright as well, with 37% saying they had looked up information related to the TV program they were watching. In fact, the second-screen experience was engaged evenly across demographics, with all of the age demos and both genders within four or five percentage points of one another. It seems that as of now at least TV programmer can count on more than a third of their target audience with tablets being willing to make the TV-to-tablet connection.

Finally, the energy around so-called “social TV” may not be undeserved. Aside from email checks, accessing the social network (47%) is almost a majority activity among dual-screen users. And here is where the demographic differences do still show. While 62% of the 13-17 segment check their social nets with the TV on, that drops dramatically to 50% of 18- to-34-year-olds and 47% of 35- to-54-year-olds. If TV networks and marketers want to reach audiences on the second screen during prime time, the social networks may be the most direct route.

Perhaps even more dramatically than we saw the smartphone disrupt the retail space last year, tablets and smartphones will fundamentally alter the way we think about the TV experience this year. The rapid adoption of mobile technology is something we have become accustomed to seeing in recent years. What is especially impressive about the tablet/TV combination is just how rapidly the tablet device has settled into a kind of ritualistic use during prime time.

For most tablet owners, prime time is tablet time. This is important because it opens up for programmers and advertisers the expectation of a live and interested audience on this second screen with the same kind of regularity that traditionally they expect from a prime-time audience.

While obviously the tablet is an interactive and highly personalized experience, it seems to me there must be opportunities to think about something like “appointment content” on this device in a way you can’t on smartphones or even the Web. Whether as a complement to the main TV screen or simply as a portable TV itself, this may be the interactive TV (ITV) everyone has been pursuing for decades.

The full Nielsen breakdown of tablet and TV tandem activity is in its new report.