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Nielsen: Kids Encounter Ads Less Than AdultsKids 2-11 endure the lowest level of ad clutter on the Internet, followed by the 12-17 groupOct 28, 2008 ![]() The data appears to buck conventional wisdom that the younger, social networking and instant messaging-loving generation is constantly bombarded by banner ads. Nielsen's analysis found that kids 2-11 endure the lowest level of ad clutter on the Internet, while the 12-17 group experiences the second lowest level, based on the company's new "clutter expose" metric for online advertising. Meanwhile, the 65 and older Web surfing crowd sees more ads than any group, reported Nielsen, which found that higher ad clutter correlates with consumers' ages. The researcher said its new clutter exposure measure pieces together data from a variety of sources, including it's own Web site audience reports as well as ad campaign data, page views, impressions, time spent and even ad pixel numbers. The hope is to give advertisers information on where on the Web they can place ads without getting drowned out. "Used in conjunction with other metrics, such as unique audience, the clutter measure provides a relative benchmark to help media buyers understand the Web sites that provide the optimal level of impressions within an acceptable amount of clutter," said Jon Gibs, vp, media analytics, Nielsen Online. According to the report, kids clutter scores are lower in part because many Web sites aimed at children (such as Webkinz) carry little or no advertising. Meanwhile teens who congregate on sites like MySpace and Facebook also encounter low levels of clutter -- perhaps because these sites often have trouble monetizing individual profile pages. Adweek is a unit of the Nielsen Co. Nielsen: Kids Encounter Ads Less Than AdultsKids 2-11 endure the lowest level of ad clutter on the Internet, followed by the 12-17 groupOct 28, 2008
The data appears to buck conventional wisdom that the younger, social networking and instant messaging-loving generation is constantly bombarded by banner ads. Nielsen's analysis found that kids 2-11 endure the lowest level of ad clutter on the Internet, while the 12-17 group experiences the second lowest level, based on the company's new "clutter expose" metric for online advertising. Meanwhile, the 65 and older Web surfing crowd sees more ads than any group, reported Nielsen, which found that higher ad clutter correlates with consumers' ages. The researcher said its new clutter exposure measure pieces together data from a variety of sources, including it's own Web site audience reports as well as ad campaign data, page views, impressions, time spent and even ad pixel numbers. The hope is to give advertisers information on where on the Web they can place ads without getting drowned out. "Used in conjunction with other metrics, such as unique audience, the clutter measure provides a relative benchmark to help media buyers understand the Web sites that provide the optimal level of impressions within an acceptable amount of clutter," said Jon Gibs, vp, media analytics, Nielsen Online. According to the report, kids clutter scores are lower in part because many Web sites aimed at children (such as Webkinz) carry little or no advertising. Meanwhile teens who congregate on sites like MySpace and Facebook also encounter low levels of clutter -- perhaps because these sites often have trouble monetizing individual profile pages. Adweek is a unit of the Nielsen Co.
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