At least that’s Michael Connolly’s view. Connolly is CEO and co-founder of Sonobi, an ad-tech firm. He thinks that planning and transacting media based on impressions and CPMs will
eventually go away.
Connolly believes the market is heading toward something he describes as a “100% people-based market” that’s direct to publishers, with no intermediaries.
In that scenario, technology that plans and delivers media to specific and highly targeted audiences is guaranteed. Sonobi offered its views recently in a series of three whitepapers.
What
does a move from impressions to people mean? Connolly said Sonobi is making people “plannable” so brands can have predictable conversations. For example, a publisher today might deal
with 30 million impressions a day generated by 1.1 million people. That’s the currency the publisher has and the currency the buyer wants. The ability to plan and sell media on an
“individual person basis” is what Connolly said the market will evolve to. That means thinking about ad inventory as people, not impressions.
From an impression perspective,
advertisers want to reach consumers in engaged environments. If a brand says it wants to look at its 250,000 customers across a specific publisher, it wants to know how many of its customers are on a
particular page and then reserve that audience.
But, in Connolly’s view, audience-based targeting has no planning function. And real-time bidding (RTB) is essentially auctioning off
unsold inventory. Connolly maintained that the RTB marketplace is limited by creative type: “It doesn’t work across video and mobile very well, and there’s no planning component. The
question is, how do we provide technology that gives both the publisher and buyer the insights necessary to plan and negotiate against future audiences?” He said agencies like Merkle are
bringing CRM-level data from brands to the table to negotiate on.
Connolly thinks cost-per-viewable-person will be a metric that’s eventually adopted and that publishers need to
transition to people as inventory, and away from impressions as inventory.
What are the benefits of this so-called “people-based market” vs. the impressions-based CPM model?
Connolly said the cost-per-viewable person (cpVp) offers benefits for publishers because instead of a site’s inventory being just a collection of impressions, it becomes a collection of unique
consumers. This creates a sense of scarcity, which can be a publisher’s most valuable asset. In Connolly’s “people-based” scenario, every viewer is relevant and has
value; there are no remnant consumers.
The sense of scarcity is further enhanced when anaudience is combined with the right content and a consumer-friendly media experience. Then you
might have guaranteed, viewable audiences across mobile, video, and native channels.
This scenario also enables advertisers guaranteed access to their unique audiences, and enables
communication with consumers based on their particular relationship with a brand. Sonobi believes that media plans represent, at best, a proxy for an audience, but “people-based” planning
and buying creates more certainty around consumer reach with minimal waste.
Connolly argued that buyers need to evolve their strategy. If they want data, it should be at the center of their
media plans. Data can be forecast and predicted on a guaranteed basis. “We have to make sure the new marketplace is direct and there are no intermediaries,” Connolly said.
All
intermediaries do is increase fees and place restrictions. By intermediaries, he means ad exchanges, supply-side platforms, demand-side platforms, and other entities that publishers use to get access
to demand sources.
Connolly maintained that publishers only need one technology intermediary, not dozens.