To those of us in the media world, the discussion of
attribution and cross platform measurement has been going on for decades. Waiting
for solutions has been painfully slow. But in the most recent CIMM
Cross-Platform Video Measurement and Data Summit (now in its 8th
year) the big reveal was that not only has significant progress been made in
attribution and cross platform measurement, feverish activity has been taking
place behind the scenes for years.
The reason is that it’s simply not easy to
form new metrics and protocols between the need for consensus across all types
of companies and the persistent evolution and expansion of technologies.
For Jane Clarke, CEO Managing Director of CIMM,
2018 was a year of significant advancements. At last
year’s conference, CIMM announced a Measurement Manifesto to keep the
industry focused on cross platform measurement. Her work on content labeling
has been pivotal to stitching all pieces of video together across screens. This
year Clarke announced the launch of TAXI Complete (Trackable Asset Cross
Platform Identification) which is the creation of audio watermarks for content
(EIDR) and ads (Ad-ID). It will, according to Clarke, “Advance cross platform
video measurement and bring more measurement to TV.”
For me, the major takeaways were:
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While
content labeling gains traction, deduplication is pivotal to getting to a
reliable and adoptable cross platform measurement currency.
If it can’t be measured it can’t be
monetized and if it can’t be measured accurately, monetization will be flawed. Content
labeling is continuing apace with more companies adopting the coding and the
cost of entry to enroll has been lowered. One next step includes the
advancement of deduplicated reach measurement to help accuracy.
According to Beth Rockwood, Senior
Vice President, Ad Sales Research, Turner,
“Questions can be answered well with deduplicated reach. It’s an important tool
and fits into context of marketing mix models and attribution.”
Ø
Measurement
challenges will continue as we try to keep pace with evolving technologies and
how consumers use them.
As Krishan Bhatia, Executive Vice
President, Business Operations and Strategy, NBCU,
noted, “The transformation of the consumption of video on a cross platform
basis … has accelerated in the past 18-24 months. Devices are driving it
(while) measurement has not caught up or stayed ahead of the curve.“
Evolving technologies such as voice
assistants, “are making measurement more difficult,” Jack Smith, Chief Product
Officer, Global Investment, GroupM
pointed out. “It is happening in apps that are already walled gardens and
operating systems are also intermediaries which can control pricing, ordering
products and recommendations instead of having a direct relationship with the
brand.” These, along with screens in self-driving cars, provide new viewing venues
and experiences. As an industry we need to understand how it all works … and morphs
over time.
Ø
Privacy
and Transparency need to be addressed. We can no longer kick the can down the
road.
“Privacy and data issues will
become more important,” stated to Laura Nathanson, Executive Vice President
Revenue and Operations, Disney Advertising Sales. “Consumers will demand more
privacy and more walls,” she added. But how privacy balances with transparency
is still to be discussed. For others there is not enough transparency, at least
when it comes to data labeling.
To that end, part of the content
labeling initiative includes a data
transparency label which points to aspects of the data and its collection such
as how the data got created and where it came from. The careful balance between
privacy and transparency, including the impact of GDPR in Europe on the U.S.,
require us to continue the discussion and create protocols.
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As an
industry we need to work together to develop and establish adoptable
measurements.
“We need to hit the pause button
and up level the conversation,” stated Radha Subramanyam, Chief Research and
Analytics Officer, CBS.
She was referring to the clamor of competing voices around measurement today.
“I love the innovation in measurement and the abundance of products and
granular data,” she continued, “But are we any closer to making things make
sense? My call is for a common sense framework. Stop the noise and see what we
are really trying to solve for.”
This article first appeared in www.MediaVillage.com
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