iOS ad share continues to grow, accounts for almost two-thirds of market
Apple's iOS mobile platform continues to make a strong showing in the mobile advertising space, accounting for almost two-thirds of ad impressions despite not having anything near that in terms of installed user base.

Mobile ad firm Velti just released its most recent look at the mobile ad industry, finding that Apple's iOS platform grew its share of of the market from 59 to 64 percent between May 2012 and May 2013, reports TechCrunch. This was due in large part to the continued success of the iPhone, especially the iPhone 5, which contributed 7.9 percent to Apple's share.
Meanwhile, Google's Android platform saw its share of mobile advertising shrink from 41 to 36 percent over the same period. Apple's iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch were the top three devices for mobile ad impressions in Velti's study, while Samsung's Android-based Galaxy S devices were a distant fourth, contributing only 2.7 percent of all impressions.
The report also found that advertisers are interested in moving toward bigger ads across all platforms. On the iPhone in particular, smaller ads decreased in popularity over the past year, while full-screen ad units rose 4.7 percent from last year.
The study also looked at which carriers were hosting the most ad impressions on their networks. AT&T, the original carrier for Apple's iPhone, remained in first place with 46 percent of all mobile impressions, but that figure was down significantly from the 53 percent share it held last May. Verizon, however, saw its share jump more than 10 percent, from 23 to 34 percent, while Sprint saw its share drop from 23 to 19 percent.

Mobile ad firm Velti just released its most recent look at the mobile ad industry, finding that Apple's iOS platform grew its share of of the market from 59 to 64 percent between May 2012 and May 2013, reports TechCrunch. This was due in large part to the continued success of the iPhone, especially the iPhone 5, which contributed 7.9 percent to Apple's share.
Meanwhile, Google's Android platform saw its share of mobile advertising shrink from 41 to 36 percent over the same period. Apple's iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch were the top three devices for mobile ad impressions in Velti's study, while Samsung's Android-based Galaxy S devices were a distant fourth, contributing only 2.7 percent of all impressions.
The report also found that advertisers are interested in moving toward bigger ads across all platforms. On the iPhone in particular, smaller ads decreased in popularity over the past year, while full-screen ad units rose 4.7 percent from last year.
The study also looked at which carriers were hosting the most ad impressions on their networks. AT&T, the original carrier for Apple's iPhone, remained in first place with 46 percent of all mobile impressions, but that figure was down significantly from the 53 percent share it held last May. Verizon, however, saw its share jump more than 10 percent, from 23 to 34 percent, while Sprint saw its share drop from 23 to 19 percent.
Comments
I don't know how any company outside of Apple can be credible regarding the effectiveness or growth of Apple's mobile advertising.
Originally Posted by AppleInsider
Apple's iOS mobile platform continues to make a strong showing in the mobile advertising space ...
... hitting Google right where it hurts. 96% of Google's revenue comes from ads.
Never forget that.
Oh, and ironically, Google makes more money from ads on iOS than they do from the entire Android "ecosystem," fragmented weedpatch that it is.
Or more likely iOS users actually use their phones as smartphones and not just phones.
But, but..... doesn't Google's Android sell billions and billions of 'smart'phones?
I know Apple has started to use Bing search, but why bother to collaborate with Microsoft. Is it that hard to build a search engine or purchase the algorithms? I'm so pissed that Google's share price is worth more than 2X Apple's share price. That makes no sense at all. Apple is pulling the majority of mobile industry profits and that's all Apple can get in shareholder value? Give Google some competition at least. I don't understand why Wall Street thinks Google is such an unbeatable company. Google is making Apple look like crap as far as value is concerned.
I am glad Apple finally created a web portal (Workbench) for developers to create iAds instead of "email us and we'll call you" approach. I don't remember AI writing a story about it.
I think those platforms are all trash, but they do exist. These numbers aren't believable or representative unless there is at least an "others" column.
I'd be inclined to believe 2/3rds add impression towards apple is close to truth, but obviously this firm's methods are remarkably flawed.
The article says nothing about iAds.
Quote:
Originally Posted by SockRolid
... hitting Google right where it hurts. 96% of Google's revenue comes from ads.
Never forget that.
Oh, and ironically, Google makes more money from ads on iOS than they do from the entire Android "ecosystem," fragmented weedpatch that it is.
"Weedpatch". hahahahahahahahahahhahahahahhahahahahaahahahahaha.
This has nothing to do with Apple's mobile advertising, but rather the ads that are seen by iOS users (probably mostly Google ads).
Again, showing that iOS is more frequently used to browse the Internet, you know like an actual smartphone.
Apple has a "search engine," the fact that so few people understand this simply demonstrates how well the Apple strategy is working.
Share price by itself has nothing to do with "value". It's one part of an equation.
"Siri, please hurt Google where it counts."
...
"I'll get right on that."
This is more about people using their devices than about Apple making anything off of ads.
Yep, and most of the android apps are ad based. Those stats includes all ads?
Ads on a mobile phone? I'll pass. That's why I use an ad blocker.
Quote:
Originally Posted by MacBook Pro
Apple has a "search engine," the fact that so few people understand this simply demonstrates how well the Apple strategy is working.
Yeah, right. Every time we type something in search field in browser we actually send search string to an Apple search engine, masked as Google's and then the Google's search result page is also spoofed, it is actually Apple's. Same with ads, they are actually Apple Ads. Fabulous strategy!