Gamers spend twice as long viewing intrinsic in-game ads compared to other digital channels – report

The world’s most advanced in-game advertising platform Anzu.io, and Lumen Research, an attention technology company, have today revealed collective results from research carried out together across a series of mobile and PC campaigns over the past 12 months, examining the power of attention within intrinsic in-game advertising.

The study used Lumen’s cutting-edge eye-tracking technology to monitor player attention levels within in-game ad campaigns across multiple ad categories, including automotive, education, energy, entertainment, fashion, CPG, QSR, retail, and tech. Some of the brands that took part include Amazon, Dell, Vodafone, Coca-Cola, Levi’s, Subway, and Empire.

Mike Follett, Managing Director of Lumen Research said: “Anzu has conducted attention tests amongst 5,000 respondents globally, giving them the richest and most robust attention dataset for gaming advertising in the world. This means that we can speak with some confidence when we say that Anzu’s inventory delivers high attention, high recall and significant shifts in brand perception and purchase intent for advertisers.”

With 83 per cent of in-game ads viewed compared to Lumen’s benchmark of 62 per cent, the findings show that gamers are 34 per cent more likely to view an in-game ad than those placed on other digital channels like social media and websites.

Across the studies, average spontaneous advertising recall was 36 per cent, with the best performing campaigns achieving over 70 per cent. Regarding purchase intent, 61 per cent said they would definitely or probably buy the brand in the future, representing a significant uplift of 9 per cent. Looking at prompted brand awareness, the studies saw an average of 71 per cent across the test audiences, and 68 per cent of the test audiences also agreed that the advertising was suited to the brand. Overall, the research clearly demonstrates the power intrinsic in-game advertising has in helping advertisers to effectively communicate with massive gaming audiences and achieve their campaign goals.

On the findings, Itamar Benedy, Co-Founder and CEO of Anzu, said: “These results clearly demonstrate the power in-game advertising has to drive attention which then converts to brand recall, favorability, and purchase intent, demonstrating how brands can use in-game to reach consumers at every stage of the marketing funnel. By adding in-game to the marketing mix advertisers can supercharge their campaigns, and with the new MRC and IAB guidelines having just been released, the medium has never been a more attractive proposition for advertisers. As we deliver more studies with Lumen, we look forward to sharing more research highlights, including benchmarks by advertiser category.”

Peter Kadin, SVP of Marketing at Empire said: “In-game advertising has played a key role in helping us drive attention and ramp up excitement for our artists, with campaigns far exceeding what we are used to from other digital channels. Our latest in-game ad campaign delivered an outstanding composite attention score that was 3.9x our desktop display benchmark, along with 93 per cent viewability on PC and 94 per cent on mobile. The high attention levels and huge reach have allowed our artist to stand out in an extremely saturated market.”