New academic research “Seeing the Big Picture: Multitasking and Perceptual Processing Influences on Ad Recognition” finds that a certain type of users can recall video advertising as effectively when they are exclusively viewing the ad as when they are splitting their their time between watching the ad and performing another task on the computer.
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Industry Research
TRUSTe: 79% of consumers are concerned about about the idea of personal information collected by smart devices
The newly released TRUSTe’s 2015 U.S. Internet of Things Privacy Index focuses on the Internet of Things (IoT) and captures consumer attitudes and concerns on privacy, security and data collection through smart devices.
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IAB Hosts Discussion of its State of Viewability Transaction 2015 Position Paper
IAB held a call to discuss its new State of Viewability Transaction 2015 position paper. In addition to reading out the principles outlined in the paper, Randall Rothenberg, President and CEO of IAB, and Sherrill Mane, SVP of Research, Analytics and Measurement at IAB answered questions from the call participants.
Below are the topics addressed along with key insights from the discussion.
Scope of the principles:
- IAB principles do not specify who should be responsible for covering the cost of viewability vendor services.
- The issue of fraudulent traffic is outside the scope of the viewability discussion, although these issues do overlap at times. TAG (Trustworthy Accountability Group) was created specifically to address the issues of fraud.
- The principles apply to desktop (display and video) transactions and do not cover mobile.
- IAB is not making any recommendations on how viewability should affect pricing.
- IAB generally limits the principles to measurable impressions – some formats, e.g. sponsorships, cannot be measured and are thus outside the scope.
How IAB arrived at the 70% viewability threshold for measured impressions:
As the position paper specified, the core aspiration of the 3MS initiative was to have 100% of traded impressions be deemed viewable by the MRC. IAB consulted a group with the IAB board (primarily composed of sellers), who have recommended that a 70% viewability rate was achievable at this point in time. IAB recognizes that 70% will be difficult for some publishers, but they think this is achievable. At the same time if a publisher thinks that they can do better than 70%, IAB encourages them to do so.
Dealing with unmeasurable impressions:
- IAB has cautioned against extrapolating any metrics from the measurable impressions to unmeasurable impressions.
- As per the example to principle 3 in the published position paper, unmeasured impressions should be billed for as fully viewable impressions (though not contributing towards the 70% viewability threshold for the measured impressions).
Next steps IAB will be undertaking to pave the road to 100% viewability:
- IAB has assembled an additional group of leaders to monitor the impact of viewability on publishers and course-correct if necessary (as the position paper specified, IAB are looking to revisit the principles at least twice a year).
- The industry is not yet at a level of sophistication where there can be a standard test suite that is run across all vendors to establish measurement consistency. IAB is working with the MRC and is encouraging its members to share data with the MRC to help them address the variability in measurement rates between vendors.
Impact on agencies:
- IAB thinks that the 100% viewability guarantees demanded by some of the agencies are unreasonable and will only hurt efforts to collaborate and fixed measurement throughout the system.
- Asked how IAB would recommend agencies to communicate to clients the endorsement of paying for 30% of inventory that was not viewable, Rothenberg advised agencies to always reference the MRC “Viewability Implementation Considerations”, issued on 16 October 2014, which state that 100% viewability is an unreasonable expectation at this point. Rothenberg advised agencies to educate clients on the current technological limitations of this space and the need to absorb the discrepancies in measurement.
Content Marketing + Programmatic: Opposites Attract
Content marketing and programmatic. Arguably two of the hottest terms in digital today, with more than 370 million Google search results between the two. For the most part, when we think about content and programmatic we think of opposites, of incompatibility, of contradictions. After all, they are used to execute strategies on opposite ends of the marketing funnel (upper vs. lower), deliver against opposite objectives (brand awareness vs. conversions), are measured with opposite metrics (time spent vs. CTR) and are delivered with opposite mechanisms (manual vs. automated). It’s the ultimate oxymoron.
However, the future of advertising depends on these two polar opposites fusing together to deliver meaningful brand engagement to the right consumer at more cost efficient scale. CMOs will demand more from their advertising and content marketing will help to fill the current void between the value ads are providing and the value CMOs want. And when content marketing programs are targeted, distributed and optimized programmatically, brands will be able to achieve a higher return on their investment.
