The first-ever digital banner advertising campaign was bizarrely launched by stodgy American telecoms giant AT&T in 1994. Both AT&T and Wired, the website that published the advertisement, were unable to foresee how pervasive digital advertising would become or that it would grow to be a $700 billion industry in only three short decades.
Today's internet goliaths like Meta and Google were born as a result of the juggernaut of online advertising. The digital economy depends on it for survival. However, it also has an existential crisis. Digital advertising very likely no longer exists in the way that we currently perceive it and have for the past thirty years.
In terms of excess, abuse, and privacy violations, the digital advertising sector is a Lovecraftian horror story. It is a monster with several heads, each of which is more disgusting than the previous one. If only to convince the sceptics that the demise of online advertising isn't just inevitable, but essential, I'll go into the industry's most terrible acts later in this article.
Cause of decline
We should strive to comprehend the root causes before describing the phenomena speeding digital advertising's terminal demise.
And in order to accomplish that, we must go back to the beginning. The initial banner advertisement was strangely prophetic in many ways. It utilised strategies that nowadays would be referred to as "clickbait." It read: “Have you ever clicked your mouse right HERE? YOU WILL”.
Obvious? Yes. Sophisticated?No way. But most all, it was incredibly efficient. A 2017 retrospective that was published in The Atlantic found that 44% of people who saw it also clicked on it. By today's standards, such a sum is nearly unfathomable. The typical clickthrough rate for Google Ads is 3.17 percent, according to the ad industry analytics firm Smart Insights.
Of course, there is much more to online advertising than just clickbait. As the Internet got more and more ingrained in our daily lives, it drew in famous "blue chip" corporations that wanted to take advantage of its expanding reach but didn't want to risk the safety and reputation of their brands by using dishonest methods.
Thus, we came to possess a highly developed tracking and profiling system. The ad-tech sector developed extensive, comprehensive profiles of specific consumers, their interests, and their preferences. Almost like a private spy agency, these ad-tech companies operated. They could deliver adverts with gravity-defying accuracy through their surveillance.
This situation held until it didn't. Consumer privacy awareness increased significantly in the 2010s, in large part as a result of the Snowden revelations, which, while mostly unconnected to the advertising sector, nonetheless demonstrated the great targeting power of our personal data.
There were further controversies that followed, most notably those involving Cambridge Analytica and AggregateIQ, two companies that employed traditional ad-tech strategies and tactics to achieve political change as opposed to promoting consumer electronics and fragrance brands. Regulators were forced to deal with the predicament it had caused.
The opposition to the existing data-centric advertising paradigm that has been voiced by regulators and tech corporations is the most noticeable factor.
On the regulatory front, there has been a flurry of measures designed to rein in the excesses of the online advertising industry. Of course, the most famous example is GDPR. It is notable for three primary reasons: first, the extent of the European market, second, the fact that it has acted as a model for legislation of a similar nature in other non-EU territories and states. Examples of the latter are Canada's Digital Charter Implementation Act (DCIA) and the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA).
The GDPR (and related legislation) expands the definition of what counts as private data, establishes a need for consent before any data is processed, and imposes severe financial penalties for breaking its rules. Additionally, it formalises the line of command by requiring certain sizable enterprises that rely heavily on data to designate a Data Privacy Officer (DPO) and mandates that companies acquire specific consent before processing "special categories" of data. This phrase refers to both a person's biographical details as well as possibly less obvious information, such as political ideas.
Additionally, major digital companies have taken actions that restrict the ability of the advertising sector to follow and target consumers. Apple's App Tracking Transparency (ATT), which is both widely used and incredibly effective, is an excellent example. Analysts estimate that in 2022, Facebook would have lost close to $13 billion in revenue. And that's only one business.
Google has also taken similar actions, most notably by deciding to stop using tracking cookies in Google Chrome in 2024. Building anti-fingerprinting technology is a goal of the open-source Chromium project, which also creates the engine that powers Microsoft's Edge, Brave, and the Chrome browser. These will make it even more difficult for ad-tech companies to accurately identify people.
In other words, the legal and technological framework that let the ad-tech business flourish unrestrainedly has been removed. The importance of these developments cannot be overstated. The impending ban on the sale of new gasoline vehicles in California and other US jurisdictions is the closest analogy I can come up with. They will be that drastically transformational.
There is a cascading impact from these actions. Legislators and tech companies aren't the only ones making life difficult for the online advertising industry. Digital channels are consequently becoming less desirable (or useful) for advertisers. They are therefore seeking other places to spend their budget. One outstanding example is audio advertising, which surged by 57.9 percent in 2021 and is still rapidly expanding.
Future of digital advertising
I believe it is important to provide some depth so that I am not accused of using the same clickbait strategies that I criticised before in this article. I firmly feel that the current method of digital ads is obsolete. It will happen in due course. Simply said, there is no longer any technological infrastructure or regulatory negligence that supported the status order.
Clearly, companies will continue to advertise their products online. But it will appear very different from what we have right now.
The age of highly specific targeting has come to an end.
Additionally, the importance of the browser to advertisers will decline, partly as a result of the causes I already discussed but also as a result of the widespread adoption of technology solutions that enable users to efficiently opt out of advertising. Ad blockers are used by about 42.7% of people, and this percentage is rising.
In terms of digital channels, controlled platforms like YouTube will become more prevalent. This is an excellent illustration of what online advertising will look like in the future because most of its customers choose to utilise the mobile app to access the site, which makes it nearly difficult to block advertising without subscribing to a premium service.
Browser-based advertising will inevitably rely on cohort-based or contextual targeting. As a result, advertisers will probably see a decline in conversions and switch back to more traditional advertising channels. One excellent illustration of this is audio, as I already highlighted. Additionally, outdoor advertising is.
In other words, although being less invasive, this new iteration of digital advertising will also be less profitable. Working with massive, monolithic platforms like YouTube will be necessary since they can exercise some control over the situation through their mobile experiences. Less and less of the world's advertising budget will be spent on online advertisements.
Most of this problem is self-inflicted.
By simply exercising more control and self-policing, the digital advertising business might have prevented a large portion of this upheaval. Though it didn't. It must now pay the price of the approaching existential crisis.