YouTube is experimenting with a new format that changes how skippable ads behave.

Instead of disappearing entirely when a user presses “Skip Ad,” a sticky banner overlay tied to the advertisement remains visible inside the video player.

The banner stays on screen until the user manually dismisses it, extending the advertiser’s presence beyond the initial ad view.

What’s Changing

In this test:

  • Users can still skip the main video ad
  • After skipping, a persistent branded banner remains visible
  • The banner stays on screen during the video playback
  • Users must manually dismiss it to remove it

The result is extended exposure even after skipping.

Why This Matters

Traditionally, a skipped ad meant the advertiser lost visibility immediately.

This format changes that dynamic by providing secondary exposure without forcing users to watch the full ad.

For advertisers, that could mean:

  • Increased brand recall
  • Additional engagement opportunities
  • More value from skippable ad inventory

Our Take

This test reflects YouTube’s ongoing effort to balance user control with advertiser visibility.

Instead of removing the skip option, the platform is experimenting with ways to extend brand presence without increasing friction dramatically.

It may also reshape how advertisers evaluate performance from skippable formats.

What ADSQUIRE Is Doing

We’re watching how these evolving formats affect engagement and performance.

Creative Strategy

  • Designing video assets that work well in both full-view and partial-view scenarios

Format Monitoring

  • Tracking which YouTube placements gain extended exposure formats

Performance Analysis

  • Measuring how these placements affect brand recall and interaction behavior

Bottom Line

If rolled out broadly, sticky banner overlays could redefine what a “skipped” ad actually means.

Instead of ending the interaction entirely, skipping may simply transition users into lower-friction brand exposure.

Google appears to be testing a new AI-driven Map Pack layout that includes organic website links embedded directly within map listings.

If you’re seeing a new Gemini button show up in Chrome (or at the top of Google Search), you’re not imagining it. This is a deliberate push.

A lot of advertisers are noticing the same thing lately: budgets are spending much faster than usual. Not small fluctuations…real spikes. Campaigns that normally pace predictably are suddenly pushing spend aggressively, with daily budgets getting exhausted earlier and overall monthly spend accelerating faster than expected.

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