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To: THE PHANTOM who wrote (14348)5/3/1999 12:42:00 AM
From: Ian Davidson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 41369
 
Monday May 3, 12:19 am Eastern Time

Internet ad spending up 112 percent in 1998

By Yukari Iwatani

SAN FRANCISCO, May 3 (Reuters) - Internet advertising revenues more than doubled to
$1.92 billion in 1998, the Internet Advertising Bureau (IAB) announced on Monday.

The IAB Internet Advertising Report said ad spending on the Internet grew 112 percent last
year, surpassing the $1.58 billion spent on outdoor advertising. Online spending in 1997 was
$906.5 million.

''Internet advertising is ratcheting up the ladder, so it is taking market share from other segments,'' said Pete Petrusky, director
of new media for Price Waterhouse Coopers, which conducted the study.

Petrusky said that in the fourth quarter alone, online advertising revenue increased by 34 percent, to $655.6 million. Just two
years earlier, in 1996, Internet advertising annual revenue was only $267 million -- the equivalent of the total from only one
month -- December -- in 1998.

Started in 1996, the IAB report compiles data from more than 200 companies representing over 1,200 Web sites. It is
considered a leading indicator of trends in online advertising.

''It is easy for us to forget that the Internet, as a viable advertising medium, is barely four years old,'' Rich LeFurgy, chairman of
the IAB, said in a news release. ''It is astounding, that in such a relatively short period of time, its growth is now measured in
billions of dollars.''

Both Petrusky and LeFurgy expect a sustained growth period in coming years due to increasing online ad budgets and greater
commitments by large traditional advertisers.

The report, which was to be announced at a news conference in San Francisco to coincide with @d:tech, an online advertising
industry conference, also showed that consumer-related advertisements in 1998 continued to lead spending, at 31 percent,
ahead of computer-related ads, at 28 percent, and financial services, at 19 percent.

''The gap between consumer-related and computing is beginning to widen,'' Petrusky said. ''Although computer-related ads
primarily led spending prior to 1998, it is safe to say consumer-related advertisers will continue to lead the charge and the
growth. Advertisers are recognizing the Internet as a branding and direct marketing tool,'' he added.

The percentage share of consumer-related ads, which include retail, automotive and travel categories, was unchanged last year
from 1997. But Petrusky said it was still significant because the total revenue was much higher.

IAB also found that banner ads continued to be the predominant form of advertising, at 56 percent, followed by sponsorships,
at 30 percent, television commercial-like interstitials at 5 percent and e-mail at 1 percent.

Increasing numbers of Web publishers are also offering advertisers hybrid revenue models that combine an upfront CPM, or
cost-per-thousand rate, and a performance-based revenue sharing rate. The report found that 40 percent of ad spending was
based on straight CPM pricing, and 6 percent was based on straight performance deals. Fifty-four percent were hybrid deals.

''It is a win-win situation because the publisher continues to get an upfront valuation and they get a back-end revenue share.
The advertiser gets a discounted CPM rate and placement,'' Petrusky said.