
It’s
been a little over a week since we launched the RTB 500 and I apologize for not weighing in on it again sooner, but this little ad festival
over in Cannes, France, more or less got in the way. I thought about writing about some of what people were saying over there about programmatic marketplaces, technology, data and RTB (mostly, it
wasn’t good), but I figured I should come back to the RTB 500, because it’s the first chance I’ve had since the launch. So here are a couple of things. First, the reaction to it has
been overwhelmingly positive. Actually, there have been no real negatives yet. And the closest thing to anything negative has been some confusion about what it is, what it really represents and means.
And I take that as a good thing, because part of our mission is to help figure that out. So let’s pick that up again here and I welcome anyone to step forward, weigh in, and provide more
context.
Among the comments I’ve received were some professors of business and economics at a major university who want to discuss exactly that with us, and I will report on whatever
comes from that shortly. In the meantime, I’d like to discuss one initial reaction we had to the index, and some insights that grew out of the discussion. It came from Mike Nolet, CTO and
Co-Founder of AppNexus, who commented on my previous post that the RTB 500 looked “interesting,” but he didn’t feel it looked “very accurate,” because it didn’t
match AppNexus’ quarterly trending data indicating that demand and pricing for RTB inventory builds during the course of a quarter, and rallies near the end of the last month due the way
advertisers manage their quarterly budgets.
“I've always seen a gradual increase in price as the quarter progresses with a strong peak in the last few days of [the quarter] when
advertisers pump unspent budgets,” he commented on RTBlog, adding, “The first few days of a quarter are always low as advertisers are late setting up the next quarters campaign.”
Interestingly, I heard almost the exact same pattern when I previewed the RTB 500 to Art Muldoon and his team at Accordant Media. Muldoon said Accordant is analyzing that pattern and may issue an
analysis of its own as part of its quarterly reports on the RTB marketplace, but he said it basically shows a similar flighting patterns to what Nolet describes, and his conclusion, like Nolet’s
is that advertisers are simply dumping their unused quarterly budgets in the RTB marketplace to make their quarterly goals.
If that’s true, it is an interesting discovery about RTB
marketplace behavior that has not really been discussed openly before, so I’ll take that as one of the first genuine insights to be uncovered by the RTB 500, even if only indirectly. Because if
you ask me, it’s a behavior based on an artifact -- burning up unused quarterly budgets -- and not one a rationale read of the supply and demand of inventory in the RTB marketplace. And it is
the exact reason we wanted to start publishing the RTB 500 index -- to give people a yardstick to compare their own behaviors to.
if what Nolet and Muldoon say is true, it’s a behavior
based on a vestige that I’m not sure any individual marketer -- and maybe not even any individual agency may have been able to see. You’d have to have a diversified portfolio of brands
actively bidding in the RTB marketplace -- the way say AppNexus or Accordant does -- to see that kind of behavior. I’m curious what the folks with an even broader view, like a Rubicon Project,
or maybe OpenX or Google have seen about the peaks and valleys of quarterly RTB budgeting.
If it matches what Nolet and Muldoon are saying, my own belief is it says more about how immature and
unsophisticated the RTB marketplace currently is -- that predictable swings can be made based simply on brands burning off extra budgets at the end of a quarterly cycle. Don’t get me wrong, it
is a genuine market behavior, because obviously, people (and their machines) are behaving that way. It’s just that it probably doesn’t have anything to do with the actual supply-and-demand
of biddable impressions available in the marketplace, like the way annual trends showing the marketplace building in the fourth-quarter and crashing on January 1. That’s a pattern of
supply-and-demand that pre-dates the RTB marketplace and reflects the tightness of marketers competing for share of consumer attention during the peak holiday marketing season.
Anyway, I
thought I’d come back to that one to see if anyone else has a POV on what it means, whether it makes sense, or is as I suggest, just an artifact vs. genuine supply-and-demand. I’ll be back
soon with some other observations about the marketplace -- hopefully with ones made by you.
-- Joe
Money-burning image courtesy of Shutterstock.