Home Measurement Meta Is A Brand Safety Cash Cow For DoubleVerify, Accounting For 7% Of All Revenue

Meta Is A Brand Safety Cash Cow For DoubleVerify, Accounting For 7% Of All Revenue

SHARE:

DoubleVerify is bullish on social.

How bullish? “We expect customer adoption of DV solutions across social media to fuel revenue growth for years to come,” CEO Mark Zagorski told investors on the company’s earnings call on Wednesday.

Social media measurement rose 62% in the fourth quarter compared to Q4 2022. The category now accounts for 43% of DV’s measurement venue (which grew 25% to $198 million) and 15% of DV’s total revenue in 2023.

And as DV sees it, social still has plenty of room to grow.

For instance, roughly half of DV’s top 100 customers currently use the company for measurement on Meta, whereas more than 90% of them use DV for YouTube, according to Zagorski. Those YouTube advertisers are probably on Meta, too; they just aren’t using DV tech there.

In the first quarter, DV released its third-party brand suitability verification for Facebook and Instagram feeds and Reels, and there was 51% growth in impression volume. Doing some quick mental math, Zagorski estimated that, since Meta comprised about 7% of DV’s revenue last year, or close to $40 million, on its current growth trajectory with Facebook and Instagram, DV could generate an incremental $20 million in revenue for 2024.

TikTok also presents a “large growth opportunity,” said CFO Nicola Allais. They’re only just expanding beyond English-language campaigns.

DV is also riding the wave of short-form video consumption, which Zagorski said demands AI investments (can’t forget to cite AI in an investor call nowadays). To that end, it bulked up its employee count from 902 at the close of 2022 to 1,101 at the end of 2023. “Nearly half of our headcount growth was attributable to R&D,” Zagorski said.

The big picture

Aside from measurement, DV has two other lines of business. Activation revenue, which refers to DV’s brand safety and suitability products, grew 31% YOY to $328.9 million. Meanwhile, supply-side revenue – which, at $45.6 million, accounted for less than 8% of total 2023 revenue – grew only 5%.

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

Get our editors’ roundup delivered to your inbox every weekday.

A handful of CTV and retail clients had a slow start to the year, but DV expects that revenue will ramp up from both them and new clients in the latter half of the year, which could provide a much-needed boost to the supply-side business.

Monolith no more

DV also touched upon a tiered MFA classification tool it launched earlier this month. Advertisers often take a “meat cleaver” approach to blocking MFA inventory. That cleaver harms publishers, including “marginalized publishers who are being excluded from media buys,” Zagorski said.

The same applies to filtering out misinformation, disinformation, inflammatory content and hate speech when, say, placing ads next to user-generated videos. During this election season, particularly with highly competitive races, there’s a higher incidence of so-called news that most brands wouldn’t want to appear next to, Zagorski said.

“We don’t see it as a category on its own that’s going to drive business for us,” Zagorski said of DV’s MFA and news filtering tech. “We think it is just another value add that our solution provides that makes us sticky with our customers.”

Must Read

The Trade Desk Reframes Its Open Internet Vision As ‘The Premium Internet’

The Trade Desk is focusing beyond the overall “open internet” and on what CEO Jeff Green calls the “premium internet.”

Comic: Welcome Aboard

Google Search’s Core Updates Are Crushing Sites And Reshaping The Web

Google Search, the web’s largest traffic and revenue generator for two decades, is in the midst of sweeping overhauls that have already altered how users are funneled around the internet.

Liquid I.V. Sponsors A Formula 1 Race As DTC Brands Compete For Sports Fans

Digital-native brands are racing to break free of their social media roots to reach a broader base of US customers. For many brands, this means betting big on sports.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters
Comic: Shopper Marketing Data

Criteo Splits Out Retail Media Revenue For The First Time

Criteo split out its retail media segment revenue for the first time during its earnings report on Thursday.

Comic: Welcome Aboard

Google’s Ad Network Biz Dips, But Search Brings Home The Bacon

By next year, Google will have three separate business lines – Search, YouTube and Cloud – with an annual run rate to generate at least $100 billion, CEO Sundar Pichai told investors.

Comic: The Last Third-Party Cookie

Cookie-Related Quips To Get You Through Google’s THIRD Third-Party Cookie Delay

If you’re looking for a think piece about what Google’s most recent third-party cookie deprecation delay means for the online ad industry – this isn’t it. 😅