Wall Street's Wieser To Premium Publishers: You're On The Endangered Species List
Don’t count on the emergence of “native” advertising, larger ad formats or publisher alliances to do much to reverse the gains made by programmatic buying
at the expense of traditional content-based advertising.
In a keynote talk at the OMMA Premium Display conference Thursday, Brian Wieser, senior research analyst at Pivotal Research,
offered a dim outlook for the future of premium Web advertising.
In addition to the rise of audience-based buying, he pointed to factors including flat ad spending overall, a slowing
shift of ad dollars to digital, and the stronger negotiating position of advertisers in digital media.
“The reality is, I just don’t see a lot of growth,” said
Wieser. “There are real practical reasons I see what we have historically seen as premium display is challenged for structural reasons.” His address follows a recent research report he
issued titled “The Eventual Death of Premium Web Advertising.”
One of the underlying hurdles is the overall weak forecast for ad spending into next year. Because of
factors like the looming fiscal cliff and Hurricane Sandy, Pivotal has reduced its projection of U.S. advertising, predicting it will fall slightly in the second half of 2012 and be flat for the full
year. It projects growth of just 1.2% for 2013.
Wieser also pointed out that annual ad budgets for large companies in recent years has been flat — averaging about $60 million
from 2001 to 2008. That lack of growth in budgets is compounded by a lack of new ad categories and advertisers entering the market. “Growth only occurs when you get new categories of marketers
showing up," he said.
He suggested the shift of spending from traditional media to digital has slowed, with big brands still heavily reliant on TV advertising for major campaigns.
Brands have, in effect, used the Internet to substitute for magazines, limiting how large the digital portion of a media budget can grow.
At the same time, the growth of
audience-based buying through real-time bidding exchanges, agency trading desks and the like has made the economics of display advertising more efficient. But instead of reduced costs leading to
increased spending, Wieser argues that marketers just do more with less -- reallocating spending to social platforms like Facebook or Twitter.
In the digital realm, the advantage in
negotiating for inventory also swings to the buy side because advertisers have better information than publishers to determine pricing. When it comes to negotiating with premium display owners, ad
buyers have the upper hand.
“All these factors put together do not create favorable circumstances for premium display,’ said Wieser, noting there will be a big winner from
the same trends undermining premium advertising: Google. With the largest ad exchange (AdX), the Google Display Network, and a huge amount of aggregated content through YouTube, the search giant is
poised to become the dominant player in display.
What can conventional Web publishers do in the face of premium ad erosion? In his research report, Wieser advised them to find ways to
become a one-stop-shop by making it possible to reach virtually everyone as often as a marketer wants. Plus, he suggested the combination of Yahoo, AOL and MSN into a single entity would
“dramatically change conditions” in the industry by providing a counterweight to Google and Facebook.
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