• Home
  • News
  • Insights
  • Columns
    • From The Archives
    • Hawk Talk
    • The Take
    • The Streaming Madman
  • Topics
    • Advertising
    • Business
    • Entertainment
    • Industry
    • Programming
    • Technology
    • Sports
    • Subscriptions
  • Reports
    • Streaming Analytics in the Age of AI
Menu
  • Home
  • News
  • Insights
  • Columns
    • From The Archives
    • Hawk Talk
    • The Take
    • The Streaming Madman
  • Topics
    • Advertising
    • Business
    • Entertainment
    • Industry
    • Programming
    • Technology
    • Sports
    • Subscriptions
  • Reports
    • Streaming Analytics in the Age of AI
Subscribe

Roku’s Latest Ad Test Backfires—But It’s Hardly Their First Experiment

Kirby Grines
March 18, 2025
in The Take, Advertising, Business, News, Technology
Reading Time: 2 mins read
0
Roku Expands Reach to 90 Million Households, Encompassing Half of U.S. Broadband Homes

Roku’s latest test—forcing users to sit through an unskippable video ad before even reaching the home screen—wasn’t just annoying. It was an immediate “hell no” from users who didn’t sign up for an ad break before they could even pick which other ad-filled streaming service they wanted to use.

The test was small, but the backlash? Huge. Roku forums, Reddit, and social media were filled with threats to dump Roku devices in favor of Apple TV or Chromecast. This wasn’t just about an inconvenient ad—it was about the creeping realization that even if you’re paying for ad-free streaming services, your TV’s OS might still be running its own ad playbook in the background.

And let’s be real: Was this just a test? Or a carefully placed feeler for an eventual “pay to remove ads” upsell? Given the industry’s current obsession with monetizing every second of screen time, it wouldn’t be surprising.

Roku’s Home Screen Has Always Been an Ad Playground

For those who’ve been paying attention, Roku has been quietly innovating in home screen advertising for years. The interactive ad units hidden inside the hero image? That’s not just an ad—it’s a clickable engagement tool designed to let non-media brands tap into Roku’s massive user base. Whether it’s a trailer for an upcoming movie, a music playlist, or fast food, Roku has been figuring out ways to sell them direct access to streamers who otherwise wouldn’t be able to connect with their brand. 

In fact, my previous company, Float Left, built a lot of those ad experiences. We called them “mini-sites”—interactive ad hubs that lived within the Roku OS. It was an early sign that Roku wasn’t just selling ad space to streamers; it was building an entire ecosystem where any company with the right budget could target you, the user, on your home screen.

The Take

Testing new ad formats isn’t inherently bad—it’s how companies figure out what their users will tolerate. But this one? Roku might want to tuck it away and pretend it never happened. Even users who’ve begrudgingly accepted home screen video ads weren’t ready for a power-on ad roadblock.

Roku’s leadership has always been vocal about balancing ad monetization with user satisfaction. But with Fire TV, Google TV, and even Samsung ramping up their own ad strategies, Roku has to be careful not to push its loyal users straight into the arms of the competition.

If this was a test to see how much ad intrusion people would accept before they riot, well… consider the results conclusive.

Tags: ad-supported streamingadvertisingCTV advertisingFire TVGoogle TVhome screen adsrokuSamsungstreaming adsstreaming business
Share219Tweet137Send

Related Posts

Starz Steps Into the Spotlight. The Growing Pains Are Real

Starz Steps Into the Spotlight. The Growing Pains Are Real Kirby Grines

May 30, 2025
‘Bluey’ Boasts 70B+ Minutes Viewed Since 2024, Leading Disney Jr. Domination In Preschool Programming Alongside ‘Spidey And His Amazing Friends,’ ‘Mickey Mouse Clubhouse’ & More

‘Bluey’ Boasts 70B+ Minutes Viewed Since 2024, Leading Disney Jr. Domination In Preschool Programming Alongside ‘Spidey And His Amazing Friends,’ ‘Mickey Mouse Clubhouse’ & More Deadline

May 31, 2025
Starz, Newly Separated From Lionsgate, Sees Quarterly Revenue Drop 6% as It Takes $168 Million Content Impairment Charge

Starz, Newly Separated From Lionsgate, Sees Quarterly Revenue Drop 6% as It Takes $168 Million Content Impairment Charge Variety

May 30, 2025
More than 7 million streaming account passwords were leaked in 2024, including Netflix and other streamers

More than 7 million streaming account passwords were leaked in 2024, including Netflix and other streamers The Streamable

May 29, 2025
Next Post
Netflix Is Beating the Streaming Competition at Leveraging Sports Documentaries | Charts

Netflix Is Beating the Streaming Competition at Leveraging Sports Documentaries | Charts

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent News

Starz Steps Into the Spotlight. The Growing Pains Are Real

Starz Steps Into the Spotlight. The Growing Pains Are Real

Kirby Grines
May 30, 2025
Amazon, Disney+, and Netflix Now Control 92% of SVOD Sports Content

Amazon, Disney+, and Netflix Now Control 92% of SVOD Sports Content

The Streaming Wars Staff
May 30, 2025
‘Bluey’ Boasts 70B+ Minutes Viewed Since 2024, Leading Disney Jr. Domination In Preschool Programming Alongside ‘Spidey And His Amazing Friends,’ ‘Mickey Mouse Clubhouse’ & More

‘Bluey’ Boasts 70B+ Minutes Viewed Since 2024, Leading Disney Jr. Domination In Preschool Programming Alongside ‘Spidey And His Amazing Friends,’ ‘Mickey Mouse Clubhouse’ & More

Deadline
May 31, 2025
Starz, Newly Separated From Lionsgate, Sees Quarterly Revenue Drop 6% as It Takes $168 Million Content Impairment Charge

Starz, Newly Separated From Lionsgate, Sees Quarterly Revenue Drop 6% as It Takes $168 Million Content Impairment Charge

Variety
May 30, 2025

The sharpest takes in streaming. No ads. No fluff. Just the truth, curated by people who actually work in the industry.

About

About

Have a Tip?

Contact

Podcast

Sponsorship

Join the Newsletter

Copyright © 2024 by 43Twenty.

Privacy Policy

Term of Use

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Insights
  • Columns
    • From The Archives
    • Hawk Talk
    • The Streaming Madman
    • The Take
  • Topics
    • Advertising
    • Business
    • Entertainment
    • Industry
    • Sports
    • Programming
    • Subscriptions
    • Technology
  • Reports
    • Streaming Analytics in the Age of AI

Copyright © 2024 by 43Twenty.