The Darker Side of Viewability

According to Magnetic CEO James Green, there are two sides to the issue of viewability that plagues marketers today. One side is the problem of viewability, which is relatively manageable, and the other is fraudulent activity, which is becoming an increasingly widespread issue.

The most common forums for fraudulent activity are ad exchanges, on the worst of which, up to a third of all ad impressions are not generated by people. Some exchanges are better than others, with ”suspicious traffic” below 5%. It is therefore important for marketers to avail themselves of the various tools and resources out there to research different exchanges.

There are some common tactics that marketers have fallen victim to when purchasing impressions on RTB:

1.    Purposely serving ads into a 1×1 pixel.

2.    Viruses that run on computers and open websites on hidden windows so that a real person appears to be visiting web pages and seeing ads.

3.    Bots that run on websites to mimic people – some bots also click on ads and show up on client sites. Examples can be seen by comparing large network volumes available by some players in RTB and cross-tabulating them with comScore metrics, whose panel’s population is 100% human.

In order to improve the situation then, marketers should focus on attribution, use viewability products, find and reward credible exchanges, and be suspicious of promises from exchanges that seem too good to be true.

Read the full article from MediaPost here!

James Green to Lead Digital Discussions

Magnetic CEO James Green to Lead Digital Discussions This Spring
Topics Cover Attribution, Search Retargeting, the Facebook Exchange and Big Data

Search retargeting leader Magnetic announced today that James Green, the company’s CEO will be moderating panels at several upcoming marketing industry events. Green will speak to a multitude of topics during each session, including how the Facebook Exchange (FBX) affects real-time bidding (RTB), attribution and media measurement, and big data.

Upcoming events include:

OMMA RTB: Real-Time Buying (March 18; San Francisco, CA)

Panel: Facebook’s FBX: The Year Zero View

At this event, James Green will moderate a panel featuring Christina Beaumier, Vice President, Global Client Development, Xaxis, Adam Berke, President, AdRoll, Brian Quinn, Senior Director, Advertising Partnerships, Kenshoo and John Tuchtenhagen, VP, Group Director, Media, Digitas. The speakers will discuss the Facebook Exchange (FBX), including the challenges and opportunities it has brought to RTB and marketers.

The panel can be viewed live on Monday, March 18 at 11:30 a.m.PST by visiting the following website: http://www.mediapost.com/ommartb/

The Attribution Revolution (March 20; Chicago, IL)

This event will provide a deep dive into the probing questions that surround media measurement in today’s digital age, covering accurate measurement across marketing strategies from site and search retargeting to social and offline. Moderated by James Green, the panel will feature Jeremy King, Senior Product Manager for Analytics at Adobe, Paul Pellman, CEO of Adometry, Jeff Greenfield, COO & Co-Founder of C3 Metrics and Stefan Schnabl, Product Manager, Google.

MediaPost Search Insider Summit (April 28-May 1; Amelia Island, FL)

Panel: Marketing Experimentation: From Big Data to Big Testing

James will serve as the moderator for a discussion surrounding big data, and how insights are used for multi-channel marketing campaigns. Additional details are pending.

 

Gartner Study Shows Positive Signs for Digital Ad Budgets

An interesting survey was recently released by research firm Gartner citing that digital advertising ranked as one of the top digital marketing tactics for success. Other findings within the report included that, on average, 28% of marketers have shifted some of the traditional ad budget to digital channels.

The survey polled over 200 marketers from companies with yearly revenue higher than $500 million. Within the participating companies, 70% noted have Chief Marketing Technologists. Digital advertising accounted for the largest share of the overall digital budget; showing that budgets allocated to online and digital advertising (12.5%) were higher than content creation (11.6%), search marketing (10.7%), email (9.6%), social (9.4%) and mobile (7.4%).

The fact that online advertising was higher than search shows strong signs for the future and overall growth of display. It could prove more interesting to look deeper into the online advertising category and the budget allocation across various strategies, such as search retargeting, site retargeting, sponsorship buys, etc.

You can read the full report from Gartner, here: http://www.gartner.com/technology/research/digital-marketing/digital-marketing-spend-report.jsp

 

 

 

Magnetic Hits The Slopes!

Apparently they don’t work all the time! This past weekend, members of the Magnetic team hit the slopes of Killington, Vermont for some skiing, sledding, and snowmobiling. Some of them were beginners, some of them were pros, all of them were a good time!


