YouTube gets 6-second ads that users can’t skip, in attempt to sell things to impatient mobile users

Ads on the site can last for as long as a minute - but have typically given users the option to skip after a few seconds

Andrew Griffin
Tuesday 26 April 2016 14:58 BST
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YouTube is bringing short, unskippable ads that are meant to force young people to watch through them.

Called “Bumper ads”, Google says that the six-second videos are a direct response to the fact that more and more people are watching on mobile phones.

Traditional YouTube videos can last far longer than a minute. But the site tends to give people the option to skip through after just a few seconds, forcing people to watch through just the beginning of a video and decide if they want to stick with it.

The new ads are intended to help companies show ads to people watching on mobile phones, according to Google. Half of people aged 18-49 tend to watch videos on their smartphone even if they’re at home and the ads are specifically targeted for those habits, Google said.

The new YouTube ads are much more successful in having people watch them, as well as remember and consider the products that they are being shown.

Companies will be able to start buying the ads from May, but some have already shown on YouTube during testing.

YouTube already rarely offers much longer unskippable ads, for which companies must pay considerably more. Those can last over a minute, but are very rare and appear to mostly show for people who are using adblockers.

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