So the Advertising Research Foundation Audience x Science 2023 conference ended, and was immediately followed the next day by OpenAP’s briefing session for the joint industry committee that
is attempting to “establish common standards for cross-platform measurement to enable more innovation and more competition of multiple currencies.”
It is doing so with many big
partners playing along, because “It is more important to be in the tent than to not be in the tent,” per Bharad Ramesh, executive director, research & investment analytics for
GroupM.
Some notable players have decided not to be in the tent, such as Alphabet, Meta, Apple and Disney. Google explained its current absence, and most likely the absence of most other
digital platforms, since its legal department was having sleepless nights over a joint industry effort that would need Alphabet data, and that would lead, so it says, to major privacy concerns.
This is a bit of a cop-out. I'm sure the concern is legitimate -- but if you can “invent” BARD, you can find a way to address the technicalities of data-sharing. It probably has more to
do with the fact that having a walled garden with little to no option to compare your results vs other walled garden players is very much in your best interest. Having said that, Google seemed open to
continue the discussion, but limited it to YouTube. Perhaps the door is not yet fully closed.
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Nielsen also very publicly said “no” to the JIC, but as a potential supplier. The
company did so the week before the ARF conference. However, in a fireside chat (can we please stop using this nonsensical term? These one-on-one conversations during conferences are never a chat, and
never involve a fireplace!), Pete Doe, chief research officer, Nielsen, said both that “I am the research guy, so not the right person to comment” -- but also, “we continue the
conversation, and as long as we can align on an MRC-accredited approach, we are open to discuss.” Comscore has aligned itself with Nielsen’s position. So, another door that was not fully
slammed shut.
I come from Europe, where JICs are everywhere and have been for decades. They are certainly not flawless, but much preferred over the mess we currently have here in the U.S.
But the JIC goings-on were not the most important topic during the ARF Conference. There were many notable studies and findings, with varying degrees of applicability to our day-to-day lives as
marketers. To me, the most shocking presentation came courtesy of Brian Wieser, who recently launched his Madison and Wall consultancy.
He explained that “pay TV penetration
continues to fall at a dramatic pace and is poised to decline below 50% in the United States probably towards the end of next year. This is leading to a severe erosion of the potential for
traditional television to satisfy reach-based media goals within any reasonable range of cost (i.e., a marketer can buy the first or second decile of reach in a campaign relatively inexpensively, but
each percentage point of reach becomes dramatically more expensive, rising at a much faster rate than CPM inflation).”
This is a major concern if your current media mix relies heavily on
any form of “TV” (linear, cable, digital streamers). TV has always maintained its story line that, in the end, advertisers need TV and TV delivers for advertisers. That truth -- as for so
many others -- no longer seems all that certain now.