
Amid ongoing and significant digital
disruption, Mark Marshall -- now the interim chairman of advertising sales and global partnerships at NBCUniversal -- reminded TV/video advertising executives at the NBCU upfront why TV/digital
video still works for his legacy media company: Its advertising clients' sales continue to grow.
Much of this comes from NBC’s cross-media ad-selling effort, One
Platform, which uses its first-party data from its platforms and marketers to achieve these results.
“These advertisers have seen an actual sales lift of 16%. And if you think of that
-- and that we reach 227 million people every single month -- that’s how you grow your business.”
Marshall credits marketers who are resolved to change the business
model. “You’ve broken free from legacy dayparts. You’ve traded genre and age demographics, for actual audiences that want to buy your product.”
Going
forward -- even amid the augur of some potential tough marketplace news -- Marshall says significant advertising business is on the way this season from key TV ad categories:
“There are 32 pharma launches, 60 auto releases -- with 46 of those being electric electric vehicles.” He adds that there will be 100 movie releases, “which puts us back to
pre-pandemic levels.”
Overall, he says: “This is going to be a very competitive marketplace -- which means you need every single impression to work harder than
ever.”
In a slight of sorts to Nielsen and some of its problems -- and giving credit to NBCU’s efforts so far -- Marshall emphasizes that advertisers “not only
need measurement that counts correctly but actually ties to your sales.”
Marshall then riffed on that last point to the event’s live, in-person audience:
“Everyone is supposed to clap on that one. It is important.” The audience heartily agreed.
“And most importantly, your ad should be welcomed as part of the
family, not looked at as a last resort of an un-welcome guest.”
Marshall left the attendees on this positive note: That media “fragmentation is a good thing.
It’s not scary.”
He used the example of “Saturday Night Live,” citing that it was the number-one entertainment show on broadcast, on YouTube, and on
Peacock.
And in that regard, he reminded media executives that although the NBC logo can be found in other platforms and presentations, “you can only buy ‘Saturday
Night Live’ through us.”
The bottom line, he says, is that in one month, NBC -- combined with streamer Peacock -- reaches 160 million people with only 10% duplication
of ads.
“This is what every media mix model has looked for, forever: The ability to find massive reach with low duplication. And unlike some of our other big-time
competitors, it is actually in content that you want to be part of.”