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AdExplainer: Data Clean Rooms
Over the past two years, data clean rooms have exploded onto the programmatic advertising scene, and they’re already at the center of some of the most exciting new partnerships and growth opportunities. But despite their rapid adoption, the definition of what a data clean room is – and all of the related nuance – is not… Continue reading »
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Are You Measuring The Brand Lift Of Your Video Ads? Here’s Why You Should Be
In the digital age, we’re often reminded about how far we’ve come from our prehistoric internet past. A similar shift is happening in traditional advertising and the way consumers build relationships with brands, writes Christian Dankl, co-founder of Precise TV. Today, advertisers have much more insight into specific, data-driven relationships between brands and consumers.
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Nielsen ONE Depends On Nielsen’s Four Screens; Why Retail Media Will Not Be Stopped
Here’s today’s AdExchanger.com news round-up… Want it by email? Sign up here. Through The Tube Nielsen has another horse in the measurement race, and this one’s name is Good Ol’ YouTube. Nielsen’s new Four-Screen Ad Deduplication product allows media buyers to compare their reach on YouTube across desktop, mobile, CTV and their linear audiences to reduce… Continue reading »
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Digiday DealBook: Movement within Netflix, Twitter lawsuit developments, Giphy deal still in flux, and more
Welcome to Digiday’s DealBook. Our focus is to create a quick and easy rundown of the deals, acquisitions and hires that took place last week. The goal is to inform and update you on the latest happenings in the industry at the top of your inbox each Monday. — Carly Weihe
—Since announcing its official advertising partnership with Microsoft, set to launch under a new lower-cost subscription tier early next year, Netflix has announced another virtual fan event with Tudum for Sept. 24. Tudum is a bonus content site owned by Netflix, and this marks the second annual event in partnership. However, Netflix reportedly cut down staffing of Tudum following a less-than-expected return on investment, so it will be interesting to see what the streaming giant will do in year two of this fan event. Netflix also announced it has acquired the animation studio Animal Logic. The deal is expected to close later this year, in which the studio will make exclusive family-friendly content with Netflix in hopes of competing with the biggest brand in kids content, Disney.
—The judge ruling over the Twitter lawsuit has announced that the trial will take place sooner than expected, a win for the beleaguered social platform. Delaware Chancery Judge McCormick ruled that the trial will commence in October over five days, during which Twitter is suing billionaire Elon Musk for backing out of his proposed $44 billion deal to acquire the company earlier this month.
—The Competition Markets Authority in the U.K. has now been tasked with reinvestigating the antitrust inquiries following Meta’s moves to acquire Giphy, home to the ever-popular giph, for $315 million in May 2020. The deal has faced many roadblocks since its initial proposal, as this is the second time Meta will meet CMA to try to get the deal approved.
In other news…
- Disney struck a development deal with OBB Media to produce documentaries and docuseries. The agreement is non-exclusive and multi-year, with Disney hoping to attract more Gen Z and millennial audiences onto its various platforms.
- FaZe Clan, an esports media company, went public in a $725 million SPAC deal this past Wednesday. FaZe Clan comprises of over 100 members, with streamers playing on 11 esports teams, with a strong Gen Z following on Youtube.
- Nintendo acquired Dynamo Pictures, allowing the company to expand into film production with its content. The company will rebrand the production company into Nintendo Pictures Co, with the deal set to close this October.
- Allen Media Group bought Black Media Channel for $11 million this past week with the intent to revive the bankrupt company after it shut down earlier this year.
- Rain the Growth Agency, a DTC advertising agency, has partnered with iSpotTV, a TV measurement company, to enable the agency’s clients to measure their engagement.
Additionally, below is a list of industry leader hires and promotions
- Exile Content Studio hired Daniel Batista as Chief Digital Officer
- He was formerly the managing director of Stormlight Advisory
- MSCI hired Cristina Bondolowski as Chief Marketing Officer
- She was formerly the global head of marketing at HP
- Material hired Laurie MacLaren as COO
- She was formerly the president of agile growth services
- XSET, a gaming and lifestyle organization, hired Tim Mulligan as vp, head of sales
- He was previously the head of strategic accounts at 100 Thieves
- Jomboy Media hired Andrew Patterson as the company’s first CEO
- He was previously chief strategy officer at Greenfly
- Apartment Therapy Media promoted Laura Shocker to CCO
- She was previously editor in chief at the company
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Media Buying Briefing: Meet the People hopes investment in blockchain-based zero-party data pays off
There’s a new breed of agency holding company on the rise: They are out to build multi-dimensional outfits to attract mid-size or even large clients, but they are built for speed and agility — something few established holdcos can say for themselves.
Meet the People is one digitally-native mini-holdco that’s quietly been growing its business base since Tim Ringel founded it in late 2021. Unlike some of its rivals that acquire and then assimilate into a single brand, MTP owns three agencies with distinct identities and purposes, said Ringel:
- VSA Partners, a Chicago-based creative shop handling clients including Google, Harley Davidson and IBM
- Public Label, a retail shopper and experiential agency working out of Denver, New York and Toronto, handling clients including Moet-Hennessy and Ford
- Match Retail, a Canadian pure-play performance shop with clients including Nespresso and LG
“I don’t believe in a unitary brands firm structure,” said Ringel, whose tenure includes stints in traditional holding companies that enabled him to learn how to scale. “Because it kills the fundamental differentiator of why your client or talent wants to work with an agency.”
But MTP is about to take an interesting left turn with the hope of solving the ever-bigger issue of identification deprecation. It’s taking an investment stake in a Swiss tech platform, called qiibee (pronounced kee-bee, so as not to be confused with the defunct Quibi), which is developing a consumer-controlled loyalty rewards program allowing consumers to redeem loyalty points across a wide variety of marketers — rather than just one at a time.
