Private marketplace is the latest confusing term to come out of the ad tech space, which seems to delight in buzzwords, acronyms and complex explanations. Depending on whom you ask, this broad concept
may be referred to as private marketplace, private exchange, publisher-direct, programmatic direct, programmatic premium, Deal ID or any other number of monikers.
The term I prefer, private
marketplace, gives demand and supply partners the ability to transact video advertising programmatically, in a direct, invitation-only technology platform. In reality, many of the other terms
you’re hearing are either an alternate definition of the same thing or a subset of private marketplace.
So why did this trend that started in display move to video?
Let’s
be honest. Premium publishers have historically been reluctant to expose their crown jewels -- digital video inventory -- transparently into video exchanges and platforms. Some of the reasons have
typically included:
1) concern over sales channel conflict;
2) worry about the commoditization of their
highest CPM inventory; and
3) fear of programmatic in general.
Private marketplaces solve all of these issues for premium publishers and
make it safe to go into the water. As more and more advertisers develop and expand programmatic-only budgets, publishers are pursuing private marketplaces in order to access these budgets.
Advertisers are using private marketplaces for several reasons: to more fully leverage programmatic technology across all of their video ad buys, to consolidate video ad buys onto one platform, and
to improve efficiencies. Private marketplaces combine the capabilities digital advertisers have been using in display and long tail video with premium video inventory. Advertisers negotiate for a set
of inventory combined with unique data sets, and for this privilege, they will pay a premium. This allows advertisers to consolidate disparate video inventory sources, premium and regular, in one
place for holistic campaign planning and optimization.
Publishers also have a lot to gain from private marketplaces. They gain efficiency by selling premium video via automated platforms,
instead of cumbersome insertion orders, while controlling which buyers access their inventory and at what price. Publishers can use analytics-driven platforms to get new insights into buyer and sales
trends, demand, and pricing across all inventory levels. The higher CPMs that publishers can achieve versus general exchange pricing make private marketplaces very compelling.
In a world where
billions of digital ad impressions are bought and sold via automated platforms every day, the fact publishers and advertisers are still using insertion orders, phone calls, and faxes to buy premium
inventory is nothing short of incredible. Private marketplaces, whatever you call them, are a win-win for video advertising buyers and sellers.