Facebook
has acquired LiveRail - a tech start-up that helps companies place more
relevant ads in the videos that appear on their websites and apps.
LiveRail
also provides a real-time bidding platform for marketers looking to place ads
on online videos.
The
firms did not reveal the financial terms, but some reports indicate that
Facebook paid between $400m and $500m (£233m and £291m) to buy the firm.
Online
video advertising is forecast to
grow robustly in the coming years.
"More
relevant ads will be more interesting and engaging to people watching online
video, and more effective for marketers too," Brian Boland, vice president
of ads product marketing and atlas at Facebook, said in a blog post.
"Publishers
will benefit as well, because more relevant ads will help them make the most
out of every opportunity they have to show an ad."
According
to LiveRail, it delivers more than seven billion video ads per month.
Growing importance
The
online and mobile ad sector has been growing rapidly in recent years.
According
to a study published in April, more than £1bn was spent on mobile ads in the UK
alone in 2013, a rise of 93% on the previous year.
Some
other estimates suggest that online video advertising revenues are likely to
hit $6bn in the US this year.
As a
result, a growing number of firms - especially social networking platforms such
as Facebook and Twitter - have been looking at ways to attract more advertisers
and tap into the sector's growth.
Earlier
this year, Facebook said it would start serving ads to third-party mobile apps
via a new advertising network.
Twitter,
acquired MoPub mobile advertising exchange last year.
MoPub
acts as a mediation service, allowing marketers to manage the placement of ads
across several networks, including Facebook's.
Analysts
said that given their large user base, social networks were likely to get a big
share of this growing market.
"It
is no longer about saying, 'My ad was was seen by so many people,'" said
Sanjana Chappalli, Asia-Pac head of LEWIS Pulse, a firm specialising in digital
marketing.
"But
it is now about knowing who those people are and how they have responded to the
information fed to them.
"And
on that front, social networks enjoy a tremendous advantage over everyone
else." she added.
Meanwhile,
Google's AdMob and Apple's iAds platforms and several other smaller firms are
also competing to provide the adverts shown on mobile phones and tablets.
Millennial
Media, Flurry and Nexage are among the firms promoting their own versions of
"programmatic buying" - a way for firms to target their ads at a
specific type of consumer via a chosen type of app at an appropriate time and
geographic location.
BBC
Business
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