Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. Mobile
  4. Photography
  5. News

Instagram is rapidly increasing the number of ads users see

Add as a preferred source on Google

Likely seeking for more ways to generate revenue through the photo app, Facebook has significantly increased the volume of ad impressions that are being served to Instagram users over the last few months. Detailed by an advertising network called Brand Networks, the company is reporting a massive uptick in available ad impressions during the last six months of 2015.

Specifically, Brand Networks served approximately 50 million ad impressions on Instagram during August 2015. That number doubled to 100 million in September and continued to dramatically rise until breaking through 650 million impressions during December 2015. Brand Networks expects this trend to continue over the first three months of 2016, potentially hitting one billion ad impressions by March 2016.

Recommended Videos

Interestingly, a large volume of these ads were video rather than traditional static image banner ads. Speaking with Business Insider, Brand Networks CEO Jamie Tedford saidThis content type (video) is experiencing a meteoric ascent to prominence in Instagram ad campaigns much faster than expected. A shocking 92% of the ad impressions we served on Cyber Monday were video ads.”

Reaching a specific type of Instagram user can be expensive depending on subject matter. Fashion advertisers, for instance, pay significantly more to reach an Instagram user than advertisers in the real estate or travel industry.

Of course, Facebook runs the risk of annoying Instagram users with this massive shift into serving more online advertisements. If users dislike the uptick in advertisements, they may start looking for alternative apps to Instagram or simply just stop using the app entirely. Facebook hasn’t reported on growth in Instagram users since hitting 400 million users during late September 2015. Roughly 75 percent of those users live outside the United States; a fact that likely forces advertisers to target ads to users in specific regions of the world.

Mike Flacy
By day, I'm the content and social media manager for High-Def Digest, Steve's Digicams and The CheckOut on Ben's Bargains…
WhatsApp pausing usernames for hundreds of millions of users over fraud fears
WhatsApp’s phone-number privacy feature runs into scrutiny in India
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

WhatsApp’s plan to let people use usernames instead of phone numbers has run into trouble in India, its biggest market. This newly introduced feature is meant to improve privacy by letting users connect without immediately sharing their phone number. Indian authorities, however, are worried that the same feature could make scams and impersonation harder to control.

India's Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) has asked WhatsApp to pause the username rollout until consultations with the government are complete. That is a major intervention, since WhatsApp has more than 500 million users in the country, who rely on the app for their everyday personal and professional communications.

Read more
X wants you to go live with its new streaming hub, and is offering $1 million to make it worth your while
Live Studio brings scheduling, audience controls, and real-time analytics to X's Creator Studio, but the platform hasn't said how it plans to split the $1 million among creators.
X Live Studio screengrab

X is making a serious push to become a destination for live video, launching a new tool called Live Studio and pledging $1 million in creator payouts to attract streamers to the platform. Nikita Bier, X's head of product, announced the tool on X with a demo showcasing how it works.

Stream controls, real-time analytics, and a $1 million payout

Read more
Reddit is ending anonymous browsing on old Reddit, and longtime users are not happy
Reddit's old interface is getting a login requirement, and its long term future looks uncertain.
Reddit

If you have been quietly browsing old.reddit.com without logging in, that option is going away. Reddit just announced it will require everyone to log in to use old.reddit.com, with the change landing sometime over the next month. A Reddit admin broke the news on the platform, calling it part of a push to tighten how automated systems get into the site.

Why is Reddit locking down the old interface?

Read more