Your Display Ad Isn't Being Ignored. It Isn't Being Seen.
The industry standard definition of a viewable display impression is: 50% of the ad's pixels visible for at least 1 continuous second. That's it. Half the ad, for one second.
If your campaign reports 85% viewability and you feel good about that, consider what it actually means. Eighty-five percent of your ads had at least half their pixels visible for at least one second. That's the bar. Not that anyone looked at it. Not that it registered. Just that it was technically on-screen.
This matters because a large share of display advertising spend is evaluated on viewability as a proxy for effectiveness — and viewability, as defined by the MRC standard, is a profoundly weak proxy.
The Pages Your Ads Are Loading On
A viewable impression on a page with 12 competing ad units is not the same as a viewable impression on a page where the user came to read something they care about.
On high-ad-density pages — which are common across the MFA-heavy long tail of the Display network — users have developed effective ad blindness. Eye-tracking studies consistently show that users on ad-heavy pages spend significantly less time on any individual ad unit. The visual competition is too high. Attention is distributed across the page in ways that make sustained focus on any single ad nearly impossible.
Your ad loads. It counts as viewable. No one looked at it.
Why This Doesn't Show Up in Your Metrics
Your reporting dashboard shows impressions and viewability rates. It probably shows click-through rate. What it doesn't show you is the attention quality behind those impressions.
High ad density pages tend to have lower CTRs — but "lower CTR" understates what's actually happening. A CTR of 0.04% on a premium editorial site and a CTR of 0.04% on an MFA site are recording the same metric, but represent completely different commercial realities. On the editorial site, the 0.04% may represent genuine interest from a relevant audience. On the MFA site, it may represent accidental fat-finger clicks or bot activity.
Cost-per-click and cost-per-conversion metrics will eventually reflect this difference. But on broad Display campaigns with many thousands of placements, the signal is diluted across enough clean inventory that the worst placements don't visibly drag the numbers.
Ad Density as a Quality Filter
If you want to improve the quality of attention your display ads receive, ad density is a tractable starting point.
Sites with 10+ ad units per page are poor attention environments by definition — the visual competition is too intense, and the fact that the site chose to maximize ad density tells you something about the publisher's relationship with their audience. Sites that respect their readers don't cover every inch of the page with ad units.
The practical filter: identify placements in your campaign with high impression volume and low engagement (near-zero CTR, high post-click bounce rate), then check those domains manually for ad density. If the site is running 8+ ads per page, exclude it. The engagement data and the structural signal point the same direction.
The Attention Economy Actually Matters
There's a real difference between an ad appearing in an environment where the reader is engaged and one where they're bouncing. The former can influence brand recall, create purchase consideration, and drive eventual conversion. The latter is a line item in your spend report with no downstream effect.
This distinction gets lost when campaign management focuses on impression volume and CPM efficiency. A lower CPM on a high-density page is not necessarily better value than a higher CPM on a site where someone is actually reading. The math on cost-per-meaningful-exposure is often reversed from what the CPM numbers suggest.
Placements on sites with real audiences and reasonable ad environments are the ones worth paying for. The cleanup work — identifying and excluding the high-density, low-attention placements — is what makes the rest of your targeting actually work.