In a highly fragmented media world, not only does the
consumer feel at the cutting edge of media consumption, so does media
measurement and attribution. How does the industry keep up? This dilemma was
deconstructed at the Data Conference, part of TV Week NYC.
What is the Measurement Solution?
In searching for the solution to cross platform media
measurement, the panel essentially described the problems in reaching a
solution. Paul Lefort, Senior Vice President, Nielsen,
noted, “No one solution will work in the long term.” But he believes that comparable
metrics matter. “The interesting push in the past few months is the impressions-based
approach,” he stated. “Impressions remove friction in process. If we only use
ratings then we lose portions of our audience.”
For Radha Subramanyam,
Chief Research and Analytics Officer, CBS,
a hybrid approach is the best way to go with, “a combination of panel and other
data.” But, she noted, there is still the issue of walled gardens. “What do you
do with all of that data that sits outside?” she asked. “We need a holistic
view because the market doesn’t care about walls or silos of data. Advertisers want
the full picture.” The barrier to a holistic solution is a not technical one,
she added, “It is will or leadership. We need to think bigger and have more cooperation.
We need a fluid ecosystem. The tech easy but getting it done not easy.”
What About the Role of Panels?
Frank Comerford, Chief Revenue Officer and President of
Commercial Operations, NBCU
Owned Television Stations, listed a range of challenges. “Is a small panel
accurately reflecting the audience we have?” he asked. “Is a big dataset reflecting
our audience?” He explained that that if people aren’t in the right places in
the data set, it will not produce the right information. In addition, “with a big
data sample, there are walled gardens that are marking their own homework.”
Panels have both advantages and shortcomings. “Panels
provide fundamental source of truth,” noted Subramanyam. “It allow customers
and clients understand the households from which it is derived. It is also a source
of diversity measurement and ensures an exact or accurate representation of
those audiences. I believe in the fundamental need of panel to give us those things.
But we also need the scale and stability of big data sets.”
“Panels can’t strive for behavioral but can strive for the demographic,”
added Comerford.
Who Leads the Charge?
When it
comes to deciding what is the most effective measurement and metric, who has
the last word?
Lefort believes
that it is ultimately up to the advertiser, “if the advertiser is happy about
what they have spent to get their results.” The good news is, “TV and digital
are not as far apart as we pretend it is.” They are complementary. “It is not TV versus
Digital.”
Subramanyam
concurred, “We are here to service the marketer and we need a healthy
transparent market. There are lots of initiatives at work and a combination of
them will lead to a new standard.” But, she added, “Consensus in standardization
across media is essential. And people have to get comfortable in getting their
data out there.”
Experimentation is Key
Measurement
solutions should be a part of tracking attribution and there is a lot of
experimentation going on in this area. At CBS, Subramanyam noted that, “We start
by experimenting on ourselves and then offer the solutions to our marketers.
Attribution, specifically in digital, is still in the early stages. It tends to
be versions of last click. But there are lots of experiments.”
For Comerford
the local markets tried a range of different attribution experiments with a “small
sample on the buy in the local market. We track and see. We can prove that an ad
that runs on TV is effective and multiplies the effect of local advertising. The
last click did not necessarily get the sale but it might be the execution of
sale. We have to see what led to that.”
The overall consensus is that the industry is now working
together to find solutions. “The good news is that we are all talking,” concluded
Subramanyam. All this results in greater cooperation and, “robust and positive
discussion.”
This article first appeared in www.MediaVillage.com
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