Nearly two-thirds of advertisers and agencies polled in a study believe more than half of all TV buying will be programmatic within three to five years. The survey -- released on Wednesday by
ad-tech firm Videology and Advertiser Perceptions -- sought to evaluate advertisers' and agency executives’ attitudes toward advanced TV, or programmatic TV (PTV), advertising.
For the
purposes of the study, conducted in February, advanced TV was defined as both linear TV that uses advanced data to define a consumer target known as data-enabled TV, as well as TV advertising
delivered at the household level, or addressable TV.
The results show that most advertisers and agencies are already embracing advanced TV as an advertising medium. And among those currently
spending on advanced TV, 57% say they plan to increase their data-enabled TV budgets this year, and 75% in the next 12 months.
According to the survey, advanced TV is the fastest-growing among
TV advertising types, with the same percentage of respondents planning to use advanced TV next year as those who plan to use traditional TV advertising.
Other findings:
--Among
advertisers and agency executives polled, 88% say they have used linear TV advertising in the past 12 months, with 77% saying they plan to in the next 12 months.
--Thirty-one percent of
TV/video campaigns are planned holistically, and respondents predict that by 2018, this number will jump to 44%.
--Among advertisers and agencies who buy both TV and video, 61% say the
TV/video buying is done under one integrated team, while 55% say they prefer to learn about both digital and TV opportunities at the same upfront events (the lines between traditional upfronts and
digital newfronts are blurry).
The study found more education is needed, as there is confusion about the definition of advanced TV:
--More than half (57%) of advertisers and agencies
say they don’t understand the difference between data-enabled TV and addressable TV. Furthermore, 20% say that advanced TV advertising is still funded primarily from test budgets.
“This research reinforces that advanced data has become critical to advertising across all screens, including TV. And while this survey focused on the demand side, we’re also seeing
acceleration by the supply side to support this new direction of the market,” Scott Ferber, founder and CEO, Videology, told Real-Time Daily via email. “The shift toward bringing
technology-driven, data-enabled planning and buying to premium TV content is no longer in the future.”