The emerging digital age is nothing if not contradictory and filled with its own ironies, and it takes events like the month long upfronts and your average random events to bring that into (quirky)
focus.
It is hardly left unsaid, but it is usually left unexplored, that online measurement of who’s watching what is vastly superior, and more intrusive, than anything in the old media
world.
But in the past few weeks, what was being sold, particularly by cable and broadcast networks, was the buy-in-bulk mentality that a rich cache of 18-34s or 25-49s awaits advertisers on
one or another of the networks.
It’s not just them, of course. At Alloy Digital’s NewFronts presentation earlier this month, I joked to an executive that I am of no help to the
demographics of the Smosh channel that I love to watch, despite my continuing calcification. He joked that, in fact, I probably help bring the average down to what they wish it was (18-to-34,
I’d guess) because it has so many younger viewers (much younger) than that.
I made the mistake of shopping for a gift for my wife online recently, and I’m still paying for it with
a barrage of advertisements that are following me around. (What I can tell you about sundresses!) I also booked a flight, car and hotel. The entire digital world seems to know about that, too.
(That’s kind of irksome. I keep getting better offers, but I’m booked. I’m flooded with evidence that verily catcall to me, “You could have done better.”)
Today’s New York Times chronicles an appearance by Larry Page, Google’s CEO, a day
after he announced he has a problem with his vocal cords that, for the last year has made him skip public speaking appearances. He doesn’t like how he handled the situation, he said, and
then he disclosed, “I had this notion that this stuff should be very private, and I think at least in my case, I should’ve done it sooner,” he said.
Private? The P-word? From
the head of Google? Elsewhere, the Times reports on a new,
improved Google Maps that will show users the places they visit a lot, based on information gleaned not just from previous Maps searches but from GooglePlus posts and Gmail in-boxes.
“Like many of Google’s new announcements, the service hovers over the line between useful and creepy,” the story says. In context, it makes Page’s feelings about preserving
some privacy over his medical condition seem disloyal to the core brand, even the core idea of digital.
The future of mass media is advertising that is on the buddy system. The advertiser
knows who you are, at least in broad terms, and you know they know. And everybody is OK with that. Online, increasingly, is being sold through programmatic buys that are based on who’s watching,
not, as the networks still sell advertising, on who they hope is watching. People deep in the digital ad business sometimes speak with a little contempt for three-martini style of buying and
selling. In fact, they have better, bigger data.
And more to come.
A Financial Times article highlighted some of the more “efficient” ways audiences could be
spliced, diced and counted: “A Verizon patent application published in
November details plans to create a digital video recorder that watches television viewers and listens to their conversations for ad targeting. A Visa patent application published in 2011
describes tapping information from DNA data banks."
It’s enough to make even Larry Page exclaim.
pj@mediapost.com