New York-based native ad firm Outbrain has acquired AdNgin, a UI (user interface) optimisation specialist built to enhance the reader experience.
The buyout – made for an undisclosed fee – marks the sixth for Outbrain since its founding in 2006, including the more recent purchases of content discovery platforms Zemanta and Revee as part of the company’s aggressive growth efforts and continued leadership in the native advertising sector.
According to the announcement, Outbrain was attracted to AdNgin’s focus on personalising reader experiences to the visual preferences of the individual consumer, from their “personal preferences to the way interact digitally”, in what the company expects to be a revenue-boosting combination for publishers integrating its native ads.
“AdNgin removes the guesswork of digital advertising, allowing us to automate the optimisation of our reader experience,” said Asaf Porat, head of global operations at Outbrain; “It’s fascinating to see a technology that can make continuous improvements and lead to significant uplifts of RPMs [revenue per mille] and CTRs [click-through rate].”
The merger’s unveiling today (June 6) follows a six-month pilot between the two companies, during which a reported “consistent double-digit” lift in CTR rates proved a deal-breaker for the two teams to unite under the Outbrain banner.
“Joining forces with a native powerhouse like Outbrain, which organically outperforms the competition using interest-based recommendations, couldn’t be a more perfect digital advertising match,” added Amnon Lahav, co-founder of AdNgin.
“This is an incredibly exciting start to a high-converting content adventure, both for us, and the end consumers,” he added.
Lahav will bring over a decade’s experience in UX (user experience) and will be instrumental in collaborating with Outbrain’s business optimisation team at the company’s new head of UI optimisation.
According to eMarketer, native advertising spend in the US is projected to hit $32.9bn (£25m) in 2018, a 31% growth which represents a slight tapering on previous years owed to a reduction in overall budgets allocated to social media platforms, such as Facebook.
However, the same report forecasts that native will account for more than three-quarters of display ad spend on mobile, while just shy of 96% of ad spend on social media will indeed be focused on native ad units.