I remember that when I started in the media business, around the mid-‘70s, the community's attention was focused on reach. Mass reach.
Broad reach. Television. The cult of the horizontal. Three broadcast networks. Some black-and-white syndication. TV upfronts concluded no later than late May's, Memorial Day. In the early to
mid-‘80s, emulation expanded beyond the limits of its reflection, as cable co-opted the vertically magazined approach and injected it with horizontal modifications. ESPN, MTV, CNN, Nickelodeon
and Discovery sought and won their niche psychographic and demos.
At the turn of the 21
st Century, as the televisual universe
expanded and video became much more prevalently experienced across all static and mobile TV platforms (traditional TV, broadband, mobile), we entered the horizontical epoch. Snuck up on me, too. I
first witnessed this phenomenon when salespeople – particularly start-ups – presented their pitch in what first appeared to me as contradictory parallels. From their vantage point, one
could utilize their value proposition in an either/or basis. I think I need some illustrations:
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Social Video Networks
Social video networks, such as NextNewNetworks
– acquired by YouTube in 2011 – and For Your Imagination, built their video brands by discovering meaningful social networking communities and generating video programming that was
attractive to that audience. Oftentimes, they will discover their program hosts, champions and content within that community. Once they have established a foundation within the communal vertical, they
forge ahead to generate another vertical of loyal socialists that have similar characteristics (age, wealth, education, hobbies) but are drawn to different subject matter. In their sponsorship
proposition to the marketer, they stress the value of their vertical i.e., males that watch boxing, as well as the value of their horizontal i.e., males that watch boxing programs, males that watch
basketball programs, males that watch baseball programs, and package it all together: niche and broader reach unique audience synthesized into one package.
Addressable Media
Companies
By mid-2005, addressable media companies Navic, which was acquired by Microsoft in 2008 and subsequently laid to rest, and Invidi evolved internal corporate value propositions
that travel down opposite roads simultaneously -- though only at first glimpse. When I first started utilizing Navic's interactive TV applications, it was to send the appropriate message (banner
overlay on video commercial) to Zip codes as well as to individual households in a select group of markets. I was able to match the technology with Acxiom's segmentation analytics and provide what I
hoped was the most relevant messaging to a particular household. The vertical approach worked for me. Navic introduced its Admira ad auctioning product, which drilled down into the individual
set-top-box program usage and was able to sell, through auction, specific programs delivering video commercials to specific set-top boxes within a cable zone (a gaggle of Zip codes) as well as
aggregate those STBs with similar program-viewing characteristics to create a broad reach of a narrow demographic i.e., the horizontal.
Invidi, whose investors include Google, NBC, GroupM, and
who is now the predominant video addressable technology utilized by the majority of MVPDs (Dish, DirecTV, Verizon, Comcast, Cox), had a similar but different approach. Its technology delivers specific
video commercials to households with specified characteristics. These characteristics can be determined by partnerships with dataminers, marketer's loyalty databases or their fuzzy mathematics. In
fact, Invidi has said on occasion that it doesn't matter what program is being viewed, they know the broad psychographics of those watching and have the ability to deliver the appropriate video
commercial. That's the vertical. However, in the same breath, they continue to hint at a model in which they partner with a pay TV operator (cable, satellite, telco) to sell commercial time in an
accumulation of audience ratings to rival local TV stations. As an example, in a given market the broadcast TV station delivers on average a 5 rating during a particular daypart, whereas the average
cable operator delivers a .5 rating per network for the same daypart. The Invidi horizontal solution: Aggregate enough local cable inventory to equal a 5 rating, offer competitive pricing and increase
the local cable operator's market share.
OTX & Its LMX Study
OTX was a leading independent global consumer research and consulting firm that was acquired by
Ipsos in 2010. One of its publications, “The Longitudinal Media Experience Study” (LMX), first pointed out to me that the 24-hour day is now 33 hours, we still sleep a consistent eight
hours a day, and the additional nine-hour expansion of our day is the result of multitasking mostly within and accompanied by media consumption. OTX developed this tome to provide understanding into
the evolving U.S. consumer's multimedia experience from a behavioral and attitudinal perspective. In other words, provide insight on the media dynamics across the life cycle and the implications for
content choices and device adoption moving forward.
Although I remember as a kid doing my homework and watching TV or my next door neighbor, Uncle Bill, the policeman, watching baseball
games with the volume off and the radio on, or practicing the piano and simultaneously speaking on the phone (landline) with my girlfriend, multitasking didn't have a dramatic effect on my daily
existence and marketers' media plans. The OTX LMX suggests that it does now. Simultaneous media usage through vertical absorption of content as well as horizontal aggregation of impressions for
marketing campaigns suggests further immersion in the horizontal and vertical crossroads.
Turner Broadcasting's TVinContext
In 2008, Turner Broadcasting introduced
a new advertising system, TVinConext, whose altruistic mission was to match commercials with the content of its programming. Theoretically, the system is designed to match the ability of digital media
to place ads next to relevant content. For example, if a movie features a scene about pregnancy, the next commercial break would feature a related product, such as gift ideas for new moms and
newborns; if the program featured a bathroom scene, then the next commercial break would feature a related product, such as a comb for a woman or Rogaine for a bald man. Turner Broadcasting continues
to position itself as a broad reach network – a horizontal rival to cable siblings and challenger to the broad reach broadcast networks – as well as offer advertisers the opportunity when
appropriate to vertically target pregnant women, and people with and without hair.
TV Programmatic
Since 2013, when TV programmatic platforms and concept sound
bites began peppering the trades more regularly, there appears to be many similarities to the aforementioned examples of vertical and horizon integrations for marketers to exploit:
-- Footprints
The majority of TV programmatic platforms allow marketers to purchase TV schedules comprised of broadcast and cable programming – national and
local - to reach broad audiences or proffer addressable opportunities for specific verticals via Clypd and Videology. RevShare’s Admore offers broadcast only inventory from TV stations across
the country, while AudienceXpress provides a rich trove of national cable inventory for advertisers to vivisect.
-- Data
Inventory can be measured, planned
and purchased through traditional Nielsen age, gender and light/medium/heavy viewership or vertically through a combination of first party and third party data from Acxiom, Experian, Epsilon and
Rentrak special segmentations.
-- Cross-Media Applications/Implications
From a horizontal view, TV programmatic schedules can be purchased and analyzed
– cause and effect – in a standalone fashion, or in combination, with complementary digital verticals media including search, social, display, and video via a value proposition offered by
Turn, and I imagine soon by TubeMogul.
-- Secret Sauce
Platforms like AdapTV, Simulmedia and Collective (TBD) utilize their proprietary algorithms to
help marketers purchase traditional linear TV inventory by selecting programming that have the highest concentrations of desired audience to extend the reach of the traditionally negotiated TV
schedules. AdapTV acquired PrecisionDemand to enable the platform to ascertain which is the most valuable TV inventory given a marketer’s criteria; Simulmedia is able to analyze a
marketer’s current and/or prior campaign to provide unduplicated reach extension; and Collective, when it announces its TV programmatic foray, will most likely incorporate its TVA product that
measures the symbiotic relationship between TV program viewership and site visitations.
-- Automation
Automation is the theoretical backbone of the
successful TV programmatic implementation. Some argue that it will save time that is valued and translated into GRPs while others are of the allowance for greater individual productivity. Regardless,
at this juncture, TV programmatic is still one phone call away.
Welcome to the horizontical.