Home On TV & Video How Will CTV Ever Measure Up?

How Will CTV Ever Measure Up?

SHARE:

On TV & Video” is a column exploring opportunities and challenges in advanced TV and video. 

Today’s column is by Mark Walker, CEO and co-founder of Direct Digital Holdings

For marketers, the great promise of connected TV is that it will blend the strengths of traditional TV and digital media, marrying powerful branding with precision targeting and tracking.

It sounds like ad nirvana. That is, until you realize just how complicated it may be to properly measure the value of this powerful combination. 

CTV is at a crossroads. We’re already seeing streaming become the dominant way TV is delivered, which opens up CTV ads to a wealth of possibilities. With that, the industry will face an existential question: What is the role of TV advertising now that it is connected? 

Right now, the TV industry appears to be expending the majority of its energy on finding a more comprehensive, accurate way to count audiences. Meanwhile, there are potentially billions of ad dollars controlled by small to midsize businesses that are looking for metrics that capture ROI the way they do on social platforms.  

It’s unclear where we are headed. The measurement path the TV ad business chooses could unlock vast new spending. Or lock the medium into a fixed, finite lane that serves neither party well.

The big money in waiting

As ad-supported CTV viewing has exploded, the early money has clearly been focused on the top of the funnel. Thus far, the booming CTV market has been primarily traditional TV brands shifting budgets to streaming, typically as part of huge packages with the likes of Disney or NBCUniversal. 

This is likely why we’ve seen so much attention and debate around TV currencies. Facing declining linear ratings, the incumbent TV networks have been pushing Nielsen to change and capture nonlinear viewers, just as tons of VC funding has poured into the market to fuel alternative currency startups.

Yet, as encouraging as it is to see TV companies embrace more big data methodologies over panels, gauging ad impact and response has taken a back seat. 

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

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

That feels short-sighted. Direct-to-consumer businesses have thrived using social platforms to drive leads. That market has been thrown into turmoil thanks to Apple’s crackdown on cross-app tracking. As a result, ad prices are soaring, and many of these companies are primed to spend elsewhere.

That’s just DTC brands. Let’s not forget the still huge budgets commanded by local advertisers. Car dealers and wireless providers still spend $21 billion on local TV and $12 billion on radio, per Kantar. These marketers would also seem poised to move into CTV in a big way.  

How do we serve all these constituencies? Is there a way to build metrics, standards and currencies that can serve every segment of the market?

The currency question  

CTV’s promise is too great to limit it to one type of marketing. Thus, when it comes to measurement, CTV needs to serve all types of brands and levels of the purchase funnel.

That will require collaboration and ingenuity across the industry. For the bigger media conglomerates, that means offering more options and platforms for the mid-market, not just the top 200 traditional TV spenders. These giants’ embrace of clean room technologies is a great start, but TV advertising needs to be more democratic and easier to buy and measure. 

From the ad tech point of view, we need to spark more innovation around the middle and bottom of the funnel. The same applies to the measurement sector. There’s a big opening for a new wave of tech vendors and attribution startups built for CTV specifically. Whoever can create tools designed to measure and factor in audience numbers, attention and impact and tie it all together should win.

The revenue potential is massive. Let’s not miss the moment by predetermining our destiny by leaning on the simplest, easiest metrics at hand.

Follow Direct Digital Holdings on LinkedIn and AdExchanger (@AdExchanger) on Twitter.

For more articles featuring Mark Walker, click here.

Must Read

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.

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.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters
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. 😅

Comic: InstaTikSnapTokTube

The IAB Predicts Social Video Will Overtake CTV This Year

The IAB projects digital video ad spend will rise to $63 billion in 2024, representing a 16% increase from last year. Of the three video ad categories the report breaks out (social and online video and CTV), the clear winner is social video.

Pictograph of graph, mug of beer

Inside AB InBev’s Strategy For Tapping Into First-Party Data

Pour one out for third-party data. These days, AB InBev’s digital marketing strategy is built squarely on first-party data.