So proclaimed iSpot.TV’s George Castrissiades during the Advertising Research Foundation’s (ARF) “Attention 2023” Summit Wednesday at Fordham University in New
York City. The event provided extensive insights on attention metrics, definitions, derivations, and measurement techniques and values that the industry will need to assess in the ongoing
TV/video “currency wars.”
Key questions were raised that the ARF will attempt to address as part of its “Attention Measurement Validation
Initiative,” including assessing various attention metric vendor offerings for both creative and media.
Can attention metrics be applied successfully and fairly by
marketers? What are the valid definitions of attention? What campaign dimension must be considered in any attention metric for any campaign? For example, media type, creative, device, audience,
context, environment, duration, media-creative synergies, etc., plus their various interactions? How should attention be measured?
advertisement
advertisement
The ARF plans to provide an
“Attention Vendor Atlas,” the first phase of which will be released in July, covering 23 companies responding to its request for information (including validation studies).
A constant theme by virtually all the presenters throughout their technical reviews was the fundamental importance of persons-based measurement. It is considered essential –
whether to confirm actual presence in the viewability or audible zone – relative to the device, page, panel, or screen; or, to measure the “really valuable” levels of people’s
actual attention.
In what I take to be a nod to out-of-home’s measurement standard for the last 20 years, one way of measuring attention is via
“eyes/ears-on” techniques, such as those utilized by TVision.
A strong emphasis was placed on more meaningful metrics to reflect media quality and replace the
“easily gamed” and extremely weak media value proxy of “viewable impressions” used by some media platforms.
Referencing viewable impressions as,
“The lowest possible measure of media value,” Adelaide’s Marc Guldimann should be applauded for nailing media metric nonsense that has no person’s dimension whatsoever in its
measurement, which are based on Media Rating Council standards.
Castrissiades’ talk was entitled, “Why Persons-Level Measurement is Critical,” which
further underlined the fundamental weakness in the use of viewable impressions, as well as household data for media planning, buying, and selling media.
Continuing the
potential value and relevance of attention as a currency to advertisers and programmers/publishers, the University of Delaware’s Matthew McGranaghan, asserted, “Attention is the currency
that clears the market” when considering the interplay between advertisers, the media, and the consumer.
Media Science’s Duane Varan said it was important to
understand “distractions,” such as multi-tasking, clutter, environment, or co-viewing, something that is expected to be addressed by a “Distraction Consortium,” which will
provide insights into how “attention” erodes over time due to various distractions. This in turn will produce clues as to how to understand and remedy distractions.
Varan also addressed the U.S.’ so called “JIC” farrago. “Viewability (which is consistently being confused with eyes/ears-on) is being gamed, he said, calling for
“The value of a single common currency. Or it’s chaos!”
Ultimately, attention-based metrics surely will help prove comparable media value
data for full cross-media measurement that includes the print, radio, and out-of-home media.
Clearly, the creative brand message needs to be aligned with the target
audience, the media vehicle, its environment, and context. Attention metrics will help us do that much better with both the creative and media executions albeit undoubtedly with higher
CPM’s but relatively much better ROAS (return on advertising spending).
However, CPM (cost-per-thousands) has always stood for “Completely Positively
Mad” when based on viewable impressions, so another major advance for the industry.