Inside ITV’s bid for addressable TV ad budgets

ITV is going all in on addressable advertising with a plan to let advertisers use ad tech to buy its VOD content before the end of the year. Investing in addressable advertising is crucial to sustaining ad revenues  — Sky’s AdSmart, for example, has brought a long list of new advertisers into TV, and the future of media trading is in addressable and self-serve platforms.

The broadcaster is working with partners to develop the offer after a deal with ad tech firm Sorensen Media failed to materialize in 2018. Discussions are ongoing, said ITV’s CEO, Carolyn McCall, on the company’s earnings call today (Feb. 27), as the broadcaster looks to build a programmatic team capable of managing the yields from auctions. Managing those deals makes more commercial sense to McCall despite the hefty £40 million ($53 million) outlay if it means not having to sell addressable ads through Sky’s own Adsmart and subsequently give away too much commission.

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How Rockets of Awesome will benefit from Foot Locker’s mall stores

Rockets of Awesome, a digital children’s apparel brand, will be setting up shop in Foot Locker stores.

On Tuesday, Foot Locker announced that it had invested $12.5 million in Rockets of Awesome, as part of the company’s recent string of investments in online retailers. Rockets of Awesome is most well-known for its subscription business — parents can order a box of eight clothing items for $150 per month — but customers can also buy individual pieces. To reach more customers, the brand is meeting them where they are.

Rockets of Awesome will launch its own “mini-stores” within Kids Foot Locker stores, and plans to open its own standalone brick-and-mortar store later this year ahead of the back-to-school season. Rockets of Awesome and Foot Locker declined to say specifically how many of these mini-stores they’ll be opening.

Blumenthal said that Rockets of Awesome hopes to learn “how to identify real estate, how to hire and how to run a really well-oiled [brick-and-mortar] machine” from Foot Locker, giving the mini-shops an educational benefit for Rockets of Awesome that a DTC brand opening pop-up stores or wholesale partnerships wouldn’t necessarily get.

The “vast majority” of Foot Locker’s stores are still in malls, according to Matt Powell, a sports industry analyst for NPD group said. Despite declining mall foot traffic, Rockets of Awesome sees Foot Locker’s presence in malls an advantage.

“What we know about Foot Locker is that they have distribution in every single major city and major mall in America. And that’s where moms are buying shoes with their kids,” said Rockets of Awesome CEO Rachel Blumenthal.

Even in categories that aren’t as dominated by traditional mall retailers like children’s apparel, many DTC companies still find value in mall space. Some are using empty mall spaces to test products, while department stores like Nordstrom, which often serve as mall anchors, have proven eager to partner with DTC companies.

“With the cost of digital acquisition continually rising, existing traffic centers such as malls make sense as long as people still go to them,” Richie Siegel, founder and lead analyst of consumer advisory firm Loose Threads said in an email. “While the narrative is that malls are dead, tens of millions of people still visit them on a monthly basis, and those are still valuable places to acquire customers. The more good brands a mall has, the better chance it has to continue surviving, so it’s a virtuous cycle.”

For Foot Locker, infusing an online brand into its stores could also help boost traffic. In recent years, Foot Locker’s growth has been hampered by major footwear brands like Adidas and Nike investing more in boosting their direct-to-consumer sales rather than selling through retailers like Foot Locker, as well as declining mall visits. The Rockets of Awesome deal was preceded by Foot Locker’s investments in sneaker reseller platform GOAT, and women’s apparel business Carbon38. Foot Locker so far has not said that it plans to open mini-stores within its own physical retail spaces for GOAT and Carbon38 like it will with Rockets of Awesome.

Brick-and-mortar remains a valuable channel for any DTC company to raise brand awareness — Digiday spoke with 12 DTC companies last fall who all said that their online sales were higher in cities with physical stores than in cities without them. But it’s especially important for companies like Rockets of Awesome looking to tap into the back-to-school market. That’s because the majority of back-to-school purchases are still done in physical stores — and it’s an especially important time for athletic footwear brands like Foot Locker.

