Incisive Media sees 40 percent drop in ad blocking after banning access

Publishers often wring their hands about how tough to get with ad blocking. U.K. business publisher Incisive Media decided late last year to block access to its tech publications The Inquirer and V3, both of which had ad-block use rates of over 20 percent. The result: Within 48 hours, the number of page impressions ad-blocked dropped by 40 percent.

Before the ban, which started in April, 30 percent of page impressions were being blocked on The Inquirer, and 20 percent on V3. During major product launches, like Apple’s iPhone 6S last September, organic search and social traffic normally spikes — and the number of page impressions affected by ad blockers hit 40 percent. The publisher has determined that any site which sees 20 percent of pages ad-blocked will have a ban.

“We agreed on 20 percent because that’s the point at which we start losing serious cash,” said Robin Shute, head of operations at Incisive Media.

The stakes are high. The publisher has estimated that if all its titles were to see 20 percent of impressions blocked, the average revenue loss to the business would be north of £100,000 ($146,000) a year. That estimate would be far lower if one looked at V3 and The Inquirer titles separately, because their ad revenue is more reliant on programmatic advertising, which commands lower yields. “For those titles, we estimate it would be around the £30,000 ($44,000) mark per site,” added Shute.

Those titles are likely also the only two to tip over that 20 percent threshold, as they’re in the publisher’s tech cluster. The group’s other brands, including financial titles Investments Week and Professional Pensions, see far lower ad-blocking rates, between 2 and 9 percent.

“Getting it working properly has been a bit of a case of catching a tiger by the tail. It’s fiddly, and with tech brands, people can often figure out a way to spoof it anyway,” said Shute.

But Incisive persevered. The current message running in each article is similar to that used by City AM, which was the first U.K. publisher to run a ban. It states politely the reasons why the site relies on advertising to survive and asks the user to disable the blocker. The content is blurred so no one can click through without disabling.

ban

Shute said that The Inquirer will also get a ban, likely to roll out in June. The site, which has higher ad-blocker rates than V3 and also has the larger audience — 1.5 million pageviews in April, according to the publisher’s internal figures, compared to V3’s 700,000 — wasn’t first with the ban because its website redesign was set for a later rollout than V3’s, according to Shute.

Incisive Media has two arms: Incisive Business, which houses all its ad-funded titles, and Incisive Insights, home to its subscription-based titles. The publisher has toyed with the idea of introducing tiered subscriptions to its ad-funded titles, but given how saturated the technology title market is, subscriptions aren’t a viable alternative for those particular titles, according to Shute.

https://digiday.com/?p=179238

More in Media

Marketers balance creepiness and realism as more AI-generated avatars come online

It’s now possible to generate avatars in minutes using audio, images or videos and produce content with hundreds of different backgrounds, outfits, tones and languages or gestures. Others use virtual influencers or animated characters – but either way, do you as a marketer aim for realism or steer clear of the uncanny valley?

Referral traffic from Google Discover increases in 2024 amid the steady decline of referrals from social

The fragmented social landscape continued to splinter in 2024, as traffic from social media platforms sent to publishers’ sites continued its steady decline this year.

AI fatigue sets in among workers and company leaders

About half of business leaders report declining company-wide enthusiasm for AI integration and adoption, according to a recent EY pulse survey.