Chris "Coz" Costello
Senior Director of Marketing Research @ Skai
Spending and Pricing Trends Across Paid Search, Social Advertising, and Retail Media
The biggest monthly change in spending in October came from retail media, where the Amazon Prime Big Deal Days event helped propel total spending for the channel up 12%. Growth in paid search and paid social was more modest, at +3% and +4%, respectively, and when we account for the number of days in the month, was actually flat.
Ad prices were mixed. The Amazon sales event put a premium on retail media ads, driving CPC up by 7%. Search CPC was up slightly at +2% while social CPM dropped 3%.
How do you measure up? Check out these benchmarks to see if your programs are on par with your industry peers, ahead of the curve, or behind the curve.
This is a continuation of our monthly paid media snapshot series. As with any benchmark, your mileage may vary, but we hope this provides a bit more context for you as a marketer as you navigate the ups and downs of your program’s performance.
Monthly Industry Snapshot – October 2024
Methodology: Only Skai accounts with spend above a minimum threshold for the previous three months are included in these benchmarks. Please note that the selection criteria used here differ from the Skai Quarterly Trends Report and may not be consistent with those results in all cases. Starting in November 2023, paid social data has been expanded to include Meta, Pinterest, TikTok, LinkedIn, and YouTube.
How to read these charts
Accounts are divided into segments based on increases or decreases of at least 5% in monthly spending and CPC for retail media and paid search or CPM for paid social. Those segments are then plotted on a bubble chart where the x-axis represents the month-over-month (MoM) percent change in pricing for that segment, and the y-axis is the MoM percent change in total spending. Bubble size represents the percent of total Skai accounts.
The diagonal line indicates spending changes that are completely described by the change in pricing. Bubbles above the diagonal mean that ad volume—clicks for retail media and paid search, impressions for paid social—grew faster than pricing. In contrast, bubbles below the diagonal mean that volume grew slower.
Retail Media
Overall, retail media spending grew 12% in October, while average CPC increased 7%. Average spending per day rose 7%.
- 59% of retail media accounts spent more in October than September compared to 26% who spent less, and the average price of a click increased for 44% of accounts and decreased for 25%, with the remaining share for each metric seeing no change.
- Of the segments that showed movement in both spending and pricing, the largest was where both spend and CPC increased, which comprised 35% of all retail media accounts in the analysis. Another 39% showed no change in either spending levels OR the price per click.
Paid Search
Overall paid search spending grew 3% in October, while average CPC increased 2%. Average spending per day was flat.
- 39% of search accounts spent more in October than September compared to 38% who spent less, and the average price of a click increased for 38% of accounts and decreased for 33%, with the remaining share for each metric seeing no change.
- Of the segments that showed movement in both spending and pricing, the largest was where both spend and CPC increased, which comprised 23% of all paid search accounts in the analysis. Another 41% showed no change in either spending levels OR the price per click.
Social Advertising
Overall, paid social spending increased 4% in October, while average CPM decreased 3%. Average spending per day was flat.
- 44% of social accounts spent more in October than September compared to 39% who spent less, and the average price of one thousand impressions increased for 42% of accounts and decreased for 35%, with the remaining share for each metric seeing no change.
- Of the segments that showed movement in both spending and pricing, the largest was where both spend and CPM increased, which comprised 22% of all paid social accounts in the analysis. Another 35% showed no change in either spending levels OR the price per thousand impressions.
Check out more resources from Skai
Come back next month for the most up-to-date data. Until then, you can dive into more of our research via our Quarterly Trends Reports hub.
Please visit The Breakthrough and the Skai Research Center for ongoing insights, analysis, and interviews on all things related to digital advertising.








