Brand managers ask if it’s possible to launch branding initiatives programmatically but I think that’s the wrong question. What they need to ask is: How quickly can I get good at
it?
Why the urgency? Look no farther than your newest employees; I bet they’re Millennials.
We are living through a seismic shift in demographics. Millennials – the 80
million people who were born sometime in the early 1980’s to the early 2000s — are the largest generation in the history of
America. By 2030, there will be more
Millennials than all other generations combined. Remember when the Boomers dominated consumer culture? They need to make way for their grandkids.
Millennials
already wield tremendous economic power, and their power is growing. By 2017 they will spend $200 billion each year, outspending the
boomers. Over the course of their lifetimes this will top $10 trillion.
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Here’s where things become very interesting for brand marketers. Over the next decade, tens of
millions of Millennials will select, attend and graduate from college, enter the work world, marry, buy homes, and start families. Each milestone represents a prime opportunity for brands to influence
those 80 million people and earn their loyalty. There are literally trillions of dollars at stake.
But brand marketers will need to learn a new bag of tricks to reach and engage them. Back in
the days when families tuned in to watch the Bill Cosby Show or Seinfeld — on the same day and the same time and generally all in front of the same set — reaching a target demographic was
pretty straightforward, and scale was simply a matter of buying more airtime. And with every network selling 30-second spots, the same creative could be reused everywhere.
Those days are
gone. While Millennials watch just as much TV as previous generations, they spend more
time watching it on devices other than television sets. There’s no shortage of digital outlets for them, including network’s Web sites, Netflix, Hulu, YouTube, and any
one of the TV-on-demand services. Add content, social media and ecommerce — and their entire media focus has shifted online.
This complicates things on many levels. First, brand
marketers need to embrace all digital mediums, not just TV. And they’ll need to create a broader palette of creatives, as well as learn how to match the best format for each channel. After all,
if you force Millennials to watch a 30-second pre-roll on YouTube, the only thing you’ll earn is their resentment.
This is why mastering programmatic marketing is essential for brand
survival. It’s the best (and most efficient) way to reach and engage millions of Millennials — with the kind of reach that TV used to provide.
But in a world swamped with
“Big Data,” it’s critical that ad buyers understand which kinds of data will actually help them reach Millennials. Not all data is created and segmented equally, which can hurt your
ability to reach your target audience efficiently. At the end of the day, programmatic marketing is only as good as the data that feeds it.
Over the past five years the industry has seen a lot
of advances in the data used to target consumers. With 80 million Millennials essentially up for grabs, brand marketers need to focus on the right data. You can’t assume that all young adults
25-34 are interested in, say, marriage -- many may already be expecting their first child, and many may be planning the trip of a lifetime. If you want to establish meaningful communications with
Millennials, you’ll need to listen carefully to the data signals so you can determine the correct life stage for each individual, and message them appropriately.
One of the strategic
benefits of programmatic buying is that it allows you to focus your ad spend just on your target audience — without cobbling together sponsorships on a bunch of Web sites — so it’s
highly efficient. Plus, you can track results in real time so you can optimize your spend immediately.
Fortunately, purchase data provides very specific clues and insights as to whom, when and
how you should message consumers. But you need to know now to interpret the signals. (Someone who purchases a box of diapers isn’t necessarily a parent; she may be an aunt or a friend doing
favor for a new parent. Someone who purchases diapers on a weekly basis is certainly a parent).
So brand marketers will need to ensure the targeting data they purchase is accurate by examining key characteristics, including recency, source, and the number of data
points used to classify the audience. If their data isn’t accurate, they’ll miss their target.
If brand marketers get smart about programmatic marketing, they will they secure the
future of their brands.