Most people in the ad-tech universe are talking about transparency in one way or another. Of course transparency means different things to different people. It involves media buys, media pricing,
viewability standards, the assessment of non-human traffic, relationships among ad-tech vendors, agencies, publishers and marketers, and more.
But here’s a piece of the transparency
equation we hear less about: accountability. And by that, I mean to include attribution. Savvy agencies and marketers are trying to confront accountability across as many screens, channels and formats
that exist. There are many. And there will be many more, because technology is evolving every day.
For the enterprise, accountability is no less than a call to arms for agencies and
marketers, and I would include publishers in this equation as well, to speed up marketing technology decisions. Prioritizing and assessing what’s needed is essential before making an investment
in ad tech or marketing cloud services from the likes of an Adobe, Oracle, IBM and others. But the faster the decision-making goes, the sooner marketers, agencies and publishers will figure out
what’s working and what’s not working.
So how do they get smarter about transparency and get reliable attribution?
According to Joe Apprendi, CEO of Collective and a
veteran ad-tech executive, the biggest problem in the market today is the lack of education among marketers responsible for investments in technology. They need to know and understand much more than
they do. They also need to understand what data they’ll get and how it meshes third-party data. They need to know how to use all the data and hold partners accountable.
“Ultimately,
whatever service provider they choose to work with, it’s incumbent upon the marketer to get organized to make them accountable,” Apprendi says.
Overall, attribution is really the
biggest problem in media. Ask yourself these questions: How will I measure success, and how do I hold my partners accountable no matter if they have an open or an undisclosed business model?
In Apprendi’s view, once you have attribution in order, you can solve for accountability. And then, you can talk about how transparency can enable better decisions about where working media
dollars are going.
While attribution is a certainly an issue for traditional media, many think digital media will hold stakeholders accountable—that digital media is more
measurable. What people didn’t take into account were the issues of non-human traffic, all manner of issues around viewability and how impressions are attributed: which are seen, and which ones
contribute to ROI.
“Marketers have a hard time holding their partners accountable, because until they can emphatically determine that their investment is working, they don’t have
the confidence in measurement. At bare minimum, they should at least have transparency,” Apprendi said. “It provides insights on where the money is going, and the way to measure
success.”
Once you solve for data and attribution, you can see what’s working and what’s not. There’s an overarching need for marketers to get smarter and get
attribution nailed down. For digital display and video, marketers need to understand the quality of the impression they’re getting. Does it have the opportunity to be seen? And, that
impressions needs to be served to a human being, not a robot! No credit for non-human impressions. Then marketers can ask: Is my media working? Waste needs to be filtered out to determine whether
media is working properly.
“It’s shocking to me still how few marketers are ensuring they’re getting the appropriate information to measure success,” Apprendi said.
Beyond the basics, marketers also need to ask: Which impressions matter and which don’t? How do I give credit to those that matter and are viewed—by screen, format, partner and/or
service provider?
Another important piece of the puzzle is gaining a unified view of all data. Marketers are struggling with this and are finding they have too many platforms. The result?
Silos, and a lack of interoperability.
For example, marketers may have a DMP (data management platform), a SSP (supply-side platform), DSP (demand-side platform), exchange and providers that
are walled gardens. All of these platforms may end up handicapping marketers even after they have their data in order. Selecting the right partners is important—but Apprendi argues that
interoperability between platforms may be even more so.
Companies that provide marketing cloud services will increasingly acquire attribution platform and data companies. Attribution is
where everything comes together in terms of media measurement and, ultimately, performance. Companies like Adobe, Acxiom, Oracle (with its integration of Datalogix and BlueKai) and IBM are in a good
position to provide attribution services. Attribution leads to accountability.