As Viewers Go Ad-Free, Streaming Services Adapt With Product Placements

Subscribers to Hulu’s ad-free plan pay twice as much as limited ad customers each month to avoid commercials. If they watched the service’s original comedy Four Weddings and a Funeral, though, they still saw an ad for Hotels.com. In an episode where a faux reality TV show sponsors a wedding between two characters, a reality…

How Sonic the Hedgehog Sped Past the Competition

If you had lived in New York City three decades ago and spent some time in Central Park, you might have chanced upon a slender, bookish-looking man named Naoto Ohshima. And if you had perchance run into him, you’d have influenced the course of video-game history. It was 1990. Ohshima, an artist for Sega, had…

Why Younger Consumers Are Hitting Retail Locations Rather Than Shopping Digitally

While some may believe that millennials and Gen Z might prefer shopping digitally, the contrary actually appears to be true. When Walmart recently stopped selling handguns and handgun ammunition, the move was in reaction to the mass shooting at its El Paso, Texas, store last month. But it also probably had to do with the…

What Happened When DTC Met ATV

Adweek brought two of the most salient topics in today’s brand marketing world together in a new event: DTC Meets ATV Summit, presented by Viacom and held at LinkedIn. Experts looked at how Direct-to-Consumer marketers are responding to rising ad costs and the growing need to find new channels via smart, internet-connected TV–with insights on…

Marketers are still learning where to find high-quality video inventory

By Bryon Schafer

It has been well over a decade since a renaissance began in video content distribution. Platforms like YouTube, Netflix and Hulu forever changed how audiences can find and consume video content, creating more ways to watch than ever and reducing ad fatigue and friction for consumers. Progress we have made as an industry is significant, and today, premium video content is now available through a multitude of convenient forms: Linear television, SVOD, mobile, social and OTT.

With linear TV’s receding audiences, it’s clear that a broad and differentiated video ad ecosystem offers opportunity to engage audiences in new ways. They’re easier to find and activate against than one might currently believe.

Media’s role
Often in planning there is a fine line between finding opportunity and splitting hairs. While audiences don’t cume as quickly or as easily as they used to on linear TV, it has never been more possible to improve on the status quo. A challenge, however, is to better manage the diminished returns on extending audience.

Media’s role for marketers has historically been to extend audience and manage frequency as optimally as possible against objectives, within parameters such as budget or time. The fundamental measures of delivery that are audience reach and frequency haven’t changed, yet their contexts have changed significantly.

So many marketers are encumbered by inertia, pricing or both to affect meaningful reallocation of ad frequency towards extending reach. Unable to consider more valuable, more effective inventory, they end up paying significantly more on a cost-per-reach basis. This is not new news to the average marketer, but CPM is a strong focus in judging their buying partnerships, hence it remains a strong focus for their partners.

Reach is king
Ad supported video today has but a few last bastions of premium, high quality scale. Generally speaking, these categories of content include current and syndicated shows and movies, sports content, music content, and Spanish language content. For other categories, such as gaming, the ad inventory is lacking today.

These categories are the most in demand by marketers and audiences alike: They have scale, accumulate large audiences more quickly than others and are more expensive to both produce and advertise in. They are the safest bets for brands — and they are the healthiest places available for video marketers to participate in today.

In the absence of supply alongside this content, marketers are left with buying aggregated audiences from a long and foggy tail, blind to the content that runs adjacent to their ads. Quality is reflected in the price — and lower prices have historically been attractive to a buyer. Hence the conundrum, as marketers have often found they really do get what they pay for.

Reach is king when it comes to media effectiveness. Reach is what executives mean when they say “scale”: scale to move populations, to target, to build brands.

Today, consumer tastes and attention are spread thin, so it is fairly obvious that finding complementary media has never been more important. Premium video complements are everywhere to be explored and exploited — broadcast and cable, online video, mobile video, OTT — not to mention the many national and local markets that exist. Within these choices there even more complements, as one marketer doesn’t buy just one TV show or even one TV network — they buy a mix, ensuring a larger audience reached.

