LIMITED SPOTS LEFT:

Join us at the Digiday Publishing Summit from March 24-26 in Vail

VIEW EVENT

Forbes starts blocking ad-block users

The escalating battle between ad-dependent publishers and ad blocking has a new front: Forbes. The publisher last week started blocking access to the site to some users of ad-blocking software. Visitors using desktop browser ad blockers are greeted with a polite but firm message on the “welcome screen” ad page Forbes serves prior to landing on its site.

forbesadblock2

Once an ad blocker is disabled, users are promised the “ad-light experience” for 30 days. Forbes said the effort was one of a series of tests it is undertaking to see if it can convince ad-block software users to whitelist the site.

“It’s about doing something based on what our users are looking for versus not doing anything,” said Mark Howard, chief revenue officer at Forbes Media.

In one test, visiting pages through a browser that disabled an ad blocker does not show animated ads or autoplay video placements. The pages still have plenty of ads, however.

For instance, the top story on the site with the “ad-light experience” still serves a 730 x 90 leaderboard, three 300 x 600 pixels display ads, along with eight “from the Web” paid content placements. However, the ads do not include autoplay video or animation.

Howard said what constitutes an “ad-light experience” will shift based on the data Forbes collects.

Major publishers are experimenting with various ways to deal with the rise of ad blocking. Some are ignoring, but others like The Atlantic are requesting users turn off their ad blockers and some like Yahoo with its email service are experimenting with blocking some ad-block software visitors.

Forbes is on something of a traffic roll lately. In November, it recorded its largest ever comScore audience, including mobile and desktop, of 43 million. That’s up from 38 million the previous month and 30 percent year over year.

The Forbes approach is interesting in offering a different experience for users of ad blockers, but it also creates something of a moral hazard of rewarding people who install ad blockers with a better user experience.

“They’ve already chosen to install the ad blockers,” said Howard. “They’ve already chosen that Web experience. For us, is there an experience we can offer that they’ll whitelist us? It’s not all or nothing.”

https://digiday.com/?p=152987

More in Media

Publishers don’t really know how Google AI Overviews is impacting their referral traffic

It’s been almost a year since Google rolled out AI Overviews, and publishers still know very little about how it’s impacting referral traffic.

How Substack creators are pooling audiences with live video co-hosting

As creators become more adept at using Substack live video, they are finding that going live with a co-host helps them gain new subscribers.

Media Briefing: Brian O’Kelley’s Scope3 promises an AI-powered ad tech reset — publishers aren’t buying it yet

AppNexus co-founder Brian O’Kelley wants to fix the ad tech ecosystem with his platform Scope3, which is designed to allow advertisers to buy directly from media owners. But publishers have a lot of questions.