European-based, Enreach’s C-suite
includes British born Brian Jacobs, Co-Founder Director and Chairman, and
Finnish born Kimmo Kiviluoto, Co-Founder and CEO. Jacobs and
Kiviluoto started
Enreach in 2010 in Helsinki with the then novel idea of bringing data analytics
into the media planning, buying and selling space.
Jacobs spent most of his career
in agencies, starting in media research in a UK agency before moving into media
planning and global media management. He had stints at advertising agencies
including Leo Burnett, Carat and Universal McCann. Jacobs eventually formed a consultancy
practice helping start-up and young businesses where one of his clients was a Finnish
analytics company called Xtract.
Kiviluoto was one of the founders
of Xtract and is an analytics serial entrepreneur whose passion is to improve digital
customer experiences and interactions between consumers and brands, supported
with mathematical expertise and machine learning technologies.
I asked
Jacobs the following questions:
Charlene
Weisler: What is your definition of programmatic?
Brian
Jacobs: Very good question! Put 10 people in a room and you’ll finish up with
12 definitions…
In our
opinion programmatic is all about using large amounts of data to improve media
planning and buying (by precision targeting, as one example), and automating
the process as much as possible.
We
absolutely do not believe that it is possible to remove the skills of the media
planner and buyer from the process, rather we see programmatic technology as a
way of improving efficiencies both in message creation and placement, and in
removing much of the drudgery from what is still often a largely manual
process.
Charlene
Weisler: How does your business differ by country?
Brian Jacobs: To be honest it
doesn’t much. Our core product offering is consistent, and we still work with
premium publishers. What is different is the maturity of the various media markets
and thus the dynamics within the planning, buying and selling of digital space.
This means that the speed of take up of some elements of what we offer varies.
Charlene Weisler: How are you removing the middleman and who is
the middleman?
Brian Jacobs: The whole digital
planning, buying and selling space is cluttered and yet the basics are pretty
straightforward: the publisher creates premium content that attracts an
audience, and the advertiser wants to reach that audience with relevant and
effective messages. It seems to us that there are too many people in that chain
from advertiser to publisher, most of who supply a technical link that can be
automated. The consequence is the so-called technology tax which most objective
sources would agree leads to something like 60% of the advertiser’s budget
vanishing before it gets to the publisher, the creator of content and
audiences. Our vision is to simplify that chain, and to ensure that a higher %
of the advertiser’s budget ends up where it can have the greatest effect – with
the publisher. In our vision, the middleman has to add value to the process. We
are not sure that operations like SSP’s and DSP’s in themselves add much value,
although they undoubtedly add complexity.
Charlene Weisler: Are you removing agencies from the mix?
Brian Jacobs: No, absolutely not. In fact when we first
came up with the Enreach idea way back when, we saw it in large part as a media
planning tool. But agencies by and large don’t own data (although of course
they use it), publishers do, and advertisers do. Hence our current model,
focused on the publisher.
We imagine
that our new product, Audiences Guaranteed will be of value to the media agency
community in that it streamlines the planning and buying process, and puts the
planner center stage. Our service called “Audience Guaranteed” lets the
planner plan, and then the rest of the process, including the incorporation of
deals done by the buyer, the placing of orders, the tracking and reporting of
campaigns and the rest are handled automatically within the system. We are very
happy to talk to agencies as we believe they should play a major role in the Audiences
Guaranteed future. We have already started those conversations.
Charlene
Weisler: Do you have a problem with attribution?
Brian
Jacobs: We think the industry has a problem with the broad topic of attribution,
which we would define as being all about understanding what drives results. We
have started working with a North American marketing science business to start
to build attribution models that move the business along from the current focus
on media outputs (like reach) to business outcomes. We are excited by the
possibilities thrown up by the first stage work on a prototype, and hope to
have a product that both companies can bring to market in 2016.
Charlene
Weisler: Do you grapple with viewability? How do you handle that?
Brian
Jacobs: We don’t see this as a big-deal measurement problem. We do certainly
see it as an issue the industry needs to get to grips with, but we think the
issue is largely a commercial one as opposed to a ‘how-do-we-measure-this’
issue. So – a publisher can certainly
offer high levels of viewability, but then the gross audience numbers go down.
That may well not matter in some circumstances, and it may be significant in
others depending on the advertiser, the messaging and indeed the objectives.
Our solution
is to offer our publishers a choice. We can adopt the IAB standard; or we can
dial-up the viewability criteria. We can
imagine our customers being in a position to adjust the viewability scores
depending on the communication objectives of the campaigns they’re carrying.
Charlene
Weisler: How do you think your part of the business will look five years from
now?
Brian
Jacobs: Good question! I think it will be far less cluttered, the market is due
a period of consolidation – indeed I would say that this has already started. I
also think the adtech world (on all sides) will mature and work through what
seem to me to be several polarizing points-of-view.
So – I don’t
think it’s correct to assume that the media planning, selling and buying
process will ever be 100% automated; but I do think a degree of automation is
inevitable (and desirable). I don’t
think real-time-bidding systems will rule the industry; nor do I think they
will disappear and direct insertion order techniques will take over. I don’t
think publishers will only sell direct to advertisers, and that media agencies
will disappear; but I do think direct selling will grow, and that planning will
enjoy a revival in a world currently obsessed with buying tools, techniques and
indeed controversies.
For Enreach
in particular I see three key challenges. 1. Remain focused on serving our
clients as best we can so that they succeed. 2. Remain open to ideas and major
innovations both in the industry and from elsewhere. 3. Keep our eyes on the
road – we must not get distracted by the latest passing fad and fashion. We are
always open to new developments, we always evaluate and consider but if it’s
not helpful to our clients then we will not be distracted by the latest shiny
thing.
This article first appeared in www.MediaBizBloggers.com
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