This is the time of year when pundits make bold, attention-grabbing predictions about what you can look forward to in the coming year. These prognostications tend to be grandiose and pretty much
identical, as if everybody attended the same panel at the most recent conference and agreed to write the same predictions.
I thought I’d take a different “spin” on
things. Rather than simply saying what I think might happen, I decided to predict what won’t happen in 2015. So without further ado, here’s what we
won’t see in 2015:
You won’t hear “2015 is the year of mobile.” That was 2014 00 and 2013, 2012, 2011 and even part of 2010. Mobile is not a year -- it is a
transition, and it takes time. In 2015 everyone will wake up to the idea that mobile is a channel, and possibly as important a channel as television. Mobile is going to move from a line
item on your plan to the driving factor behind your marketing efforts, becoming the primary means of brand engagement for every retail, travel and financial services company on the planet. Those
behind on this transition will begin to lose market share.
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You won’t hear about 2015 as the year programmatic TV took hold; that will be 2017. 2015 is the year where
the infrastructure will be built in anticipation of programmatic models being applied to TV, and 2016 will be the year of trial and testing. The television upfront in 2017 is going to be
earth-shattering, but we are still two years away from that. The market is not quite ready yet, primarily because the systems for buying the media and the ability to purchase actual audiences
rather than estimated audience composition are not yet in place. They may not be final in 2017, but that’s the year when things are going to really shift, since 2017 is the year when all
media truly goes digital. That gives you two years to get your act together.
2015 will not be the year we get tired of Big Data. 2015 will also not be the year where privacy gets
addressed (that won’t happen until after an election year). Big Data is a concept still in its infancy and we have some time before it matures. What we are going to see are new ways
of accessing and using data. The biggest challenge in Big Data is how to prioritize which data is most important and how to get started. That is no small feat and that is what 2015 will
set us up to do. 2015 is the year when Big Data gets digested.
2015 will not be radically different from 2014. It will simply be a continuation of what we saw this past
year. The business of digital media is not small anymore, and radical change is not likely. Once every few years a new player will come along and shake things up, but for the most part
Facebook and Google will dominate the Web, and Amazon and eBay will dominate ecommerce. There will be more consolidation and the deals will get larger, though I think there will only be a few
deals north of $400 million in 2014, while most of the M&A market will focus on companies in the sub-$30 million in revenue category.
Consolidation, maturation and evolution are the
standards in 2015, which is good because I think we need some time to figure things out. If 2017 is the year of cross-channel and TV going programmatic, we are about to witness an exponential
expansion in the digital media business so we could use a year or two get ready for it. Don’t you agree?