Only ten seats remaining

Secure your place at the Digiday Media Buying Summit in Nashville, March 2-4

REGISTER

The Digits: YuMe’s Video Advertising Report

 

YuMe, a leading video advertising technology company, recently released its 2010 Video Advertising Metrics Report based on data from the 30 million + ad impressions per day YuMe serves for more than 600 publishers. The report supports pre-roll’s popularity and reveals that women have a significantly higher video completion rate than males. “As consumers turn more and more to online and mobile options for video entertainment”,  stated Jayant Kadambi, president and co-founder of YuMe in a press release, “brands are moving ad dollars to reach these consumers wherever they might be.”  Key findings include;

Format and Completion Rates

Pre-roll continues to be the dominant ad format, representing 96.7% of YuMe’s volume in Q4

15 second pre-roll remains the most common ad length making up 57% of impressions served in Q4.

The Female audience continues to have a higher video completion rate at 74% versus 67% for Males.

Demographics  

Persons 25-54 was the most requested age demographic by marketers overall, representing 18% of the total Request for Proposal (RFP) volume in 2010.

Additionally, females 25 to 54 were the most frequently requested gender target; and jumped from 10% of RFPs in Q3 to 15% in Q4.

Industries

Consumer Packaged Goods (CPG) marketers dominate the online video advertising volume with 27% of all spending in 2010.

Auto and Entertainment trailed close behind at 12% and 9%, respectively.

YuMe saw a 50% increase of in-stream video ad impressions served from Q3 to Q4. Additionally, the network served the highest amount of ad impressions in California at 10.6% of total volume, followed by Texas at 6.8% and New York at 6.2%.

Learn more about the report here.

 

More in Media

From feeds to streets: How mega influencer Haley Baylee is diversifying beyond platform algorithms 

Kalil is partnering with LinkNYC to take her social media content into the real world and the streets of NYC.

‘A brand trip’: How the creator economy showed up at this year’s Super Bowl

Super Bowl 2026 had more on-the-ground brand activations and creator participation than ever, showcasing how it’s become a massive IRL moment for the creator economy.

Media Briefing: Turning scraped content into paid assets — Amazon and Microsoft build AI marketplaces

Amazon plans an AI content marketplace to join Microsoft’s efforts and pay publishers — but it relies on AI com stop scraping for free.