eMarketer reporting:
Device fragmentation is a tenacious problem for content providers and
advertisers. The rapid adoption of smartphones and tablets, the growing
popularity of internet-connected TVs and the promise of web-enabled
everyday devices like watches and eye glasses means digital content will
need to be served to an ever-increasing number of screens, according to
a new eMarketer report, “Responsive Design: A Solution for Publishers, a
Question for Advertisers.”
Responsive web design—a single-URL site configuration that enables
content providers to dynamically adjust content to fit the screen of any
internet-enabled device—is seen as a way of addressing the challenge of
a multiscreen environment.
To understand which screen sizes were most widely used by consumers
worldwide, and determine where to begin when thinking about responsive
design, app measurement firm Flurry Analytics
analyzed the top 200 device models as measured by active users on
Flurry’s app platform, which represented more than 80% of all usage.
Dissecting the data by operating system showed the vast majority of
Android and iOS devices in use on the Flurry platform—and all Window
devices—were “medium phones.”
http://www.emarketer.com/Article/Responsive-Design-Aims-Solve-Multiscreen-Dilemma/1009904
....
Ad serving systems are not fully ready for responsive sites and neither
are marketers. Serving display ads to a fluid content environment
requires extra coding and tagging on the publisher’s side. Ad servers
are likely to evolve quickly to relieve this burden. However, marketers
are wary of the idea of responsive ads for fear a dynamic “one size fits
all” ad will fail to take the site user’s context into account. For
now, advertisers prefer to stay with fixed ads and publishers are happy
to accommodate them.
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