In a recent report, “The Future of Programmatic: When The Art & Science of Advertising Collide,” PulsePoint partnered with Digiday to survey over 335 industry professionals on both sides of the buy and sell aisle, from agencies and brands to publishers in order to understand how close our theory is to becoming a reality. Is the industry ready for the art of content marketing and science of programmatic technology to finally collide? In short, yes.
The research uncovered a strong case for a more creative, more custom programmatic future. Over 83% of respondents believed that content marketing will go programmatic by 2017, indicating the desire for art and science in advertising to collide much sooner than expected. So what’s driving this?
Programmatic has been generally confined to lower funnel objectives. But the days of direct response objectives dominating the programmatic landscape are nearing their end. In fact, 71% of respondents thought programmatic technology best supports mid-upper funnel campaign objectives. Additionally, high-impact, custom ad formats will begin to give standard display a run for its money as the proportion of respondents expecting to buy sponsored content placements programmatically in just one year’s time will grow 114%. Respondents also reported that in the next 12 months, the amount of TV bought programmatically will increase 45%, and custom rich media bought programmatically will increase 43%, while digital video will see a 29% increase.
This shift could not come at a better time. Nearly every respondent (about 97%) said that either they or their clients are using some form of content marketing and anticipate increasing programmatic ad spend by 62%.
We’re excited by these results and are confident that what we once considered to be an oxymoron will soon become the industry norm: rich content served programmatically exactly when and where consumers are ready to engage with it.
Download the full report here: http://goo.gl/Ktb3rS
Lindsay Boesen is the Director of Marketing at PulsePoint, a global advertising technology platform focused on fusing the efficiency of programmatic technology with the engagement of content marketing. At PulsePoint she oversees the companies marketing, communications, and creative team. Lindsay has over 10 years experience as a B2B digital marketer and was previously Senior Global Marketing Manager for Vibrant, the pioneer in to contextually relevant native advertising. She has also held marketing & creative roles at media companies like Select NY and Condé Nast. Trained in brand strategy, copywriting and art direction at NYC’s Adhouse, Lindsay holds a B.A in Communications & Advertising from Loyola College in Maryland.
PulsePoint: Programmatic Set to Move Up the Sales Funnel in 2015
PulsePoint, Inc., makers of an advertising technology platform, have released a new state of the industry intelligence report, “The Future of Programmatic: When The Art & Science of Advertising Collide,” conducted by Digiday and PulsePoint.
Download The Future of Programmatic: When The Art & Science of Advertising Collide whitepaper for the full research results and additional insights.
Forrester: US digital ad spend to overtake TV
Forrester Research forecasts digital ad spend (search , display advertising, social media and email) to top $103 billion by 2019, overtaking broadcast and cable TV ad spend combined.
Click here for full report.
Click here for CNET coverage.
BI Intelligence: mobile will account for half of digital advertising revenue by 2018
BI Intelligence, a subscription research service from Business Insider, expects US mobile ad spend to top $42 billion in 2018, growing at a 43% compound average growth rate (CAGR) in the five years from 2013.
Hub Research: TV Advertising in an OTT World report
A research outlet Hub Research asked 1,200 US consumers, who watch at least 5 hours of TV per month and use at least one online ad-supported online video service, to rate quality, quantity and relevance of advertising they see on ad-supported online video sites, such as TV Everywhere services, Hulu and YouTube. The researchers concluded that viewer tolerance for ads drops off sharply after 5 ads per half hour of viewing.
Click here for Hub Research site.
Click here for Media Post coverage.
InSkin Media/RAPP Study: over 50% of consumers are put off buying by retargeted ads
In a survey of over 1,600 people aged 20 to 60, ad tech company InSkin Media and ad agency RAPP found that more than half of the consumers are put off from buying a product if the see the ad multiple times, particularly on unrelated sites. The study also showed that ads displayed on a well known sites are likely to be viewed more favorably by the the consumers.
To see MediaTel coverage click here.
eMarketer: Native Advertising Roundup
eMarketer compiled recent research on Native Advertising, including spending forecasts and a paid social media ad effectiveness study.
Click here to download the report.
Forrester Research: U.S. Online Display Advertising Spend Forecast 2014-2019
Forrester Research expects a 90 percent increase in online display ad spending in the US between 2014 and 2019. Growth will be driven by video, programmatic and mobile display.
Click here to view AdWeek coverage.
Click here for full report.
Adap.tv’s fifth-annual 2014 US Video State of Industry report
A survey of more than 350 publishers and media buyers focuses on changing attitudes to programmatic video trading.
Click here to view the research item.