ComScore Reports That 3 in 10 Ad Impressions Are Never Seen by Viewers

Out of the 5.3 trillion ad impressions served in the U.S., 3 in 10 are never actually shown in-view.

This statistic, among others, is delivered in ComScore’s Digital Future In Focus report for 2013. The report examines the role that current events, as well as the latest trends in social media, search, online video, digital advertising, mobile and e-commerce play in shaping the U.S. digital marketplace, and what they mean for the coming year.

Rendering ad impressions in-view is a persistent problem for the industry, and the report says we should “look for advertisers to demand more accountability and publishers to reconfigure their site design and ad inventory to improve performance in the coming year.” Large advertisers like AT&T, Microsoft, Experian, Verizone, and State Farm, are also using programmatic buying and improved targeting to avoid increasing their ad buying as much as in the past.

How else are advertisers staying current? Out of the 5.3 trillion ad impressions served, one in eight are “socially enabled,” meaning that they direct viewers to “Like” or “Follow” the advertiser.

For 2013, ComScore predicts that publishers will resist dropping CPMs (the amount paid per thousand ad impressions) caused by programmatic buying. To fight back, they’re putting their ad inventory in private exchanges, using data to prove ad viewability and engagement, and actively seeking to demonstrate that ads drive offline behavior (e.g. in-store sales). The use of “native” ads is also expected to increase as certain large, premium publishers “experiment with and implement native advertising based models to deliver unique branded content at scale”, following in the footsteps of Facebook and Twitter’s success with such ad units.

Facebook is clearly doing something right! The site was the top in time spent, accounting for a total of 10.8 percent of the minutes spent online, while Google had the most unique US visitors (191.4 million in December).

For more information about other findings in the report click here! 

 

A Look Into RTB’s Quality, Ad Impressions, Data & Future

Some call it real-time bidding (RTB) 2.0, and others simply believe that RTB has not yet reached a level of maturity satisfying for brands and agencies. In a recent panel at OMMA RTB in New York City, debates broke out over issues surrounding metrics, content, quality of inventory, and how the world of RTB has actually evolved.

With digital advertising’s adoption of audience targeting, it’s become common to hear the phrase, “reach the right audience, with the right message, at the right time and in the right place.” However, there has been a lot of debate over the value of “place” or “content and context” within RTB.  If you are reaching the right audience at an optimal time, does inventory matter? Does media placement make much of a difference in RTB — or is it just the data?

On the one hand, as long as agencies are meeting KPIs, they don’t care about controlling content, as long as it’s not anything offensive. On the flip side, many marketers disagree and say that the context of the placement and publisher that an agency works with is critical – but in a way where you can still pick the user. Rob Griffin, EVP/director of product development at Havas Media, and Joel Nierman, marketing and media director at Critical Mass, later noted that there really are no bad impressions, only bad valuations. You are either willing to pay a higher rate for selective content and/or you are willing to pay more on an RTB platform for a specific user.

Another hot-button topic for the panel was viewability. Anne Hunter, SVP advertising effectiveness at comScore, stated that the average percent of viewable ad impressions is between 60%-70% on premium inventory and 40%-50% on non-premium/exchange inventory. The problem here is that any ads that were not viewable by the user still placed an exposure pixel, even if the user never actually saw the ad. Thus, if that user proceeds to fill out a survey or buy a product, the non-viewable ad will appear to have had real business value for the brand and will be given credit, when in fact it was never seen by the user.

In order to get an accurate account of performance and set pricing according to market demands, marketers and publishers should focus on only counting ads that are seen. At the publisher level, the infinite amount of pixel dropping hurts a publisher’s price, since it shows a massive number of impressions available for cheap, making it harder to price the real quality inventory. Therefore, publishers providing quality inventory still might not look as if they’re performing.

Peter Naylor shared NBC Universal’s story of adapting to the viewable impression. As an early adopter, NBC Universal began making changes for viewability back in 2010. Initially, there was a 30% reduction in inventory, but also a substantial increase in ad effectiveness, which in turn led to higher pricing opportunities, according to Naylor.

For marketers, the viewability issue affects performance and spend. If a high percentage of ads are not even seen, then there’s a large amount of money spent on wasted impressions. Additionally, since agencies rely on what the conversion data tells them in order to determine what an impression is actually worth, they may be allocating money and optimizing to a bot vs. an actual end user.

