While there are financial analysts who are predicting a dark
future for linear TV advertising spend, Omar Sheikh, US Media / Cable Analyst
from Credit
Suisse sees sunny skies. His company published a thematic report this week,
outlining their long term view of global advertising and on a call, he outlined
the report’s takeaways.
TV is Poised for Greater Growth
Embarking on
a full analysis of the future TV media market, Sheikh started with the question
- What is the basis of competition between the advertising product offered by
all of the media and technology platforms out there? “In the early 20th
Century it was reach,” he noted. “Then with the advent of TV it was engagement.
And since the advent of internet advertising in 1995 it has become relevance,”
as media becomes more able to target specific audiences.
With the
advancement of technology like machine learning, the ability to target audience
becomes even more precise. Because digital can make full use of this
technology, the general consensus is that the growth of digital advertising is projected
to be robust by taking share from other budgets. Does this come at the expense
of linear TV? According to Sheikh, no, and this is where Credit Suisse deviates
from the general financial wisdom. “Investors think that digital growth will
inevitably come at the expense of the growth of TV,” he remarked, “We disagree
with this view.”
While he
projects that digital growth will continue to be strong with projections of
+60% in the US by 2030, TV will also grow even if digital share doubles. “In
fact we think that TV ad growth can accelerate from a 2% per annum we have seen
over the last three years to 5-7% between now and 2030,” he shared.
Where will
this growth come from? The spending on all media is about 45% of overall
marketing spend. The other 55% is spent on below-the-line marketing like price
promotion and sponsorship. Sheikh
believes that advertisers can shift their investment from below-the-line to
fund growth in digital and other media. And with continued innovation in the TV
market, it will become easier and more precise to target the relevant consumer
via dynamic ad insertion and linear TV. “Both are moving TV into the sweet spot
of ad target positioning,” he noted. And by combining reach with relevance,
“the ability of the TV product to recapture market share is structurally
improving,” he concluded, with targeted linear in particular fueling this
growth.
OpenAP Will Help Facilitate TV Growth
Targeted
linear TV advancements like the recently announced OpenAP will help pave the
way towards the projected TV growth spurt. OpenAP, according to Sheikh, “gives
advertisers a gateway to advertising on linear television” by enabling
advertisers and networks to use data to more narrowly target subsets of relevant
consumers in individual shows beyond the Nielsen data. “This will deliver a
much more efficient linear ad feed, which reduces the waste in reaching people
when the ad is not relevant,” he added.
Sheikh
explained the process by an example of reaching truck buyers. Whereas
previously the advertiser would purchase on age and demo across a selection of
shows on a network, the ultimate conversion would be relatively low. “The same
sales goal could be achieved by targeting a much smaller subset of potential
truck buyers like current truck owners whose lease is about to expire,” he
posited. The smaller subset of a highly targeted relevant group of consumers
can lead to the same (or better) sales outcome.
Traditionally
it was impossible to target such a small group, but now with the advancements
of technology and the ability to combine first party (such as customer lists)
and third party (such as lease expirations) combined with syndicated data (such
as set top box or Nielsen), advertisers can buy more efficiently with less
waste and networks can maximize the value of their inventory with higher CPMs
and fewer makegoods.
“OpenAP
enables an advertiser to standardize the definition of their audience across
all of the networks of Fox, Turner and Viacom so they don’t have to go through
the same process three times, enabling them to buy a guaranteed narrow target
audience rather than a broad gender / age Nielsen guarantee,” he concluded.
While, at this time, nothing approaches the highly focused narrow targeting of
audiences of digital, this does enable advertisers to dramatically reduce
waste.
Conclusion
For those
investors who may be concerned with the future strength of media stocks, the
advice from Credit Suisse is don’t be. Looking ahead to 2030, inventions like
IoT, wearables and smart cars will make it increasingly easy to reach and
target consumers. While this may hurt old time marketing like direct mail and
telephone marketing, those ad dollars will flow to digital and … yes … TV. In
fact, Sheikh believes that “TV advertising growth will accelerate.” So, as for
me, I am sticking with my media stocks and envisioning a cushy retirement.
This article first appeared in www.MediaVillage.com
This article first appeared in www.MediaVillage.com
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