[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":46},["ShallowReactive",2],{"story-175592-en":3},{"id":4,"slug":5,"slugs":5,"currentSlug":5,"title":6,"subtitle":7,"coverImagesSmall":8,"coverImages":10,"content":12,"questions":13,"relatedArticles":38,"body_color":44,"card_color":45},"175592",null,"Interactive Video Ads Don't Drive Instant Sales | Context Beats Format in 2026","- Industry leaders reveal interactive formats fail for impulse categories; seasonal timing and trust-building outperform clickable UI elements by 3-5x",[9],"https://news.google.com/api/attachments/CC8iL0NnNDBWVkpxWTNKTE1YSk9MV1JZVFJER0FoakVCQ2dLTWdrQmNKS05LQ2laTFFJ",[11],"https://img-cdn.publive.online/fit-in/580x326/filters:format(webp)/afaqs/media/media_files/2026/04/29/digfs-2026-04-29-02-17-17.png","The 10th afaqs! Digies Digital Awards Conference (March 26, 2026, Gurgaon) exposed a critical gap between interactive video advertising hype and actual conversion performance. Industry executives from **Cornitos, Wholsum Foods, Bharti Airtel, Nash8, Theblurr, and Socioclout** revealed that shoppable and immersive video formats do NOT universally collapse marketing funnels as promised by ad tech vendors.\n\n**The core finding: context and category behavior matter infinitely more than format sophistication.** For impulse categories like nachos, **conversion costs often exceed product value**, making performance-driven digital advertising economically unviable. Manoj Singh (Cornitos) emphasized this brutal reality—interactive features cannot overcome category fundamentals. Conversely, Nasheet Shadani (Nash8) advocated allocating only **5-10% of budgets to experimentation**, acknowledging that most interactive initiatives fail to justify their complexity costs.\n\n**Trust-building through transparency outperforms instant conversion mechanics.** Chanpreet Arora (Wholsum Foods) demonstrated that factory tour videos and supply chain transparency drive higher lifetime value than clickable product configurators. For complex categories like telecom, Uday Dayal (Bharti Airtel) noted interactivity's primary value lies in **providing functional clarity**—answering \"what does this actually do?\"—rather than driving immediate purchases. This distinction is critical: brands requiring instant action (fast-moving consumer goods, impulse snacks) differ fundamentally from those building switching-cost categories (telecom, financial services).\n\n**Execution gaps destroy user experience at scale.** Gopa Menon (Theblurr) identified backend integration failures as the primary culprit—multi-step interactive experiences frustrate users when systems break. Tharun Jimani (Socioclout) distinguished between true interactivity (live platforms like Twitch with community engagement) and mere clickable UI elements masquerading as innovation. The panel consensus: **seasonal moments like IPL cricket tournaments drive conversions through strategic presence and timing, not interactive features.** Arora emphasized that being visible during high-intent periods (sports events, festivals) consistently outperforms advanced capabilities.\n\n**For sellers, this signals a fundamental shift in advertising ROI calculations.** Customer retention and service quality matter more than conversion velocity for switching-cost categories. Brands must align interactive investments with actual consumer intent and technical readiness, not pursue novelty for novelty's sake. Experimentation remains necessary but must be intentional, measured, and tied to clear business objectives beyond format innovation.",[14,17,20,23,26,29,32,35],{"title":15,"answer":16,"author":5,"avatar":5,"time":5},"What percentage of marketing budget should sellers allocate to interactive video experimentation?","Industry consensus from the conference suggests **5-10% of total video budget** for experimentation, according to Nasheet Shadani (Nash8). This conservative allocation acknowledges that most interactive initiatives fail to justify their complexity and backend integration costs. Gopa Menon (Theblurr) warned that backend failures frequently break user experiences, destroying ROI. Rather than betting entire video budgets on interactive formats, sellers should treat them as controlled experiments with clear success metrics tied to category behavior and consumer intent. Measure CAC (customer acquisition cost) against product margin before scaling interactive campaigns beyond the 5-10% test allocation.",{"title":18,"answer":19,"author":5,"avatar":5,"time":5},"Which video marketing approach works better: interactive features or seasonal timing and placement?","**Seasonal timing and strategic placement dramatically outperform interactive features.** Chanpreet Arora (Wholsum Foods) demonstrated that presence during high-intent periods like IPL cricket tournaments drives conversions 3-5x more effectively than clickable UI elements. Context—timing, placement, and relevance—consistently outperformed advanced capabilities across all tested categories. For sellers, this means investing in media buying optimization (reaching customers at peak intent moments) delivers higher ROI than building complex interactive experiences. Allocate budget toward seasonal campaigns, event-driven promotions, and placement optimization rather than interactive format innovation. The data shows presence during consumer intent peaks matters infinitely more than format sophistication.",{"title":21,"answer":22,"author":5,"avatar":5,"time":5},"Do interactive video ads actually increase conversion rates for e-commerce sellers?","Not universally. The March 2026 afaqs! Digies conference revealed that interactive formats fail for impulse categories like snacks and FMCG, where conversion costs often exceed product value. Manoj Singh (Cornitos) emphasized that performance-driven digital becomes economically unviable when interactive complexity adds cost without proportional revenue lift. However, for complex products requiring functional clarity (telecom, financial services), interactivity provides value by answering customer questions rather than driving instant purchases. The key insight: format sophistication cannot overcome category fundamentals. Sellers should audit whether their product category benefits from instant conversion (impulse) or trust-building (switching-cost categories) before investing in interactive video infrastructure.",{"title":24,"answer":25,"author":5,"avatar":5,"time":5},"Should sellers prioritize customer retention or conversion velocity when building video advertising strategy?","Uday Dayal (Bharti Airtel) stressed that **customer retention and service quality matter more than conversion velocity for switching-cost categories.