Kudos to AMC Network for starting to offer a percentage of their TV ad inventory through programmatic buying. The announcement last week brought media agency leaders a sliver of hope.
The
buzz surrounding programmatic TV has been heating up for some time. However, AMC is one of the first and only premium suppliers offering some of their TV ad inventory through programmatic buying.
The reality is that true programmatic TV at scale is not quite here yet. In a report earlier this year, IPG Mediabrands told Ad Age that programmatic TV is expected
to surge over the next few years. This is not the case.
Agencies need to educate the industry and marketers on the realities of today to avoid confusion, celebrate and commend milestones,
such as AMC’s announcement, and accelerate drivers for programmatic TV to arrive at scale sooner than 2019 as currently projected.
In the most basic definition, programmatic TV is the
use of technology to connect TV media buyers and sellers in a uniform, automated environment. Programmatic TV utilizes a combination of Set Top Box (STB) data, third-party syndicate audience data and
clients’ customer data to scientifically identify audience profiles based on analysis and then target them with 100% accuracy.
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Unfortunately, tech infrastructure is not set-up to deliver
this at scale. The industry is lacking advanced targeting, real-time bidding, supply-side platforms and private exchanges.
More importantly, programmatic TV in the truest definition requires
on-demand purchase. Since the networks desire upfront commitments for the majority of their inventory, there is little inventory available to purchase through these methods at scale at this point in
time.
Not to mention, network inventory is far from uniform and differs in sophistication by network and is still being managed in excel. Doesn’t sound automated, does it?
But
this doesn’t mean we don’t have the capabilities of better audience targeting with TV these days. We just need to clarify what this means. When industry professionals say programmatic,
what they are really saying is data-driven TV.
Addressable TV is one form of data-driven TV that is available more readily today.
While traditional TV buying is based on a broad
demographic group such as adults 18-34, addressable TV uses customer data and syndicate audience data to identify targetable households that are purchased via the MSO providers: DirecTV, Dish,
cablevision and Comcast.
This equates to roughly 42MM households. By EOY, we are expecting TWC, Cox and Verizon to bring the total HH’s reached to over 60MM (half of all TV
households in the U.S). While this buying is not performed automatically, this "matching" against more granular and specific audience profiles drives more effective audience targeting of TV
ads.
So what does all this mean for TV buying today?
Regardless of how it’s purchased, whether it be upfront, scatter, programmatic, or via addressable/hyperlocal, the TV space is
a sellers’ market, while the digital space is a buyers’ market.
It is up to the agencies and marketers at large to recognize this reality, so we can accelerate
change and enable true programmatic TV at scale sooner than later. We need more Networks like AMC to start selling their shows programmatically so we can drive more relevant advertising for viewers
with more valuable targeting for marketers.