Facebook Brought Its Blood Donations Feature to the U.S.

The Blood Donations feature Facebook initially introduced in India in October 2017 is coming to the U.S. The social network first revealed the feature’s impending U.S. debut at its Facebook Communities Summit in February. Blood Donations will debut in Chicago, New York, the San Francisco Bay area, Baltimore and Washington, D.C., before expanding throughout the…

Facebook Watch Is Rolling Out New Features, Monetization Options and Shows

Are people really watching Facebook Watch? Yes, according to the social network, which said Wednesday that 720 million people per month spend at least one minute on its video destination, and 140 million people do so daily, with those daily visitors spending more than 26 minutes there on average. Director of product management Paresh Rajwat…

Why Desus and Mero’s Unique Podcast Ads Aren’t Changing Anytime Soon

One might not associate Desus (Daniel Baker) and The Kid Mero (Joel Martinez), who cover Adweek’s Creative 100 issue this week, with “brand-safe” environments. Desus and Mero are known for their straight-talking takes on everything from baseball to pop culture, their late-night show on Showtime is full of curse words and their podcast seems like…

The Daily Show Buys Ads on Fox News in DC Inviting Trump to Its Presidential Twitter Library

Two years ago, John Oliver realized that the best way to get a message to President Trump was by purchasing ad time on the cable news shows he watches every day. Now his former employer, The Daily Show, is trying the same targeted approach again this week. As The Daily Show With Trevor Noah brings…

Highsnobiety CEO Explains Why The Media Brand Made The Leap To Commerce

Highsnobiety curates and recommends the latest sneakers, streetwear and men’s fashion to its readers. Now David Fischer, the founder and CEO of the 14-year-old media brand, is using that expertise to create its own ecommerce, direct-to-consumer business. Highsnobiety’s first product “drop” in May, a partnership with Prada’s streetwear imprint “Linea Rossa,” sold out of theContinue reading »

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Identity: Too Big To Fail?

“Data-Driven Thinking” is written by members of the media community and contains fresh ideas on the digital revolution in media. Today’s column is written by Nancy Marzouk, founder and CEO at MediaWallah. Without a doubt, identity is the capability du jour. It seems like identity is everywhere, and a slew of new identity players –Continue reading »

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Let’s be up front about advanced TV

By David Dowhan, CEO and founder, TruSignal, a TransUnion company

The possibilities of advanced TV — the use of advanced data to enable household-level targeting or smarter planning on television channels and devices — are blossoming, with investments in addressable channels continuing to grow. But much like a reality show, the story of advanced TV may be exaggerated to sell you on a vision. The truth is that advertisers still invest the majority of TV budgets in linear TV — because the majority of consumers still watch linear TV.

While the industry hums with the potential of advanced TV, advertisers need careful consideration before getting too excited. It’s critical to collect and understand the facts about both advanced and linear TV in order to understand the present market — and plan for the future.

Scale by owner
Both advertisers and analysts agree that scale remains a challenge — and in a sense, all parties are right.

Over-the-top (OTT) channels like Hulu and Roku report annual subscriber growth of up to 50 percent, with each channel touting more than 25 million subscribers. In addition, leading multichannel video programming distributors (MVPDs) like Comcast Xfinity, Spectrum TV® by Charter Communications and AT&T DIRECTV are each plugged into 10 million or more addressable homes. But the scale of these disparate channels still pales in comparison to traditional linear TV, even when stitched together. So with this information in mind, why are advertisers spending billions on advanced channels? A few reasons.

First, scale is set to grow a considerable amount through increased subscribers as well as merger and acquisition activity. As reach increases over time, early adopters will reap the benefits. Secondly, traditional linear scale is on the decline. 39 million U.S. adults have already cut the cord. That number is set to hit 55 million in the next three years. Finally, 30 percent of households with OTT capabilities do not have a cable subscription, meaning OTT advertisers have the potential to reach incremental eyeballs they can’t get on traditional television alone.

Scale is critical in the war to drive a return on media investments, but it’s ultimately inconsequential if you don’t reach the right people. That’s why one of the most compelling reasons to embrace advanced TV is the data.

A quantum leap
Consumers have changed the way they watch TV (screen sharing, streaming, binging, etc.) and advertisers need to change their delivery and approach to fit these new viewer habits. As household-level targeting capabilities improve, perhaps television can no longer be singularly viewed as a mass-reach channel.

While advertisers can still use linear TV for mass branding campaigns, advanced TV channels should embrace a more targeted approach that adjusts reach goals, frequency caps and cost per thousand impressions (CPM) targets accordingly. Advertisers should expect that CPMs may increase, but engagements will also improve as you reach more of the right people and stop targeting those who aren’t a good fit.

A data-first approach
With traditional linear TV, advertisers can only access a handful of data points to make decisions about what inventory to buy, looking for shows that over-index against a few demographics like age and gender. With advanced TV, including data-driven linear planning, advertisers can — and should — leverage thousands of new, people-based data points to power decisions tied to the advertiser and the campaign in order to drive better returns.

Advertisers need to keep pace with consumers who are still largely invested in linear but are flocking to more advanced channels at a quickening pace. This presents a unique opportunity for advertisers to balance data-driven and mass-reach approaches for omnichannel success.

However, before the advanced TV industry reaches mass adoption, it’s crucial that data and technology providers step up to help increase scale, improve interoperability and make data activation easier across the existing complex infrastructure.

As the infrastructure becomes more manageable, expect to see the number of brands investing in advanced TV increase.

We’ll continue to see large, innovative brands take the plunge first, in part as an attempt to use their weight to influence the development of the nascent industry’s setup to their advantage. Smaller, more nimble brands (especially in the direct-to-consumer space) will also continue to move into this space, as many have no qualms in trading scale for smarter targeting.

These early innovators are already seeing the payoff. As the word spreads, it will be up to other brands and mid-sized companies to either fall in line — or fall behind.

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Hulu Tries TV-Style Negotiation; Old Brands Can’t Burn Cash Like A DTC

Here’s today’s AdExchanger.com news round-up… Want it by email? Sign up here. Hulu Steals The Show Hulu is taking a page from the TV sales playbook by offering lower rates to buyers who commit large budgets ahead of time, Variety reports. Hulu was one of the only ad-supported streaming video players at the upfronts, TV’s annualContinue reading »

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