Ads Are Rebuilding TV—Measurement Is the Bottleneck
Citing Omdia projections, the article says global TV and online video revenue is expected to rise from $775B in 2025 to $1.03T by 2030, with online video advertising growing from $309B to $540B and increasing advertising’s share of total revenue from 40% to 53%. It argues that industry measurement and pricing systems are not keeping pace with fragmented streaming consumption, pointing to issues such as Nielsen’s timing challenges ahead of upfronts and estimating streaming has recaptured only about two-thirds of ad dollars lost from linear TV. The piece also projects social video platforms (YouTube, TikTok, Meta) will account for roughly $400B in streaming ad revenue by 2030, aided by closed-loop measurement and optimization compared with more fragmented measurement across ad-supported streaming services.
Key Takeaways
- Omdia forecasts online video advertising rising from $309B (2025) to $540B (2030), making advertising 53% of total video revenue (up from 40%).
- Linear TV declines structurally: linear ad revenue is projected to slip from $123B to $113B, while pay-TV revenue edges down from $169B to $159B by 2030.
- Measurement is now a commercial risk: the article points to Nielsen timing challenges ahead of upfronts as a symptom of an ecosystem struggling to transact cleanly across streaming fragmentation.
- Streaming has recaptured only ~two-thirds of ad dollars lost from linear, suggesting “value leakage” driven by inconsistent measurement and lack of standardization.
- Social video (YouTube, TikTok, Meta) is positioned to capture disproportionate growth—projected around ~$400B in streaming ad revenue by 2030—benefiting from closed-loop measurement and optimization.
Why It Matters
The next TV war isn’t SVOD vs. AVOD—it’s open ecosystems vs. closed-loop ad machines. As ads become the majority revenue driver, whoever can prove outcomes fastest will set pricing power and win budget share. That’s why social platforms keep compounding: discovery, measurement, and monetization run as one system, while many streamers still stitch together identity, frequency, and attribution across partners. The “meme” to watch: measurement is the new moat. If streaming can’t standardize and speed up proof, dollars won’t “move from linear”—they’ll bypass CTV entirely.
Read full article at thestreamingwars.tv