The overall sentiment on OMMA’s panel was that issues of inventory quality, ad impressions and the use of data will remain top-of-mind for marketers. However, depending on a client’s goals, some will care more about some issues than others. As Griffin said, “History does repeat itself.” The reality is that we are now solving the next stage of challenges for RTB 2.0.

Originally published on MediaPost RTB Insider on 2/22/13

Attribution Revolution Roadshow Hits Chicago

Magnetic is bringing its Attribution Revolution Roadshow from the West Coast to Chicago! Join experts from Google, Adobe, C3 Metrics, and Adometry for cocktails, hors d’oeuvres, and a panel discussion about the important questions surrounding media measurement in today’s digital age.

Events for the evening will include:

6pm: Pre-panel cocktails & hors d’oeuvres
7:15pm: Panel discussion with industry experts
8:15pm: Post-panel cocktail hour at the ROOF lounge

When: Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Where: theWit Hotel
201 N. State St.
Chicago, IL 60601

Request an Invite Now >

And click here to check out the Attribution Revolution Roadshow’s visit to the West Coast!

The Road To Understanding Viewable Ad Impressions

According to a recent comScore study of a dozen major brands, including Allstate, Ford and Kellogg’s, 31 percent of online ads go unseen by consumers.

Recently, I moderated a panel of experts in the field, and they all said they’d seen typical rates of unseen ads coming in at over 50%, and, in the worst cases, up to 80% of ads are going unseen.

How can this be? Perhaps because of where an ad is placed (below the fold, in another window, etc.), page load times, or in the case of a few bad actors, downright fraud. Consequently, many of us in the industry are engaged in an ongoing debate about creating a new “viewable impression metric.”

What Exactly Is A Viewable Ad Impression?

If the entire page was only loaded for one-second before it was closed, can marketers claim the ad on the page was seen? If all of the ads are refreshed on a screen after inactivity for five minutes or more – were any users there to see them? If there are 20 ads on a page that was designed just to lure consumers to it – did visitors actually see an ad on that page?

While it remains clear that a viewable ad impression metric is needed within the industry – exactly what that means is still being debated.

Where Does Data Come Into Play?

Another factor that influences viewability, at least viewability by the right audience, is the accuracy of data — this is because viewability really only comes into play if you are buying ads in real time (RTB) or via aggregators/networks.

If you want to be sure your ad is seen, just buy from a site directly. Although even the biggest and best publishers are occasionally tricked by fraudsters, this is rare, and if you are buying a full-page take-over or other custom placement, according to experts I’ve talked to, it is very likely that your viewability rating will be in excess of 90%.

This approach will actually not work for most marketers because their budgets are not big enough to buy media in that way (it’s expensive to buy large custom units from big publishers), or because like so many people, the marketer is buying the ad placement because s/he has data on the person viewing the page – demographic, customer data, psychographic data or search history.

Some of this data is well known and verifiable – for example, if you are re-targeting people who have visited your site — but if you are buying third-party data, there’s lots of information around to suggest that much of it is inaccurate.

If so, how are you going to verify that you really reached the segment you were targeting? Put another way, if your ad was seen by someone outside your targeted segment, do you want to count it is seen or “viewed”?  So, just as we move forward with standards in viewability, we’re going to have to start thinking hard about standards for data, as well.

Will Viewability Affect The Value Of Display Ads?

The true evil of unseen ads is that they flood the market with inventory, thus lowering prices for publishers. Lower publisher prices means less investment in content, which inevitably means worse ad placement and thus, worse ad performance, which starts a downward spiral of lower quality and pricing for everyone.

Of course, it’s terrible that an advertiser pays for an ad that is never seen, but the effect on pricing in the ecosystem is potentially much worse and more dramatic.

Most People See Most Ads, Isn’t That Good Enough?

I’ve heard some digerati disparage the entire viewability debate by suggesting that we are being held to too high a standard. After all, we all know that not all 30-second spots are viewed on TV, and yet, that industry still dwarfs the digital world.

This is a spurious argument. Just because something is broken somewhere else doesn’t mean it should be broken in the digital world. We have the ability to know exactly who has seen what ad and where, and while an error rate of 5-10% is probably acceptable, anything much beyond that is not.

I don’t know about the rest of you, but I’m still striving to be the best I can be regardless of what everyone else is doing.