They say that the more things change the more they stay the
same. The recent Advanced Advertising Summit this past week was notable in that
the issues facing the industry seem to remain the same year after year.
But the
good news is that the technology is advancing to a point where the ability to
seamlessly integrate digital and linear is ever closer to launch. Another
positive change, for me, is the presence of more and more research and data
executives in attendance at these types of conferences. When I first attended
these events, there were few of my research compatriots there. Now we are even
on sales panels!
Challenges in Advanced Advertising
Irwin
Gottlieb, Senior Advisor WPP, in his keynote, explained that while advanced
advertising has been around for years, it is not scalable yet. It is “somewhat
scalable today,” he averred, “there are two minutes an hour (available) in
local but it is not scalable in terms of support systems or inventory.” On the
bright side, according to Gottlieb, there are no technology obstacles because
companies such as WPP made deep investments in tech years ago. But there
continues to be business obstacles where short term thinking, intra company
fiefdoms and local vs national interests have enabled digital to “eat TV’s
lunch.”
Scaling from a test to a full buy is another aspect of
scalability that brings pain to the industry. Dan Riess, Executive Vice
President of Ignite, WarnerMedia,
noted, “We can always get clients to start a test but have find ways to scale
that will trigger the technology to make it happen.” As a stopgap, he starts
manually “to see how it works,” but there are, “so many different datasets, for
example, that make it hard to scale.” Ultimately, we “need to move faster.”
Legacy
systems are another challenge. Mike Mayer, Executive Vice President Sales
Solutions, NBCU,
explained that they are taking a “one order one report approach,” but if the
order trail takes them from a legacy to legacy system, the buy has to be put
together later. “It’s complicated,” he admitted, and it “can’t change
overnight.”
Add to this the issue of silos. “Walled gardens make it
difficult to develop business,” stated Jennifer Koester, Director of Telco and
Distribution Partnership, Google.
The solution is, “more standard segments,” noted Maureen Bosetti, Chief
Investment Officer, Initiative, who added, “how it is being measured, more
standardization and a privacy standard on identification,” with full
compliance.
Positives in Advanced Advertising
But it’s not
all doom and gloom. Many aspects of advanced advertising are hugely successful,
offering manifold opportunities for both digital and television. Although
linear TV is declining in usage, TV as a whole is adapting well to this
multi-platform, advanced advertising ecosystem. Jason Brown, Senior Vice
President, Head of Ad Sales partnerships, Xandr
Media, finds that granular data enables us to “reach micro segments,” where
the result is that “many advertisers are moving up the funnel,” and “TV is now
full funnel for purchases, depending on the category.” This has resulted in
“price hikes well beyond inflation.”
If there is one thing that TV does well, it is storytelling.
Paul Alfieri, Chief Marketing Officer, Cadent,
explained. Within the realm of advanced advertising, “a marketer can tell their
story to consumers where they are and when they want. Is it seamless and we
close the loop.” TV, according to Alfieri is learning from digital. “The
industry has simplified it into one funnel and advertising is getting more
sophisticated. It’s happening quickly because of paradigms you have in digital,”
he stated.
No one is complacent. Many companies are creating their own
systems that address advanced advertising like NBCU’s CFlight which, according
to Mayer, “combines linear with digital impressions and sells deal with total
impressions.” Others are joining consortiums like Vizio’s Project OAR, which
stands for Open Addressable Ready. Project OAR includes Disney’s Media
Networks, Turner, Xandr, Comcast’s
FreeWheel and NBC Universal, CBS, Discovery,
Hearst Television, AMC
Networks and Inscape with the goal to define technical standards for linear
and on-demand formats on smart TVs.
Jonathan Steuer, Chief Research Officer, Omnicom
Media Group, recommended, a “focused on education on both the strategy and
investment side.” He sees a big shift from linear TV to a more expansive view
of TV in the digital space where we, “can use same strategic targets.”
Conclusion
So, yes,
there are still vexing challenges in getting advanced advertising to scale,
especially in national inventory, and we still need to agree on standards for
measurement, segments and protocols. But the industry is hyper-focused on these
addressing issues, often working together and always committed to
progress. That might be the greatest positive
of them all.
This article first appeared in www.MediaVillage.com
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