In case you live under a rock, AppLovin is the hot topic in DTC right now.

AppLovin is a mobile game & app ad network that is breaking into the DTC space with a new algorithm, new ad placements, and a self-service ad platform. While traditionally mobile app ads were focused on mobile games, Applovin is leading the way with ecommerce ads. And the results are insane: Sean Frank from Ridge says it’s delivering “Meta-like results.”

After a year of referral-only access, AppLovin is now open to all advertisers.

I’m hyped about AppLovin because it offers an opportunity for cheap new customer acquisition. Marketers are still focused on last-click, a habit we’ve tried to break them from. The real money: can a new ad platform give you profitable net new customer acquisition at scale? It sure looks like AppLovin is doing just that.  

These ad placements are inside mobile games. Some are skippable, others gamers watch for 60 seconds in order to unlock some in-game reward. It’s a familiar context for marketers - high attention, high engagement, TV-style storytelling - but in an unfamiliar combination. It’s like a voluntary, gamified television ad on your phone, inside a game you probably love (or at least can’t put down.)

As a result of this novel mashup of features, AppLovin operates different than most ad platforms. The creative demands are unique. This blog post from AppLovin CEO Adam Foroughi best explains how to make good AppLovin creatives.

But why does it work so well for ecommerce? Seven hypotheses, with supporting research. 

  1. It’s a new type of ad that people weren’t expecting to see. These mobile game ad placements… you know what they used to look like. Users of these games are probably fatigued from the ads they’ve been seeing. The creative genius of modern DTC marketers probably makes our new ecomm ads feel like a breath of fresh air. One part of this great engagement behavior is the novelty of it all. Not to mention the improvement in quality.

  2. The reach is fantastic. AppLovin’s network reaches 1.4 billion users, putting it on par with TikTok’s 1.5 billion. Fifty-five percent of adult Americans play mobile games once per week, which will soon put that audience over 200 million people. For comparison: Americans play more mobile games than watch cable television. And it isn’t just low-income people either.

  3. The context is perfect. Escaping stress and boredom are the core reasons for mobile gaming. This puts people in a different headspace: instead of doomscrolling, they’re looking to amuse themselves. This opens their hearts and minds to the idea of a new product, of engaging with a new novel ad that surprised them. It’s a different psychological context than television watchers, who use commercial breaks for the bathroom or snacks. Or people stuck in traffic looking at billboards.

    The unique psychological context of these ads has a huge - if difficult to measure - impact on their performance. We don’t talk enough about an audience’s psychological context and how it affects ads. Matthew Sweezy, Principal of Marketing Insights at Salesforce, wrote a great book on this.

  4. You’re sliding ads inside a dopamine hit. These games are obviously designed to generate dopamine hits that keep users engaged. The longer a user stays in-app, the more ads they receive, the more money the app makes. Slot machines have mastered this. While Addiction.com recognizes that mobile games are a rising addiction, scientists are still unsure if video games are technically “addicting” or not. Either way, anybody who has played a video game knows it feels good to win at the game. How does this benefit marketers?

    Brand association. It’s not just about what platforms, news websites, or communities you’re associating with: it’s the emotional context. Legacy brands understand this. They often refuse to run ads on porn websites or will pull down ad spend during stressful news cycles. If your ad is appearing sandwiched between two stressful news stories, then your ad is less likely to be impactful.

    But on AppLovin, your audience just got a tiny dopamine hit from beating their Candy Crush high score. They’re feeling good - prime time to hit them with an ad.

  5. The ad formats make it easy to re-use existing assets from other ad platforms. While most vertical-video-focused ad platforms will tell you to copy over existing assets that work elsewhere, there’s often a cultural or form component that holds back performance. What creative works on YouTube Shorts, for example, may not work on TikTok because of the cultural differences between the two apps. Or even the editing style might make the creative feel “out of place” which will pull down performance.

    On AppLovin, this does not apply. The sheer novelty of the placement and the stark differences between the ad and the game content means this is a blank slate for you to play with. In this way, I believe that pre-existing assets can outperform on Applovin without too much adjustment, which is how brands were able to see such great results so far.

  6. AppLovin is doing a great job with the tech. From the algorithm itself to the support provided, Applovin’s done an excellent job speaking to the needs of the DTC community. They understand what performance marketers value and what results are required for us to succeed. They’ve put together a ton of education on how to succeed at AppLovin ads. Read these first, don’t go in blind.

  7. When tracked with Northbeam, it gives a whole new set of touchpoints to the customer journey. Let’s face it: every ad is a battle for a user’s attention. In the limited amount of time that a user is holding their phone, they are available to receive ads within whatever app they’re using. Before AppLovin, users on mobile games weren’t available to DTC advertisers. That’s a whole slice of time now available to us.

    Now DTC advertisers can reach their audiences across the most common apps they’re using: social, email, and finally mobile games. It’s a huge win for frequency, brand awareness, and reach. If you’re using Northbeam, you can track all those touchpoints in one place and measure their profitability. 

Side note: Northbeam is sponsoring Camp Commerce, a luxury summer camp for ecommerce leaders. It’s invite-only and will feature 200 of the smartest minds in ecommerce. The value from these types of events are insane, this is where you’ll hear what’s working — before everybody else catches up.

This year the team is doing a giveaway for a lucky winner: free transportation from anywhere in the US, lodging in Manhattan, attendance to the event, and a helicopter commute. You and one guest get to experience this iconic meeting of the minds in style.

Sign up for the giveaway here! You’re literally the first people hearing about this. The real press will go out after the holiday. I hope to catch you there!

📺 Thinking about CTV? We’re here to help. We’re partnering with QRY and MNTN to describe exactly how to scale via connected TV ads. More on this as we get closer to the event.

🎨 Meta finally put a name on its Cannes creative engine: the Creative Exploration Tool. It tests, scales, and explains your winners, allegedly.

🔧 Jon Loomer dropped a checklist for when Meta ads get clicks but zero conversions. Clicks, landing page, offer, pixel, CAPI. Bookmark it before your next fire drill.

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