This study analyzed over 16 billion programmatic advertising impressions purchased by 7 major advertisers through 5 demand-side platforms. The study found that:
1) Across the full supply chain, 58 cents of each advertising dollar went to media inventory and 42 cents went to fees and costs of the programmatic supply chain.
2) Looking just at demand-side costs, 72 cents of each dollar went to media inventory and 28 cents went to demand-side fees and costs.
3) Programmatic fees can add 45% to the cost of display inventory and 35% to the cost of video inventory on average for advertisers.
The study provides recommendations to help advertisers gain more control and transparency over their program
The document summarizes a Total Economic Impact study conducted by Forrester Consulting on the Rocket Fuel Programmatic Marketing Platform. Key findings include:
1) Adopting the Rocket Fuel DMP led to improved media efficiency through reducing overfrequencing of ads by 20% for Organization A, saving $14 million, and avoiding targeting existing customers, saving 10% of annual media spend or $7 million.
2) Organization B realized $62.5 million in benefits from more effective conversions through site optimization powered by Rocket Fuel.
3) Overall the study found an 832% return on investment from media efficiency and a 354% ROI from site optimization and conversion improvements.
The document summarizes a Total Economic Impact study conducted by Forrester Consulting on the Rocket Fuel Programmatic Marketing Platform. Key findings include:
1) Adopting the Rocket Fuel DMP led to improved media efficiency through reducing overfrequencing of ads by 20% for Organization A, saving $14 million, and avoiding targeting existing customers, saving 10% of annual media spend or $7 million.
2) Organization B realized $62.5 million in benefits from more effective site conversions through Rocket Fuel-powered optimization.
3) Overall the study found an 832% return on investment from media efficiency and 354% ROI from site optimization. Qualitative benefits also included improved customer experience and intelligence
Predictive analytics. overview of skills and opportunitiesFarid Gurbanov
Predictive Analytics could bring benefits virtually to any data-intensive and knowledge-intensive organization. With integration into existing business processes and applications it gives plenty of powerful opportunities. In this brief presentation I outline my experience and skills in data analytics.
Business Analytics Intro Talk at Sabanci UniversityOmer Nadirler
The document discusses business analytics techniques used by SnA Consulting including predictive modeling, customer segmentation, customer lifetime value analysis, and social network analysis. SnA helps clients in banking, insurance, telecommunications, and retail understand customer transaction data to perform predictive analytics, forecasts, and recommendations to optimize marketing strategies and prevent customer churn. Specific techniques discussed include marketing mix modeling, predicting customer share of wallet, and using social network analysis of call data to identify customers at risk of disconnection.
This document summarizes key findings from Neustar's Q1 2014 Media Intelligence Report. Some of the main findings include:
- Social media demonstrated the best cost efficiency in Q1, indexing 350% below average.
- Exchanges showed improved ability to reach consistent users, outperforming other channels.
- CRM data performed 32-107 times better than average for clients in entertainment and retail.
- Targeting top audiences using third party data could increase conversion rates by 6-56 times across various industries.
This document summarizes the key findings from a 2014 study on programmatic advertising conducted by PwC and sponsored by the IAB. Some of the main points include:
- Programmatic revenues totaled $10.1 billion in 2014, comprising around 20% of total internet advertising revenues.
- Open auctions made up around 70% of programmatic revenue, but other transaction types like private auctions were expected to grow.
- Revenues from ad tech companies outweighed those from publishers. Banner ads were the dominant format but other formats were projected to increase.
- While programmatic buying and selling were advancing, standardization and transparency issues made sizing the industry challenging. The study provided
This document provides an overview of the enterprise paid media campaign management platform market in 2015. It discusses key trends driving adoption, including the growth of mobile advertising and need for cross-channel analytics. Major vendors are expanding capabilities through acquisitions and product development to manage multiple paid media channels. The document evaluates important capabilities and provides guidance to marketers on selecting a platform and implementation steps.
The document summarizes a Total Economic Impact study conducted by Forrester Consulting on the Rocket Fuel Programmatic Marketing Platform. Key findings include:
1) Adopting the Rocket Fuel DMP led to improved media efficiency through reducing overfrequencing of ads by 20% for Organization A, saving $14 million, and avoiding targeting existing customers, saving 10% of annual media spend or $7 million.
2) Organization B realized $62.5 million in benefits from more effective conversions through site optimization powered by Rocket Fuel.
3) Overall the study found an 832% return on investment from media efficiency and a 354% ROI from site optimization and conversion improvements.
The document summarizes a Total Economic Impact study conducted by Forrester Consulting on the Rocket Fuel Programmatic Marketing Platform. Key findings include:
1) Adopting the Rocket Fuel DMP led to improved media efficiency through reducing overfrequencing of ads by 20% for Organization A, saving $14 million, and avoiding targeting existing customers, saving 10% of annual media spend or $7 million.
2) Organization B realized $62.5 million in benefits from more effective site conversions through Rocket Fuel-powered optimization.
3) Overall the study found an 832% return on investment from media efficiency and 354% ROI from site optimization. Qualitative benefits also included improved customer experience and intelligence
Predictive analytics. overview of skills and opportunitiesFarid Gurbanov
Predictive Analytics could bring benefits virtually to any data-intensive and knowledge-intensive organization. With integration into existing business processes and applications it gives plenty of powerful opportunities. In this brief presentation I outline my experience and skills in data analytics.
