The focus on media currencies continued on Day Two of the Advertising Research Foundation’s (ARF) Audience X Science conference in New York City Wednesday with the divide between
Google’s YouTube and the major broadcasters becoming evident.
Madison and Wall analyst Brian Wieser set the stage by underlining the concentration of total ad dollars
among the top 20 media owners (70%) and the top 10 digital platform owners (60%).
With the rise of advertising-free premium video, as well as increasing demand from advertisers to
demonstrate the value of the media they buy, he offered a surprising conclusion, saying it would be a “mistake” to use a joint industry committee (JIC) to drive down spending on media
currency research.
He said research drives better insights and can lead to increases in return-on-marketing investments, concluding, “Spend more to achieve more.”
CBS Chief Research & Analytics Officer Radha Subramanyam offered a similar perspective, noting, “Viewing is under-measured,” especially as the major networks continue to
expand into streaming, which may require increased research investment, not less.
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“Content is still king,” including when it comes to advertising effectiveness, said
NCSolutions’ Brett Mershman, noting that while the creative execution generates around 50% of an ad’s impact, other contributors include: the brand (21%), reach (14%), targeting (11%) and
recency or propinquity (5%).
Mershman also emphasized that brand loyalty and brand equity remain fundamental KPIs and are more important than ever.
Using “viewable impressions” as the basis for cross-media audience measurement currency was raised during a Q&A chat-style presentation between Google Managing Director of
Agency & Brand Measurement Analytics Tina Daniels and Google Global Product Lead Nicole Gileadi.
Gileadi equated audience “exposure measures” with counting
“viewable impressions”.” This is despite the fact that viewable impressions are solely a device measure.
Based on that statement, Daniels asked the
essential question for audience measurement: “Are we pushing the lowest common denominator?”
To which Gileadi replied., “No, MRC pushed that. So, [viewable
impressions] is the right approach.”
Personally, I believe that misrepresents the MRC’s position and its neutrality on the current alt-currency movement and
the MRC’s independence from establishing the basis for any currency measurement other than that it should meet the MRC’s standards in its execution.
As
reported in MediaPost, Google’s YouTube is not currently participating in the U.S. “JIC,” which I call a “M-CCC,” because it really is a multi-currency certification
committee, and not a JIC in the way they operate in the rest of the world.
Notably, Google’s YouTube is also in a contretemps over the basis of measurement with BARB
Audiences, the U.K.’s TV/video JIC (an actual one) which uses “fit for TV” as its guiding principle.
However, the “viewable impressions”
plot thickened when various providers of attention metrics shared their measurement approaches and metrics results. Attention measures are not only highly related to brand campaign outcomes, but
also reveal significantly lower counts from the total circulation of content rendered delivered plus much lower counts from the MRC’s subsequent subset of “technically viewable
impressions” of content rendered – for all media.
Lumen Research CEO Mike Follett shared some not-so-surprising findings with National Cinemedia’s Manu
Singh. It showed cinema with the highest attention levels (“viewed”) of any media measured, in some cases, by a country mile.
So, is an attention metric
a far superior and more relevant base for media planning and buying and therefore a currency? It appears so.
Coca-Cola is already working closely with
Adelaide’s “attention units” to increase the value of media’s yield.
IPG Mediabrands, Havas Media Group and Dentsu are already embracing attention
metrics to make existing media currencies and investments more meaningful and deliver better results for brands.
Would a move to an attention-based currency help or hurt
Google’s YouTube? A good part of that answer clearly involves the quality and appeal of content, the editorial environment, plus the screen size and context.
Is an attention metric a superior and more relevant basis for media planning and buying, and therefore, a currency? Media Dynamics’ Ed Papazian and I have been recommending
attention as a media currency for years. It would dramatically reduce the frequency “crabgrass.”