The Future of WordPress Advertising: Why
Dynamic Video Ads Are the Next Big Thing
The advertising model that has sustained WordPress publishers for a decade is running out of road. Here is what is replacing it, why dynamic video is at the center of the shift, and what publishers who move early will gain.
Updated 2026
Industry Outlook

Something fundamental is shifting in how WordPress sites make money from advertising, and most publishers have not noticed yet. The display banner model that has funded independent publishing for over a decade is entering its terminal decline. Not because banners are disappearing overnight, but because every economic force in digital advertising is moving in one direction: toward video.
Advertiser spending is migrating to video. Consumer attention is migrating to video. Ad technology is being rebuilt around video. And the gap between what video inventory earns and what display inventory earns is widening every year. For WordPress publishers, this is not a distant trend to watch — it is a shift that is already reshaping revenue potential today, and the publishers who adapt early will have a structural advantage over those who wait.
This article is not a prediction about some hypothetical future. It is an analysis of forces that are already measurable, already moving, and already accessible to WordPress publishers who are willing to look at where advertising is going rather than where it has been. We will cover the macro trends driving the shift, what “dynamic video advertising” actually means in practice, why WordPress is uniquely positioned to benefit, and what you can do right now to position your site on the right side of this transition.
The four forces killing traditional display advertising
The decline of display banner advertising is not caused by a single factor. It is driven by four converging forces, each of which independently weakens the model, and which together create a structural shift that is not reversible.
Two decades of exposure to banner ads have trained web users to unconsciously filter them out. Research from the Nielsen Norman Group has documented this phenomenon extensively. Eye-tracking studies show that users’ gaze patterns now skip over banner positions entirely, as if the content simply does not exist. Average display ad click-through rates have fallen below 0.1 percent across most networks. For advertisers, this means display impressions are becoming increasingly valueless. For publishers, it means display CPMs will continue their downward pressure because advertisers are paying for attention they are not getting.
Global ad blocker usage has grown every year for the past decade. On desktop, estimates range from 30 to 40 percent of users running ad blocking software. On certain audience segments like tech, gaming, and developer communities, that number exceeds 50 percent. Every user running an ad blocker represents display inventory that generates exactly zero revenue. The economic impact compounds over time: as ad blockers become more common, the remaining visible inventory gets oversupplied, which puts further downward pressure on CPMs. Self-hosted video ads are significantly harder for ad blockers to detect because they load from the publisher’s own domain as regular media content.
The advertising industry’s reliance on third-party cookies for tracking and targeting is being systematically dismantled. Safari and Firefox have blocked them for years. Chrome has been moving toward restriction. Privacy regulations like GDPR and CCPA have added legal constraints. As cross-site tracking becomes less viable, display ad targeting loses precision, which reduces the value advertisers assign to display impressions. Video ads are less dependent on cookie-based targeting because the value comes from the content context and the quality of attention, not from user profiling.
The Interactive Advertising Bureau’s annual reports show a consistent pattern: digital video ad spending is growing at 20 percent or more per year, significantly outpacing display growth. Advertisers are not increasing their total budgets proportionally; they are reallocating from display to video because video delivers better brand recall, better engagement, and better conversion rates. This reallocation means less demand for display inventory (lower CPMs) and more demand for video inventory (higher CPMs). The gap will continue to widen.
None of these forces are speculative. They are all measurable, well-documented trends that have been accelerating for years. The question for WordPress publishers is not whether display advertising will continue to decline — it will — but whether they will have an alternative revenue stream in place when it does.
What “dynamic video advertising” actually means
The phrase “dynamic video ads” gets thrown around in marketing materials without much explanation. Let us be precise about what it means and why the “dynamic” part matters for WordPress publishers.
A static video ad is a single video file that plays the same way every time, regardless of context. You upload one ad video and every visitor sees the exact same clip on every page. This is the simplest form of video advertising and it works fine for single-sponsor campaigns.
A dynamic video ad system adds flexibility. It can serve different ad videos based on context: different ads on different pages, different ads for different campaigns, global defaults that can be overridden per-placement, and the ability to swap ad creative across the entire site from a single admin setting. The ad experience adapts to the page, the campaign, and the timing rather than being locked to one static file.
For WordPress publishers, the dynamic aspect is what makes video advertising operationally sustainable. A site with 50 articles cannot manually configure a unique ad on every page whenever a campaign changes. You need global controls with per-page override capability, so you can run a default sponsor across the site while customizing specific high-value pages. That layered control is what separates a workable system from a tedious one.

