Showing posts with label Kirk McDonald. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kirk McDonald. Show all posts

Dec 14, 2020

The Audience is Everything. Nielsen Announces Nielsen One Cross-Media Solution

We are fortunate to be involved in the time of the great expansion of media. But with this great expansion comes measurement challenges and Nielsen has been grappling with how to calculate cross platform behavior so that it can be an independent measurement on a single platform. 

Their solution is the recently launched Nielsen One which is, according to David Kenny, Nielsen’s Chief Executive Officer and Chief Diversity Officer, “a single cross-media solution to drive comparable and comprehensive metrics across all platforms.”

Nielsen One is Announced

“What started out as just television and movies has now grown into a multi-platform cross media landscape, bigger than anyone ever anticipated,” explained Kenny. “Consumers are no longer limited to engaging with video content at as particular time and place. They now have endless options for viewing whatever and whenever they want to.” The endless choice of platforms, devices, mediums and ad formats coupled with an increased commitment to privacy has led to a wealth of data from a range of sources that can often be duplicative. Nielsen One aims to solve for all of these exigencies. “With Nielsen’s cross-media solution, Nielsen One,” he asserted, “we are aiming to provide marketers, advertisers and publishers with a single metric, across digital and linear that is trusted, independent and standardized across the industry.”

In mapping out Nielsen One’s complete roll-out by 2024, Nielsen’s Chief Operating Officer, Karthik Rao, explained that while the industry is at a major inflection point with innovation, it has been accelerated by Covid. “The amount of disruption and innovation that we have experienced in the past nine months would normally happen over the course of a few years,” he noted. Between the fifteen new streaming services launched in the course of two years to the +33% increase in spend for addressable in one year and the push to full distribution of smart TVs where nearly 8 out of 10 homes have a least one, the industry’s expansion is taking place on many levels. Add to that is an increased focus on, “privacy restrictions, increased consumer awareness and regulatory changes. Digital ad tech, measurement, activation will be reborn in a world without reliable  persistent identifiers such as cookies  and mobile ad ids and there is a massive shift to streaming while  the walled garden walls are growing higher and the open web remains a question mark. These changes intensify the need for standard measurement and audience de-duplication,” he concluded.

Nielsen has already made great progress in cross-media measurement and this effort, through Nielsen One, is expected to ramp up over the next two years. “We are already evolving the national currency to include  addressable measurement in the first half of 2021,” Rao noted, “We are leveraging our own ACR data and announced the integration of data from Direct TV, Dish and Vizio’s Project OAR. Starting in late 2021, for live television, we will be previewing sub-minute ads and content metrics… In 2022 we will fully launch the cross-media product and expect the market to fully transition by the fall 2024 season.”

And The Industry Responds

For Luis di Como, Executive Vice President Global Media, Unilever, the need for a single cross-media solution is paramount. “One of the biggest advantages we have at Unilever is our coverage,” he explained, “If you see thought the lens of geography, portfolio and channels, we have millions of data points and signals that we can use to understand the future,” in a global marketplace. Today, Unilever boasts a People Data Center. “This is the place where we capture, store, analyze and leverage all of the data that we have from first party data to second and third party to get a holistic view of the consumer and to get unique insights,” he stated and added, “Covid accelerated that trend,” moving the markets from ecommerce to “e-everything,” creating that much more data to handle and changing consumer behaviors. One single measurement will enable companies like Unilever to mitigate waste and manage frequency resulting in optimizing company efforts and creating a better consumer experience.

Many companies have been working independently to find cross-media solutions. How can we best combine our efforts to get to an industry standard solution?  Michael Kassan, Founder Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Medialink, moderated a panel of executives from across the media industry. “We have made progress in the last year but … we need to move faster, marketers are getting frustrated, digital continues to grow,” he stated. Moving into 2021 and beyond, Kassan posited four major questions – How do we increase user engagement in advertising? How can we create new, more non-interruptive experiences that would be preferred by consumers and work for marketers? How do we make it easier for marketers to connect to the audiences that move their brand? How do we insure your messages are in front of the right viewer?

For Kirk McDonald, North America Chief Executive Officer, GroupM, “the challenges facing the industry will require us to work together and be more cooperative to make the industry function better,” and move towards single sources of measurement for video across all distribution platforms.

With an extremely diversified portfolio, Linda Yaccarino, Chairman Global Advertising and Partnerships, NBCU, believes that since the pandemic, “strategic priorities have changed dramatically. Did we anticipate, unfortunately the theme parks being largely closed down? Did we anticipate the studio business being what it is today? But additionally, did we anticipate the broadband business having extraordinary and meteoric growth with no anticipation of that slowing down?” Broadband, aggregation and streaming are now the new priorities to, “put the consumer at the core.” She added, that as the industry comes together with, “a common purpose for an open platform that is dedicated to safety and transparency, we can really make strides and get ahead to meet the consumer needs.”

