In a new white paper, “Cross-Screen Planning,” TubeMogul says the way marketers currently plan and
buy media across screens is broken — and depending on the audience, anywhere from 20% to 50% of media spend might be wasted due to siloed planning.
The goal of the research, released
Thursday, is to illustrate how far off a marketer’s plans might be if it’s not thinking algorithmically about its cross-screen planning.
The implications of the research are that
marketers might be wasting money if they’re not using software to build their media plans. Media plans have cycles throughout the year, but planning is intrinsically an iterative
process—plans must be optimized to maximize reach and other factors. Software can help.
Outside of upfronts, at least $10 billion is spent every year on reaching millennials with video,
whether it’s on TVs, PCs or phones. Avertisers that plan in silos may be wasting more than $2 billion of those dollars.
For the white paper, TubeMogul created modeled plans based
on a $10 million budget for a three-month period and assumed no preexisting TV, digital or mobile ad plans. Based on those plans, it found that marketers spend $1.43 to reach a single millennial male
(18 to 34) through traditional, siloed planning methods. They could reach that same young male demographic for only 50 cents by using software-based planning. That's 186% more efficient.
On
the other end of the spectrum, the company looked at a narrower audience like "Auto Intenders” and found it costs 26 cents to reach them through traditional methods, versus 17 cents to reach
them through software. That’s 53% more efficient.
While the costs per individual are relatively low, once you extrapolate them across the millions of individuals in each audience group,
gains of 186% and 53% represent significant savings.
Siloed plans are less successful because they don't consider the duplication across screens, or the viewing habits by demographics on
a granular level.
The white paper states that planning across screens allows marketers to maximize efficiency by making sure each element of the plan adds as much reach as possible. "For
instance, the first best way to reach your target audience might be to buy a prime-time TV show, but once that is bought, the best next step might be to buy digital video targeted at people who watch
very little TV. A predetermined budget might force a planner to buy where they have remaining budget, not where they get the best incremental reach," it stated.