There is nothing prohibiting even the most conservative of marketers from enhancing their video mix. The marketers’ toolbox is teeming with opportunity to measure and improve marketing communications investments.

Denominators that matter
Television households. Google users. Facebook users. Amazon Prime users. Apple users. These are just some of the most important denominators to marketers today, as their scale is unparalleled in terms of video audience reach and advertising opportunity.

Premium video that is syndicated across large denominators in ad-supported models become extremely valuable measurement tools. At Vevo, distributing music videos across these platforms helps our clients understand the complementary relationships between audiences on Amazon or Roku or YouTube, to name a few. For video companies like Vevo, it’s vital to be diffused, as music fans are.

Frontiersman lived in regions between settled and unsettled land, and that’s where video advertising will be for the foreseeable future. It takes a bit of grit and determination to thrive, if not only survive. The video marketing quiver has never been more full with arrows — and seeing the industry as sometimes slow to change, this potential can feel overwhelming. But based on the remarkable progress and exploration that have occurred in just the last decade or so, it’s clear we’re still just getting started. The message to marketers remains: Explore the denominators that matter, look for reach in new ways and extend your audience beyond the status quo.

The post Marketers are still learning where to find high-quality video inventory appeared first on Digiday.

Pinterest Comes to the Dark Side

Pinterest became the latest social platform to enter the dark mode fray. The company said in a blog post Monday that dark mode is rolling out globally on the latest versions of its iOS and Android applications, starting Monday. Pinterest said Pinners using its iOS app can go to the settings on their device and…

9 Answers Every Business Person Needs to Listen to

9 Answers Every Business Person Needs to Listen to
After Gary’s keynote at the Digital Agency Expo, he went to a VIP dinner session to meet some followers and answer some of their burning questions. The questions were mainly focused around business including topics like firing, client work, personal brand and more. Be sure to check the timestamps in the comment section for all the questions… Enjoy!

Your comments are my oxygen, please take a second and say ‘Hi’ in the comments and let me and my team know what you thought of the video … p.s. It would mean the world to me if you hit the subscribe button 😉

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Gary Vaynerchuk is the chairman of VaynerX, a modern-day media and communications holding company and the active CEO of VaynerMedia, a full-service advertising agency servicing Fortune 100 clients across the globe. He’s a sought out public speaker, a 5-time New York Times bestselling author, and an angel investor in companies like Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Venmo, and Uber.

VaynerX, also includes Gallery Media Group, which houses women’s lifestyle brand PureWow and men’s lifestyle brand ONE37pm. In addition to running VaynerMedia, Gary also serves as a partner in the athlete representation agency VaynerSports, cannabis-focused branding and marketing agency Green Street and restaurant reservations app Resy. Gary is a board/advisory member of Ad Council and Pencils of Promise, and is a longtime Well Member of Charity: Water.

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The Guy Who Wrote Facebook’s Content Rules Says Its Politician Hate Speech Exemption Is ‘Cowardice’

Dave Willner helped put together Facebook’s content standards over a decade ago. He’s not happy with the company’s exceptions for politicians.

The Most Insightful Data From 28 Media, Marketing and Tech Companies’ 2019 Q2 Earnings Calls

In early 2017, I was helping a client, and we were amazed that Facebook revenue was growing so much. I read about the revenue increase in one of the many trades, then I stumbled upon the Facebook earnings call and was hooked. I was on the edge of my seat listening about the quarter. I…

Essential Second-Quarter Stats for Ad Tech and Platforms

Editor’s note: Adweek worked with Matthew Scott Goldstein, a consultant with a deep knowledge of the media industry, to craft his quarterly newsletter into an Adweek article. Through his findings on various industry earnings calls, we’re bringing you insights about how your favorite brands, agencies, media companies, publishers and tech companies are performing on a…