Commentary

The Late Erwin Ephron's Measurement Contributions Still Ring True


The advertising industry has spawned amazing visionaries, but it is hard to match the wisdom of the late, great Erwin Ephron.  He has been called “the father of modern media planning,” and “the inventor of ‘recency,’” and, as the anniversary of his death approaches, I’ve been thinking about how valuable his contributions to measurement have been.

With Ephron’s input, the industry made the leap forward from daily effective circulation (DECs, also known as “opportunity-to-see” impressions) to the likelihood-to-see impressions used today.  

Pierre Bouvard, a fellow media researcher (now Chief Insights Officer at Cumulus Media, Westwood One), ran quite a number of studies on behalf of the out-of-home industry and shares my reverence for Ephron's vision. Bouvard generously shared an article that Ephron penned in July 2004, titled “And The Last Shall Be  First: In Audience Measurement, Outdoor appears to be leading the Way.”

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Despite rapid technological innovation and disruption across the industry, Ephron’s words remain as true today as they were when he first wrote them 15 years ago.  

Erwin stated: “Outdoor’s plan to use ‘visibility’ adjustments, called VAI, to measure the number of consumers who actually see a billboard, shames all of the other media exposure numbers we plan and buy with.” 

Likelihood-to-see impressions aren’t just the gold standard globally. These metrics are vital as we embrace audience-based buying.  Utilizing opportunity-to-see impressions, an ad on the back of a bench may receive the same number of “impressions” as the billboard next to it -- despite it being more likely for passersby to see the billboard. 

If you put this scenario into a blind, impression-based, programmatic platform, the bench will have a significantly lower CPM and typically be bought instead of the bulletin. Larger formats would be negatively impacted, while smaller formats artificially benefit.  

Inflated audience metrics also negatively impact the entire channel and lead to ROI/campaign effectiveness studies that show the channel underperforms.  

Ephron believed embracing likelihood-to-see impressions makes it easier to buy and sell out-of-home advertising.  I agree. Prior to the introduction of the VAI, agencies and advertisers were discounting the opportunity-to-see (OTS) impressions based on their own proprietary evaluations of inventory factors such as size.  

Ephron was puzzled that this was not embraced across more media formats. “An adjustment for unit size, for example, works across all media, not just Outdoor, why not use it? The idea that we do not adjust Print OTS for the use of fractional units is puzzling. The idea that we do not adjust TV OTS for length of message, 15’s versus 30’s, is inexcusable,” he wrote.

I recently spoke on a cross-platform measurement panel at the Advertising Research Foundation’s AUDIENCExSCIENCE conference, alongside media research leaders from across the industry. We discussed the gap between the opportunity to see an ad and actual consumption of that ad. I was happy to hear Ephron’s beliefs being espoused on stage and pleasantly surprised when the audience called for all channels to be measured as responsibly as OOH. 

I continue to support the value of the likelihood-to-see impression and am deeply grateful to Ephron and my committee members who pushed for the use of this more valuable metric.  

“Outdoor is, hands-down, the most exciting medium around.” — Erwin Ephron 

Erwin Ephron passed away peacefully on Oct. 13, 2013.

1 comment about "The Late Erwin Ephron's Measurement Contributions Still Ring True".
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  1. Daniel Parisien from Quividi, October 18, 2019 at 12:03 p.m.

    Thank you for this article! We were standing on the shoulders of Erwin Ephron when we (Quividi) created our recently released proposal for a cross-platform audience standard which units LTS/VAI and viewable impressions.

    https://quividi.com/human-valid-audience-impressions-a-proposal-for-cross-platform-viewability/

    It is based on a recognition of the viewability zone, which is consequence of the size of the display (15 multiplied by the diagonal of the screen - the bigger the display, the bigger the viewability distance), the viewability angle (120 degrees as per standards in virtual reality), occlusions (temporary interruptions to viewability), the facing direction of the audience and its multiplicity (a concept in OOH that does not currently exist for online media), and finally the duration of those qualifications being true.

    We have a whitepaper which goes into complete detail, plotting the history of the standards to today and showing the state of the art available today in OOH. It does not mention Erwin by name, but his work is foundational to this new proposed standard.

    https://quividi.com/human-valid-audience-impressions-a-proposal-for-cross-platform-viewability/

    I hope it is interesting to your readers.

    Cheers,

    Daniel Parisien

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