The concept is built on blockchain technology that safeguards the data from both a consumer and a marketer point of view. Currently, qiibee has 27 brands lined up, including Etihad Airways, Coca-Cola and Coinbase, reaching a total of 50 million customers.
The payoff? Fully consented zero-party data, which, in the age of deprecation, is pretty valuable.
“What we do is build an infrastructure where every loyalty program can build on, and to have one central database with all these rewards stored where we take responsibility on potentially billions of dollars in rewards,” said Gabriele Giancola, co-founder of qiibee. “Nobody owns the database, so no one can change the data. And you automatically create efficiency for brands because every reward is on the same chain. And they can connect more easily with each other and through that mitigate all reconciliation costs.”
The undisclosed investment gives MTP’s agencies access to fully-consented consumer data to guide clients. “If we apply a consent-based exchange of information between consumer and the brand without an intermediary like Google or Facebook — if we can create that for any mid-size brand, their future is pretty bright.”
His reasoning, given the mid-sized clients MTP’s agencies set their sights on, is that some of them can’t do this on their own. “Most of the mid-sized companies who run $50, $100, $200 million of media spend don’t have the resources, from analytics specialists to data scientists. Most of them don’t even have a data management platform,” he said.
Not everyone agrees with MTP’s choice to go the European route (Ringel is a German native). “The notion of investing in data capabilities is a strong first step as data intelligence is critical to marketing strategy, development and measurement,” acknowledged Jay Pattisall, vp and senior agency analyst at Forrester. “However, a zero-party data play in the stringent GDPR environment in Europe and the looming regulatory situation in the U.S. seems a bit short-sighted. In the near term zero-party data can be useful in activation and get around Google’s third-party data deprecation. But longer term the U.S. and European regulatory environments could challenge that strategy.”
Ringel responded that the very fact that qiibee is European puts MTP one step ahead of data privacy legislation. “If I want to bring something unique to my clients, I need to educate them based on the highest data privacy standards in the world. And that is Germany and Switzerland right now,” he said. “That’s what the future is going to look like.”
Joy Baer, a digital and tech consultant/adviser to media and entertainment companies, said the key to success for MTP’s zero-party data play with qiibee is scale. “They’ll need enough consumers to make the data set rich enough to be valuable to clients,” said Baer. “The strategy is solid and one to watch.”
Color by numbers
Matterkind, IPG’s data activation company, today plans to release a report offering clients a roadmap to prioritize diversity, equity and inclusion in their marketing efforts, Digiday has learned. Based on insights gathered by research consultancy MTM, here are some of the suggested improvements brands can make:
- The report found that over 50% of people think it’s important for advertisers to ensure they reach a diverse range of audiences, rising to 70% for people who are likely to engage with ads.
- Here’s why: 50% of customers agree that they are more likely to recommend a product or service if their advertisements are diverse and representative.
- Forty-five percent of customers feel that they are more likely to buy a product or service if its ads are diverse and representative.
- Forty-four percent of customers say they wouldn’t engage with a brand they felt it was not taking diversity and representation seriously.
- And 36% of customers have boycotted a brand because of those issues.
- As far as marketing strategy goes, the report predicts a 23% increase in advertisers adopting strategies to address underrepresented groups over the next three years compared to the last three years.
Takeoff & landing
- Some high-level executive moves went down in media agency land last week. John Osborn, a longtime Omnicom veteran who was most recently CEO of OMD USA, stepped down from the post, which he’s helmed since 2017. Ozzie, as he’s affectionately known, is being replaced by Christina “Chrissie” Hanson, who most recently was chief strategy officer.
- Over at IPG, Daryl Lee was promoted to CEO of McCann Worldgroup, replacing Bill Kolb, who remains chairman of the group. Lee most recently was global CEO of Mediabrands, the media arm of IPG, and this promotion is a return of sorts for him: He had moved up to the Mediabrands job after heading up UM, McCann’s media arm. And in that same tradition, replacing Lee atop Mediabrands is Eileen Kiernan, currently global CEO of UM.
- There was also a bit of account shuffling last week, as Hanes underwear brand put its media up for review — it has been handled by a few agencies, including Publicis’ Spark Foundry and Kepler Group … And Discover Financial Services landed its media business with GroupM’s Mindshare, representing a loss (again) for Spark Foundry as well as Dentsu, which had handled search through its 360i unit.
- Given the growing use of influencers as a marketing alternative, the Association of National Advertisers has issued measurement guidelines as a means of addressing questions of inconsistency and transparency. The metrics being introduced address awareness, engagement and conversion.
Direct quote
“We are seeing clients slow down. Many are waiting for their earnings before deciding if they’re going to go forward with initiatives. Price is always important when they’re trying to stretch marketing dollars. They’re asking us to dig a little bit deeper. We’ve really been in a hyper growth mode [but] we’re predicting it’s going to slow considerably in the second half of the year.”
— Keith Schwartz, CEO of digital agency/consultancy Bounteous, on marketplace conditions in the second half of 2022.
Speed reading
- Just as Bounteous’ Keith Schwartz indicated in the above quote, Digiday’s senior news editor Seb Joseph and senior ad-tech reporter Ronan Shields teamed up to lay out just how much softer the ad marketplace will be the rest of this year — bad enough that even digital will feel the pinch.
- Digiday senior marketing reporter Marty Swant dove into the political machinations behind the first proposed national data privacy legislation to ever successfully get out of committee.
- I looked into the chances of GroupM getting the rest of the marketing ecosystem to jump aboard its efforts to create a measurement framework for decarbonization in media. At first blush, it could be tough — but it’s vitally important.
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