Zenith’s Mobile Advertising Forecasts 2017 also shows that the UK mobile ad share is 10 percentage points ahead of global average.
Key points include:
- Globally, mobile accounts for 73% of time spent using the internet whereas in the UK its just 57%
- 63% of UK internet ad spend is now on mobile, compared to 53% globally
- Global mobile advertising is going to be 62% of all internet advertising in 2019, worth $156 billion – representing 26% of ad spend across all media
- 2017 was the first time that mobile overtook desktop for online ad-spend globally and 66% of people now have a smartphone globally
Mobile devices (including both smartphones and tablets) will account for 73% of time spent using the internet globally in 2018, up from 70% in 2017 and 65% in 2016, according to Zenith’s Mobile Advertising Forecasts 2017, published today. Mobile internet use has doubled since 2011, when it accounted for 36% of all internet use. By 2019, we expect it to account for 76%.
In the UK, mobile currently accounts for 57% of average daily internet consumption, 13 percentage points behind the global average, with a rise to 64% expected in 2018. This is partly because UK has a large installed base of desktop and laptop computers, while in some of the markets with highest mobile shares of internet use, like China and India, many consumers have gone straight to smartphones without first owning a fixed internet connection.
The markets where mobile devices have the highest shares of internet use are geographically diverse. Spain is top, with an estimated 81% of internet use coming from mobile devices this year, followed by Italy (78%), China and the US (each at 77%) and India (73%).
59% of internet advertising expenditure will be mobile in 2018
As we have documented in our quarterly Advertising Expenditure Forecasts, the amount of money spent on internet ads going to mobile ads has overtaken the amount spent on desktop ads for the first time this year. We estimate that 53% of all internet adspend will go to ads viewed on mobile devices in 2017, and forecast that proportion to rise to 59% in 2018 and 62% in 2019. In 2019 mobile adspend will total US$156 billion, and account for 26% of ad spend across all media.
In the UK, the percentage of internet ad spend going to mobile is currently estimated to be at 63%, expected to rise to 69% in 2018. Consumers in the UK are very heavy users of mobile e-commerce, which leads brands to spend heavily on mobile search to drive e-commerce sales.
Global smartphone penetration to reach 66% in 2018
In 2018, 66% of individuals in 52 key countries* will own a smartphone, up from 63% in 2017 and 58% in 2016. In the UK, penetration is expected to reach 69% in 2018. The rapid expansion of smartphone ownership across the world, which has transformed the way that advertisers communicate with consumers, is slowing down as penetration reaches 80%-90% in the most advanced markets. The number of smartphone owners will increase by 7% year on year in 2018, compared to 10% growth in 2017, 14% in 2016 and 21% in 2015.
The spread of smartphones and other mobile devices is increasing the number of contacts between brands and consumers, by giving consumers new opportunities to connect to media content wherever they are, at any time in the day. Some of these contacts take the form of paid advertising in third-party content, but mobile technology is also enabling broader brand experiences, such as branded content and social media engagement.
Western Europe and Asia Pacific continue to lead the world in smartphone ownership. We predict that five markets will have smartphone penetration above 90% in 2018: the Netherlands (94%), Taiwan (93%), Hong Kong (92%), Norway and Ireland (each at 91%). 11 markets will have penetration levels between 80% and 90%, all of them in Western Europe and Asia Pacific with the exception of Israel, where penetration will be 86%.
The country with the highest number of smartphone users will be China, with 1.3 billion users, followed by India, with 530 million users. The US will be third, with 229 million users.
Tablet penetration stabilising at about 20%
Tablet ownership is much less common than smartphone ownership, partly because they are more likely to be shared within households, and partly because consumers in some markets prefer to use larger smartphones instead. Tablets have not caught on at all in China, where we estimate their penetration at just 4.8% this year, compared to 85.4% for smartphones. Tablet penetration is even declining in Thailand.
Tablet ownership varies widely across the 52 countries in this report; it exceeds 50% in 12 markets, and is lower than 10% in seven. Tablet ownership is most common in the Netherlands (at 74% penetration is year), Australia (66%) and Ireland (65%). In the UK, tablet ownership is currently at 59%, with this expected to rise to 60% by 2018.
Globally, we estimate tablet penetration at 18.7% this year, up slightly from 17.8% in 2016. It appears to be stabilising at about 20%: we forecast penetration levels of 19.5% in 2018 and 20.1% in 2019.
“For most consumers and advertisers, the mobile internet is now the normal internet,” said Jonathan Barnard, Zenith’s Head of Forecasting and Director of Global Intelligence. “The ownership of mobile devices is beginning to saturate in some markets, but there’s plenty of room for further growth across the rest of the world.”
Vittorio Bonori, Zenith’s Global Brand President, said, “Because the internet is now mobile, brands have the opportunity to use it to communicate to consumers during more of their lives – when they are shopping, socialising and travelling as well as when at their desk. By reaching consumers at the right occasions with tailored messages, brands can guide them through the consumer journey more effectively.”
Methodology
The 52 countries included in this report are Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belarus, Belgium, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Canada, China, Colombia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Ecuador, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, India, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Latvia, Lithuania, Malaysia, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Pakistan, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Singapore, Slovakia, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Thailand, Ukraine, the UK and the USA, representing 65% of the world’s population.