The ANA
wants a window into the walled gardens. Fair enough. The gardens
are so lush and inviting. Beautiful flora and elves and gnomes and miniature deer prancing about. Look! It's a hedgehog! Look! It's a highly targeted audience in a safe environment at reasonable
CPMs!
Who wouldn't want to see that? Because it's not just the beauty; there's the security issue. A lot of advertisers who have sent cash within the walls have been mugged in the process. That's because the auditing methods til now
offered customers by Google and Facebook are positively Trumpian; the verification is based on the platforms saying: “Believe me” -- even though the metrics upon which the inventory
is sold have been shown to be….whaddya call it? ….false.
Facebook video metrics live in a world of alternative facts.
advertisement
advertisement
So, sure, by all means Platform Sultans, please open
yourselves up to scrutiny, as the ANA's report implored you on Friday based on a recent membership survey:
In an era of concerns about transparency in the advertising supply chain,
independent audits of the large digital enterprises by the MRC are very positive developments. Furthermore, it's clear from the ANA survey that there is overwhelming support from client-side marketers
for independent audits by the Media Rating Council. The ANA applauds the recent announcements of Facebook and YouTube. We would appreciate both companies keeping the marketing community fully informed
of their plans and timetables.
And then you will have achieved… very little.
Yes, the platforms have been shown to sell on metrics that didn't bear up to scrutiny.
And yes, the ANA's members have been screwed repeatedly by self-dealing and double-dealing by some agency
“partners.” The lack of vigilance from advertisers who are great at pennywise procurement and pitifully dollar-foolish at monitoring has put the whole marketplace on edge. The ANA and the
4As are the Montagues and the Capulets, and it isn't because the kids are canoodling.
Yet this still misses the point. What is needed from the platforms is far more than a view of ad
performance. What's needed is access to the user data. At present, buyers staple their cash to granular data sets of their own targets, and what they receive in return is a receipt for purchase and no
performance data whatsoever. They may get some ROI, but they get no notion of who clicked, of attribution or of anything else to inform subsequent buys on the platforms or anywhere else.
It's
like the farmers who can't buy seeds from Monsanto but only license them. They literally may not use the resulting plants and their seeds for future crops. Which is to say: perverse.
So, yeah, a window into fulfillment metrics is all well and good. But do not mistake that for transparency. Knowing you're not getting screwed is not the same thing as getting value.
Mr. Zuckerberg, tear down that wall!