Diana Smith, associate director for research and apparel at Mintel, said that when the firm surveyed 2,000 parents last November, 99 percent said that some do part of their shopping in stores, while 86 percent do part of their shopping online. She also said that specialty clothing and footwear stores like Foot Locker are among the top-five retailers that parents like to turn to for after-school shopping — behind mass merchandisers like Target and Walmart, Amazon and department stores.

Another reason why Rockets of Awesome may find it more advantageous to work with a retailer with a big mall presence like Foot Locker is that many of its biggest competitors are still there, too, even if they are shuttering some of their stores. Blumenthal said that it sees its competitors as traditional purveyors of mid-priced children’s clothing, like Gap or J. Crew’s Crewcuts line.

Online retailer and styling service Stitch Fix launched a children’s clothing subscription service over the summer, but there’s been fewer online-only entrants in children’s apparel than in other industries, like mattresses. Another big competitor is Kidbox, another children’s apparel subscription service, but Kidbox fills its boxes with items from other retailers like Nike and Adidas, while Rockets of Awesome only sells its own brand. Last year, Kidbox also launched its own private label brand, but has not opened up its own stores. Amazon also got into the kids’ subscription clothing service with the launch of Prime Wardrobe to all of its U.S. customers last year.

 

The post How Rockets of Awesome will benefit from Foot Locker’s mall stores appeared first on Digiday.

Rubicon Grows Revenue, But Bid Shading Is Driving Down Publisher CPMs

Rubicon Project’s revenue increased 32% in Q4, earning $31.4 million on $246 million in ad spend. It met its goal for a positive adjusted EBITDA and, as a bonus, became cash flow positive a year ahead of projections. The news sent Rubicon’s stock up 15% in after-hours trading. But Rubicon also noted pressure in itsContinue reading »

The post Rubicon Grows Revenue, But Bid Shading Is Driving Down Publisher CPMs appeared first on AdExchanger.

Visible Is Building a Transparent Music Box at SXSW Where You Can Record a Track

Anyone who’s ever gone to South by Southwest in Austin and had a hankering for making their own music might finally get the chance. As part of a street closure during next month’s festival, Verizon-backed digital-only phone provider Visible is building a clear “Music Box” that it hopes will be both as a respite from…

TikTok Will Pay a Record $5.7 Million FTC Fine Over Alleged Violation of Child Privacy Law

The Federal Trade Commission brought the hammer down on video creation application TikTok today, for violations committed by now-defunct app Musical.ly, imposing the largest civil penalty ever obtained in a children’s privacy case: $5.7 million. News of the FTC fine came just hours after data insights firm Sensor Tower reported that the app surpassed 1…

Federal Data Privacy Debate Drags On With Two Hearings This Week

Democratic and Republican legislators have made it evident that there is a bipartisan appetite for federal privacy legislation. But how we get there, that’s the hard part. In two hearings this week, legislators from the Senate and the House of Representatives grilled representatives from industry groups and consumer advocacy organizations about what federal privacy legislation…

Where I See The Next $100 Million Collab | DailyVee 538

Where I See The Next $100 Million Collab | DailyVee 538
I swung by Charlotte for the 2019 NBA All Star Weekend and chopped it up with my homies Nispey Hussle, DJ Clue, and many more. I gave my two cents on the next steps for hip-hop artists and why authenticity matters so much in music.

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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 company’s 4 locations.

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Growing and Improving Pew Research Center’s American Trends Panel

Pew Research Center’s American Trends Panel (ATP) is now the Center’s principal source of data for U.S. public opinion research.

The post Growing and Improving Pew Research Center’s American Trends Panel appeared first on Pew Research Center.

Ryan Reynolds Reveals the Method Acting and Personal Sacrifices Behind Detective Pikachu

Ryan Reynolds has a strong public persona, an immediately identifiable personal brand–dry, egotistical, quick-witted and slightly oblivious–that he has unleashed on his audiences to promote project after project. Most recently, his signature self mockery is on display in a new video posted to the actor’s personal YouTube channel to help promote Pokemon: Detective Pikachu, in…