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by Dave Morgan
, Featured Contributor,
September 27, 2018
I was fortunate to spend Monday and Tuesday of this week in Santa Barbara listening and debating the future of advertising with a couple of hundred industry colleagues at a conference called
“Relevance.”
What brought us together? Both the topic and the venue were compelling.
Who brought us together? AT&T and its newly branded advertising and analytic
division Xandr.
Why did they do it? Because Xandr’s CEO Brian Lesser and his team have developed a lofty mission and needed a place and audience for its unveiling. Their mission:
“We will use data, distribution, premium content, and technology to connect people with the brands and content most relevant to them in an engaging and effective way. We will make advertising
matter -- for consumers, content owners, and marketers.”
Why did I and the rest of the participants go? Because AT&T knows that shaping the future of media and advertising will take
a community, and involving players from across the emergent digital ad ecosystem -- including those from advanced TV advertising -- can only help accelerate their plans and opportunity.
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Having
the right assets -- premium content, data, technology, direct to consumer distribution and talent -- is only a start. You also need catalysts to drive market adoption. That's where the community
comes in.
Will AT&T and Xandr be able to pull it off? Like many who attended, I am hopeful.
Without question, there seems to be a big commitment from AT&T to make it
happen.
First, the opportunity to optimize billions of dollars in TV advertising was billed as a key point of synergy in AT&T’s $85+ billion acquisition of Time Warner.
Second, the importance of modernizing advertising was certainly driven home on that stage by AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson in an interview with CNN’s Poppy Harlow.
Finally, the
newest members of the Xandr unit – leaders from AppNexus, which AT&T acquired just months ago for a reported $1.6 billion – attended the conference as well, and were very much part of
the conversation.
What do you think? Will Xandr make advertising matter?