The Elementor Video Ads plugin for dynamic WordPress video advertising is built around this model. A global ad video applies site-wide through the admin panel. Per-widget overrides customize specific pages. Exclusion rules protect pages that should not carry ads. When a campaign ends, swapping the global video updates every page at once. This is what dynamic means in practice: centralized control with distributed flexibility.
Why WordPress is uniquely positioned for the video ad transition
WordPress powers approximately 40 percent of all websites on the internet. That scale creates both a challenge and an opportunity in the context of video advertising.
WordPress publishers do not need to build video ad infrastructure from scratch. The plugin model means that a purpose-built tool can add video advertising capabilities to any WordPress site in minutes, without developer involvement. This is a massive advantage over custom-built publishing platforms where implementing video ads requires engineering resources. The barrier to entry is a plugin installation, not a development project.
Page builders like Elementor have made embedding video content into WordPress pages as simple as dragging a widget onto the canvas. This ease of use means more WordPress pages include video content today than ever before, and that trend is accelerating. Every page with an embedded video is a potential high-CPM ad placement. The more video content WordPress publishers create, the more premium ad inventory they generate.
WordPress publishers own their infrastructure. Unlike creators on YouTube or TikTok who are subject to platform policies and revenue share decisions they cannot control, WordPress publishers can host their own video ads, set their own rates, and keep 100 percent of direct sponsorship revenue. In a market where platforms increasingly extract more from creators, this ownership model becomes more valuable every year.
The technology that makes this accessible now
Two years ago, running video ads on a WordPress site required either an enterprise ad server subscription or significant custom development. The tools available to independent publishers were either too complex, too expensive, or too disconnected from the WordPress workflow to be practical.
That has changed. Purpose-built WordPress plugins now handle the entire video advertising workflow within the environment publishers already use. For Elementor users specifically, the controls live inside the Video widget itself: ad source, skip timing, visit actions, and campaign management all configure from the same editor panel where you build your pages. Global settings in WordPress admin handle site-wide campaigns with exclusion rules. Built-in statistics track performance without requiring a separate analytics platform.

This accessibility shift matters because it democratizes a revenue format that was previously reserved for publishers with ad operations teams and enterprise budgets. An independent blogger, a niche news site, a small eCommerce store — any WordPress publisher with video content can now run the same pre-roll ad format that generates premium CPMs on YouTube, but on their own site, with their own ad creative, keeping their own revenue.
What the next 2 to 3 years look like
Predicting the future of any technology is risky, so we will limit this to trends that are already in motion and whose direction is clear, even if the exact timeline is uncertain.
The generation growing up with TikTok, Instagram Reels, and YouTube Shorts expects video as a primary content format. As this cohort ages into the core web audience over the next several years, WordPress publishers who do not include video in their content strategy will feel increasingly outdated. More video content means more video ad inventory, which means more revenue potential from the highest-paying ad format.
One of the current barriers to self-managed video advertising is the cost of producing video ad creative. AI video generation tools are rapidly improving and costs are falling. Within the next few years, a small publisher or local business will be able to generate a professional-quality 15-second ad video at negligible cost. This removes the creative production barrier and makes self-managed video advertising viable for publishers of any size.
As cookie-based targeting loses effectiveness, advertisers are increasingly valuing contextual placement: putting their ad next to relevant content, on sites with known audience characteristics, through direct relationships with publishers. This favors WordPress publishers who can sell premium placements directly rather than depending on programmatic networks. Video ad slots sold directly generate more revenue per impression because there is no intermediary taking a cut.
Google’s increasing emphasis on page experience metrics (Core Web Vitals, interactivity, visual stability) penalizes sites that load heavy third-party ad scripts on page render. Publishers who use on-demand video ad loading, where the ad creative loads only when the viewer clicks play, will have a structural SEO advantage over those running script-heavy display ad networks. This advantage compounds over time as Google’s algorithms become more sophisticated in measuring user experience.
What to do right now
You do not need to overhaul your entire advertising strategy overnight. The transition from display to video is gradual, and the smartest approach is incremental: add video advertising alongside your existing display ads, measure the results, and shift your focus as the data confirms the revenue advantage.
Every page with an embedded video is a potential high-CPM ad placement. Focus on your most-visited content first: add a short video summary, an explainer clip, or a related video to your top 10 articles. You are simultaneously improving the content (video-enriched articles perform better in engagement and SEO) and creating premium ad inventory.
Start with your own promotional content as the ad creative. Promote your newsletter, your best-selling product, your upcoming event — anything that lets you test the format without needing an external advertiser. The dynamic video advertising plugin for WordPress Elementor sites takes minutes to set up and gives you the data infrastructure to measure results from day one.
Once you have video ads running and performance data accumulating, approach a brand that is relevant to your audience. Show them the completion rates and impression data. Offer a one-month trial at a rate that is compelling for them but significantly better than what your display ads earn. Most advertisers who try video sponsorships on quality publisher sites renew because the engagement metrics justify the investment.

The future of WordPress advertising is not a mystery. It is video, it is dynamic, and it is already here for publishers who choose to adopt it. The economic forces pushing in this direction are structural, not cyclical. Banner blindness will not reverse. Ad blocker usage will not decline. Advertiser budgets will not return to display. The publishers who build video advertising into their revenue model now will be the ones with a functioning business model when display CPMs decline to the point where banners alone cannot sustain independent publishing.
The tools are ready. The economics are clear. The question is not whether this transition will happen, but whether you will be positioned to benefit from it when it does.
Position your WordPress site for the video advertising future
Dynamic pre-roll video ads inside Elementor. Global campaigns from one admin panel. Built-in analytics to prove value to sponsors. Self-hosted for ad-blocker resistance. Start building your video ad revenue today.

Finally someone said what we've all known for years banners are basically useless now. My food blog's RPMs were in the toilet until I ditched the static ads and started running short video spots between recipes. Engagement shot up right away, and the ad fill rates? Totally different story.
The data on banner decline is hard to argue with CPMs keep slipping, and the eye tracking studies cited here confirm what we've seen in our own analytics. Users just don't engage with static display anymore. The shift to video makes economic sense, but the transition isn't trivial for publishers still reliant on legacy ad stacks.
Banners are dead. video all the way.
Finally something that actually explains where WordPress ads are headed! Been running a parenting blog for 3 years and my banner revenue keeps dropping no matter what I try. this broke down why video is taking over in a way that made sense even to someone like me who isn't techy.