Having worked on both the client and agency side, Ben Jankowski, Group Head of Global Media, Mastercard, has been quoted as saying, “The biggest decision we have to make as marketers is where we put our money.” This is a challenge that is not yet being solved by today’s measurement. “Today we can’t measure the holistic view of the consumer. Today, with the research challenge we have and the business realities of people in the marketplace who have built products that are not conducive to being comparable, we have fragmentation which is more difficult to measure than any time before. We have to get in front of it,” he admonished.

Tara Walpert Levy, Managing Director of Global Ads Marketing, Google, noted, “The viewer is all that matters. They define what television is. If you are a buyer, it is critical to have objective, comparable, independent measurement which buyers and sellers both have confidence in and that lets you operate at scale.”  For her, Nielsen One will make this process easier and impactful.

Kenny explained that Nielsen is hyper focused on solving this industry challenge. “Nielsen has been part of the challenge,” he admitted, “We have tried to measure everything historically in different methodologies so there was a digital ad rating, TV ad rating, cable rating. When I got here two years ago we did a complete overhaul to get to one id platform and the one ability to measure all of it in the same de-duplicated way. It is the only way we can solve this problem.”

This article first appeared in www.MediaVillage.com

 

 

Jul 14, 2019

What is the Strategy in This Brave New Media World?


As the media landscape continues to evolve, media mavens sat down at the recent IRTS breakfast to discuss how the industry can respond to evolving consumer behaviors, decide which metrics are most meaningful in an omni-channel world and where they see the upfront going into the future. One thing they agreed upon is that the most important consideration is to make each dollar count by reaching the right consumer at the right time on the right device… and it isn’t easy.

What is the Strategy on the Programmer Side?
Data from all the possible touch points dictates how companies are deciding how to best manage their content for both ad-supported and subscription services noted Lisa Valentino, Executive Vice President, Client and Brand Solutions, Disney Ad Sales, thus creating multiple revenue streams for the company. “Our subscription businesses are going to fuel product development, the data strategy and the target-ability and addressability that we can offer going forward.”

Kirk McDonald, Chief Marketing Officer, Xandr, stated that his company has, “big investments in our strategy in on-demand,” and in the ad-supported sector, his company is, “collecting signals from all of the touch points across our mobility business as well as the consumption that happens in on-demand services, normalizing those data signals, parsing them in a way that we can add them to decorate the impressions we want to sell in ad-supported and doing that closer and closer to real time especially as CTV and digital come together.” McDonald believes that it is important to make it easier for agencies to buy into these various platforms and invited the industry to participate in a community marketplace, “to make it easier to buy those audiences at scale.” He concluded by saying, “It’s not the units in environments, it is the audiences and where and how they want to consume. You have to make that much easier.”
What is the Strategy on the Advertiser Side?
In seeking a go-forward strategy to reach the right audience, Catherine Sullivan, Chief Investment Officer NA, Omnicom Media Group, stated, “With the streaming services, consumers should have the choice to choose whether or not they want advertising or not. Let’s let them make the choice instead of someone else.” In this way consumers, who she sees as generally being open to advertising messages, won’t be subjected to too much advertising or irrelevant messaging and can therefore maximize their enjoyment of the content. “We have to do a better job as an industry to provide better formats for the consumer,” she added.  

Looking at streaming companies such as Netflix, she sees opportunities to create marketing partnerships and believes that, “we will see an ad-supported new world order that will allow the consumer to make the choice for advertising across platforms.”

What is the Strategy in Live?
Live events are important lean-in, tent poles and are now encompassing a variety of cross platform opportunities. For Sullivan, distinguishing marquee events requires not only working with frenemy companies but also with social media companies, “to help the consumer have a bigger experience.” It is also important, she added, to make sure that in live events, “we help our marketers get more bang for their buck and make those experiences bigger and longer,” and also lead up to the red carpet or the Olympics. “You have to map it out to get the most leverage,” she concluded.

Authenticity in live events is vital, noted McDonald. “If it’s not authentic and if it is forced, you will backlash,” that will impact the content creator and the advertising brands. “We are looking for those authentic moments.” He explained that with any partnership with Xandr, “ads have to be less interruptive,” with a good balance of the ads that viewers see against the content they came to view. “That is where we think there has to be a lot of innovation and make ads complimentary to the experience.”

Conclusion
All of this change and innovation has the potential to deliver a much better, more immersive and highly relevant viewer experience that not only benefits the viewer but also the brands that support the content.

This article first appeared in MediaVillage.com