
In an
effort to convince more advertisers to begin using technology to automate the way they plan and buy out-of-home media, four-year-old ad tech start-up ADstruc is going to compete directly with Madison
Avenue. Just months after one of the biggest agency holding companies -- Interpublic -- invested in it, ADstruc is launching its own advertising agency.
The new shop,
code-named “Project X,” will pitch and service advertisers directly, competing with the kind of standalone out-of-home media-buying shops that typically are part of major agency holding
companies, and which historically have controlled the lion’s share of the national out-of-home media business.
“We’ve watched so many agencies botch
how they buy out-of-home media that we figured we could do it better ourselves,” says ADstruc Founder and CEO John Laramie, adding that Project X was born more out of necessity than a desire to
compete with other agencies.
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While ADstruc’s automation platform been scaling nicely, and is approaching $200 million in out-of-home media billings, it is still
only being used by a handful of big ad shops, mainly Interpublic agencies and some leading edge digital shops like WPP’s Neo@ogilvy.
Laramie says ADstruc has
nothing to lose and everything to gain by entering the agency business, because most of its growth has come directly from advertisers -- often local ones -- utilizing its self-serve or managed
services platform, anyway.
By formalizing its managed services under a free-standing agency brand, he says, Project X will be able to compete directly for major national
brands. He says the fledgling shop already is pitching big brands in the fast-food, entertainment and fashion categories, and he also expects some to work with other agencies that want to farm out
their out-of-home media-buying to a specialty shop.
The big advantage Project X will have, he says, is that it sits on top of ADstruc’s technology, which is
rapidly evolving from a simple automation play into a far more strategic data-based audience targeting system with the ability to identify and reach consumers in-market and at specific locations
related to their brand research or purchasing journey.
For example, he says ADstruc recently developed a method for pin-pointing consumer tweets about brands in specific
locations to geographically target out-of-home ads to them. He says ADstruc has already begun talking to mobile companies about ways of integration mobile data and ad targeting to build on
that.
With more precise data targeting and planning systems and more efficient workflow management, Laramie says Project X can compete more effectively with even the
biggest of Madison Avenue’s out-of-home specialists.
Asked if he is worried about biting the hand that feeds ADstruc, Laramie says he’s not, noting that big
advertisers like Procter & Gamble, American Express and Target are beginning to utilize similar programmatic ad technologies to take their buying in-house anyway.
“If [traditional agencies] aren’t doing a good job, they need to get out of the way,” he says, adding that it’s imperative not just for advertisers, but for the
out-of-home industry.
“Twenty to forty percent of out-home media is unsold on a monthly basis,” he explains, “because they don’t have the demand channel to
fulfill that yet.”