With expected upfront ad volume to possibly drop
a massive 33%, according to a new
survey, attention turns to who will looking to pick through the carnage.
National TV revenue could drop to around $13 billion from a more typical $20 billion upfront marketplace, collectively
pulled in from broadcast and cable networks and national syndication programs.
So if there is some $7 billion up for grabs, where is it going? Perhaps a demand side platform (DSP), midsize and
fringe cable networks, and/or premium streaming platforms.
In its earnings phone call last week, Jeff Green, CEO of The Trade Desk, in an overall picture of the marketplace, said: “We
are winning incremental spend that would have historically been committed in the upfronts ... CTV [connected TV viewing] is getting what linear is losing from the expectedly weak upfronts.”
Spending has been upended by the pandemic.
advertisement
advertisement
“We saw a sharp deceleration in spend during the second half of March ... a negative mid-teens year-over-year decline [in the last
week],” says Blake Grayson, CFO of Trade Desk. “In early April, the year-over-year decline in spend continued to increase.”
Trade Desk touts itself as the largest aggregator
of CTV ad impressions, and going forward, it is, of course, optimistic.
The equation isn’t that simple. The shift to connected TV sales -- in the past and future -- could come to benefit
legacy TV media companies through third-party demand-side platforms, like The Trade Desk. Think Disney’s longtime streamer Hulu or Comcast’s forthcoming Peacock, big premium ad-supported
video platforms.
Other speculate possible gainers from a lower upfront could be legacy cable networks -- especially those that depend more heavily on the scatter markets. Additionally, it
could help cable networks that work on many calendar year upfront deals for marketers.
Many digital-first marketers with a history in near real-time digital media deals yielding key business
outcome metrics could place more “just in time” scatter buying on legacy TV, especially with rising return on media investment data metrics from those networks.
Overall
traditional TV networks sales executives see the marketplace as totally fragmented -- perhaps a bifurcated one where upfront deals are made for fall 2020 and others start in January 2021.
Mark
Marshall, president of advertising partnerships and clients for NBCUniversal, tells TV Watch: “We're in contact with our client and agency partners on a daily basis, and flexibility is
definitely a focus. But flexibility means something different to each, so we're working to find a path toward it on an individualized basis.
Flexibility is a good idea. But growing competitors
will have that flexible, as well.