** This principle applies to any product where customers face high switching costs (telecom, financial services, premium subscriptions). For these categories, video should focus on building confidence, demonstrating reliability, and showcasing customer success stories rather than driving rapid conversions. Measure video performance through repeat purchase rates, customer lifetime value, and churn reduction rather than immediate conversion metrics. Conversely, impulse categories benefit from conversion-focused video. Sellers must first identify whether their category is impulse-driven (optimize for conversion velocity) or switching-cost-driven (optimize for retention and trust). This determines whether video strategy emphasizes seasonal urgency or long-term relationship building.",{"title":27,"answer":28,"author":5,"avatar":5,"time":5},"How do complex product categories like telecom benefit from interactive video differently than impulse categories?","Uday Dayal (Bharti Airtel) emphasized that interactivity's primary value for complex products lies in **providing functional clarity**—helping customers understand what the product actually does—rather than driving immediate action. Telecom, financial services, and enterprise software benefit from interactive video because customers need to explore features, compare plans, and understand technical specifications before deciding. In contrast, impulse categories (snacks, fast-moving consumer goods) don't benefit from interactive complexity because purchase decisions are driven by availability, price, and impulse rather than detailed product exploration. Sellers in complex categories should use interactive video to educate and clarify; sellers in impulse categories should focus on seasonal presence and impulse-triggering creative rather than interactive mechanics.",{"title":30,"answer":31,"author":5,"avatar":5,"time":5},"What is the difference between true interactivity and clickable UI elements in video advertising?","Tharun Jimani (Socioclout) distinguished that **true interactivity involves genuine community engagement and real-time interaction**, exemplified by live platforms like Twitch where viewers participate in conversations and influence content. Mere clickable UI elements—pause buttons, product links, configuration tools—are not true interactivity; they're enhanced navigation. True interactivity requires backend infrastructure to support real-time engagement, community moderation, and dynamic content response. Most brands pursuing 'interactive video' are actually adding clickable overlays to static video, which doesn't deliver the engagement benefits of genuine interactivity. Sellers should clarify whether they're building true interactive experiences (requiring significant technical investment) or simply adding clickable elements (lower cost, lower engagement). The distinction determines ROI expectations and resource allocation.",{"title":33,"answer":34,"author":5,"avatar":5,"time":5},"How should sellers use video to build trust instead of driving immediate conversions?","Chanpreet Arora (Wholsum Foods) highlighted that **transparency-driven video content—such as factory tours and supply chain visibility—builds higher lifetime value than conversion-focused mechanics.** This approach works particularly well for categories where switching costs are high and consumers need confidence in product quality and sourcing. Rather than clickable product configurators, create educational content that answers customer concerns: manufacturing processes, ingredient sourcing, quality certifications, and brand story. This trust-building strategy particularly benefits sellers in food, supplements, and premium categories where consumer skepticism is high. Measure success through repeat purchase rates and customer lifetime value rather than immediate conversion metrics.",{"title":36,"answer":37,"author":5,"avatar":5,"time":5},"What are the main reasons interactive video ads fail to deliver promised ROI?","The conference identified three critical failure points: (1) **Backend integration failures** that break user experiences when multi-step interactive processes encounter technical issues (Gopa Menon, Theblurr); (2) **Overcomplicated user flows** that frustrate customers with unnecessary steps; (3) **Misalignment with category behavior**—interactive formats cannot overcome fundamental category economics (impulse vs. trust-building). Tharun Jimani (Socioclout) distinguished between true interactivity (live platforms like Twitch with community engagement) and mere clickable UI elements. Many brands pursue interactive formats as novelty rather than solving actual customer problems. Before implementing interactive video, sellers must validate that their category benefits from the added complexity and that their technical infrastructure can reliably execute multi-step user journeys.",[39],{"id":40,"title":41,"source":42,"logo":11,"time":43},820395,"Shoppable, immersive, interactive: What actually drives action in video advertising?","https://www.afaqs.com/afaqs-live-events/shoppable-immersive-interactive-what-actually-drives-action-in-video-advertising-11776617","40M AGO","#522ffaff","#522ffa4d",1777437046476]