The study, commissioned by performance marketing agency Affilinet, indicates that more than three fifths of Britons who use online ad-blockers do so as they find internet advertisements “annoying”, with a further two fifths agreeing they are “intrusive” and “disruptive” and more than a third finding the ads they were targeted with as “irrelevant”; according to new research.
Research undertaken in spring 2017 on behalf of affilinet (www.affili.net/uk) polled a nationally representative sample of 2,043 British adults, as part of a wider study into online consumer behaviour, media consumption and shopping habits.
All participants were initially asked the question, “Do you use an ad-blocker?” to which 20.5% answered “Yes, all the time”, 33.9% said “Yes, sometimes” and 45.6% said “No”. It emerged that females were less likely to ever use ad-blockers than men, with 48.7% of women but just 42.5% of men stating that they never use them.
Furthermore, when respondents’ answers were filtered down according to the regions that they lived in, those from Northern Ireland were the least likely to use ad-blockers, with just 40.0% ever doing so. In contrast, those living in the East Midlands were the most likely to use online ad-blockers, with 59.5% admitting that they used them either all the time or sometimes.
Finally, all respondents who admitted to using ad-blockers were asked “why do you use an ad-blocker online?” with the findings emerging as follows:
- I find ads online annoying – 61.5%
- I find online ads intrusive – 41.5%
- I find online ads disruptive – 41.3%
- The ads I used to see were irrelevant – 33.1%
- Ads affect load time and bandwidth usage – 27.6%
- I’m seeing a lot more ads now than I did previously – 26.7%
- I have privacy concerns – 22.6%
- I found ads to contain offensive and/or inappropriate content – 12.5%
Peter Rowe, UK Managing Director of affilinet, said: “It seems that whilst more than half of the respondents we questioned are users of online ad-blockers in some way, one of the biggest issues associated with wanting to remove ads is that the targeting of ads is not quite hitting the mark; with more than half confessing the ads they used to see were irrelevant. One must therefore assume that with better targeting of online ads, Britons would be more likely to re-embrace being communicated with online via brand messaging.”
Source: www.affili.net/uk