Two years after adult coloring became a trend, brands are taking
notice. Companies like Lionsgate, Hasbro and Kellogg’s are buying up ad space
inside apps, creating their own coloring apps and designing branded coloring
pages.
For
Lionsgate’s film “Wonder,” the movie studio went to coloring app Recolor to run
a three-month campaign that features a banner ad at the top promoting the
available branded coloring pages. When a user taps the banner, a branded page
appears with four coloring pages and the movie trailer. Hasbro took a similar
approach in Recolor for its October film “My Little Pony.” In September,
Kellogg’s ran a campaign featuring 3-D designs of Tony the Tiger and Pop-Tarts
that users can color in Recolor. And Marvel made its own coloring app, called
Marvel: Color Your Own, featuring characters from its movies.
Brands
say coloring app buys produce higher engagement rates than other types of
in-app advertising. Coloring apps, such as Recolor, Pigment, Unicorn,
ColorBox and Pixel Art, bring in loyal followings since they are driven by
subscriptions rather than in-app purchases, said Adam Blacker, communications
lead at analytics firm Apptopia. Most coloring app users are women in their 30s
— an attractive demographic for brands. Women control 73percent of household purchases.
App Annie estimates that in-app
advertising will triplein revenue to $201 billion by 2021.
“Our clients are beginning to see
coloring apps as a very viable place to place their ads when it comes to
engagement,” said Adam Cohen-Aslatei, vp of marketing at ad agency Jun Group,
which works with consumer goods, beauty, luxury and clothing brands on placing
video ads in a variety of coloring apps.
Coloring apps for adults sit among the top free and top grossing apps in
the Apple iOS Store, according to App Annie data. Of the current top-50
grossing entertainment apps, 11 are coloring apps. Blacker said coloring apps
began reaching the top charts in September, and in December, five coloring apps
were in the top six free apps, sandwiching Netflix at No. 3.
A coloring page in the Marvel: Color Your Own coloring app.
Coloring apps are following in the
direction in-app advertising is moving toward: delivering interactive ads to
users in exchange for something they want. Most of the time, ads within
coloring apps appear as opt-in options. Users can choose to watch a branded
video to unlock specific coloring pages. Cohen-Aslatei said the completion rate
for Jun Group’s clients is 91-95 percent, which dwarfs the industry
average of 75 percent for a 30-second video.
Cohen-Aslatei did not reveal which or how many clients the agency is
working with for placement in coloring apps, but did say that ads are bought on
a CPV basis, much like video ads on other types of apps. Jun Group determines
the right user in the coloring app based on first-party data and shows them the
ad. Once the person clicks on the ad, and after the 15- or 30-second video
plays, the person unlocks a premium coloring book. The video must be
completed for the premium book to be unlocked and Cohen-Aslatei said the agency
only charges clients once a full video is watched. So if a person watches only
half of a video, the client is not charged. Once the video ends, the user is
shown an end card with more branding.
Unlike with game apps where brands mostly have the choice to
advertise using banners or pre-roll videos, some coloring apps offer different
ad formats that can help boost engagement, like Kuuhubb-owned Recolor, which
allows advertisers to run their own branded designs. Brands buy these on a CPM
basis.
Recolor,
a subscription-based app that charges its 6 million monthly users $10 a month
for unlimited coloring designs, has worked with Kellogg’s, Hasbro and Lionsgate
in the past six months to create their own “coloring books.”
A Kellogg’s-branded coloring page featuring Tony the Tiger in coloring app Recolor
Tero Kuittinen, co-founder and chief strategist
at Kuuhubb, said branded coloring books on Recolor see an average engagement
rate of 10 minutes. For comparison, the average engagement rate of a custom
interactive ad is 43.7 seconds. Kuittinen said
branded banners at the top of the page get an average of 60 million monthly
views.
A Pop-Tart themed coloring page sponsored by Kellogg’s in the Recolor app
Brands that have launched their own coloring ads outside of
coloring apps are also seeing high engagement numbers. In December, shoe brand
Timberland launched a coloring book ad in a number of gaming and creative apps.
Users could color in the black-and-white image of hip-hop artist Nas as a
cartoon video ad for the new shoe played beneath. In the seven weeks the
ad campaign ran in October and November, 230,000 people interacted with the ad,
with almost half watching the entire video ad, said Mike Isabella, director of
consumer engagement at Timberland.
Studies have
shown that coloring apps can reduce stress and anxiety, so brands also see the
apps as a means to connect with users when they are in an open and positive
mood, said Cohen-Aslatei. “When you are relaxed and focused,” he said, “a brand
message is a positive experience.”
No comments:
Post a Comment