Business Analytics Intro Talk at Sabanci UniversityOmer Nadirler
The document discusses business analytics techniques used by SnA Consulting including predictive modeling, customer segmentation, customer lifetime value analysis, and social network analysis. SnA helps clients in banking, insurance, telecommunications, and retail understand customer transaction data to perform predictive analytics, forecasts, and recommendations to optimize marketing strategies and prevent customer churn. Specific techniques discussed include marketing mix modeling, predicting customer share of wallet, and using social network analysis of call data to identify customers at risk of disconnection.
This document summarizes key findings from Neustar's Q1 2014 Media Intelligence Report. Some of the main findings include:
- Social media demonstrated the best cost efficiency in Q1, indexing 350% below average.
- Exchanges showed improved ability to reach consistent users, outperforming other channels.
- CRM data performed 32-107 times better than average for clients in entertainment and retail.
- Targeting top audiences using third party data could increase conversion rates by 6-56 times across various industries.
This document summarizes the key findings from a 2014 study on programmatic advertising conducted by PwC and sponsored by the IAB. Some of the main points include:
- Programmatic revenues totaled $10.1 billion in 2014, comprising around 20% of total internet advertising revenues.
- Open auctions made up around 70% of programmatic revenue, but other transaction types like private auctions were expected to grow.
- Revenues from ad tech companies outweighed those from publishers. Banner ads were the dominant format but other formats were projected to increase.
- While programmatic buying and selling were advancing, standardization and transparency issues made sizing the industry challenging. The study provided
This document provides an overview of the enterprise paid media campaign management platform market in 2015. It discusses key trends driving adoption, including the growth of mobile advertising and need for cross-channel analytics. Major vendors are expanding capabilities through acquisitions and product development to manage multiple paid media channels. The document evaluates important capabilities and provides guidance to marketers on selecting a platform and implementation steps.
The blog post by Bahaa Abdul Hussein explores the essential key performance indicators (KPIs) for gauging success in the competitive fintech industry. Some important KPIs discussed include customer acquisition cost, customer retention rate, churn rate, monthly recurring revenue, average revenue per user, user engagement metrics, conversion rate, and fraud and risk metrics. Understanding these KPIs through measurement and analysis provides valuable insights to optimize strategies, refine processes, and deliver exceptional customer experiences for leading in the dynamic fintech sector.
This document discusses the growing trend of global programmatic advertising. Programmatic advertising uses automation and data to target digital ads. The summary is:
1. Programmatic advertising is no longer confined to the US, but is growing internationally as brands look to deliver targeted messages globally.
2. Drivers for adopting programmatic internationally are similar to the US - increasing efficiency to get more out of budgets. However, regional variations require localized approaches.
3. A recent forecast predicts worldwide programmatic ad spending will rise 52% in 2014 and continue growing 27% annually through 2018, totaling $53 billion.
This document outlines 17 key performance indicators (KPIs) that can be used to define the success of a virtual event, including visits and downloads, registration rates, abandonment rates, conversion rates, retention rates, traffic from referrals, interactive sessions, poll response rates, effectiveness of new features, social media engagement, sales management, feedback and surveys, click-through rates, return on investment, cost per acquisition, average daily attendance, and sponsorship revenue. It concludes by emphasizing the importance of analyzing these metrics to improve event performance and growth over time.
Marketing Land's latest publication of the "Enterprise Web Analytics Platforms 2015: A Marketer's Guide" examines the market for web analytics platforms and the considerations involved in implemention. The 37-page report reviews the growing market for web analytics platforms, plus the latest trends, opportunities and challenges.
This document discusses programmatic prospecting, which uses third-party data to target and reach potential new customers. It evaluates different data providers and DSPs to determine how to maximize their audience data and use data more efficiently. Key aspects of an effective prospecting strategy include understanding campaign objectives, selecting the right audience segments, and pairing prospecting with remarketing to support lower-funnel conversions. Prospecting should be evaluated based on media efficiency, quality of audiences reached, and ability to scale.
The document discusses how the programmatic media industry needs to shift its focus from efficiency to effective value creation in order to better align with marketers' objectives of long-term consumer engagement. It identifies the key drivers of effective value creation as efficiency, innovation, and consumer engagement. The industry needs to develop new capabilities and metrics to measure how well it is extracting useful data and insights from consumers to improve engagement over time, rather than just focusing on cost savings. This will allow it to tap into the $13 billion untapped market for online branding spending in the US.
Turn: Forrester The Total Economic Impact Of Turn April 2013Brian Crotty
This document summarizes a Forrester Consulting study on the total economic impact of using Turn Audience Suite and Campaign Suite. It interviewed one company that uses these platforms for behavioral targeted advertising. Key findings include:
- The company was able to increase the number of ad campaigns from 100 to over 287 in two years while only increasing staff by two, due to managed services from Turn.
- Click-through rates and cost per action efficiency improved by 25-35% and increased competitive advantage.
- Turn's platforms enabled identifying new audience segments and increasing potential impressions from 250,000 to billions, contributing to top-line growth.
The document is a case study report from Forrester Consulting that analyzes the total economic impact of implementing Urban Airship's Mobile Engagement Platform. It finds that for a composite organization based on interviews with Urban Airship customers, implementing the platform resulted in a 878% ROI over 3 years. Key benefits included a 30% increase in mobile product sales from push notifications, a 20% increase in customer lifetime value, and $231,660 in savings from reduced email marketing costs. Costs included $110,000 in annual platform fees and a $20,000 implementation fee.
This document is a benchmark report on event marketing that was sponsored by Cvent and conducted by Demand Metric. The report provides an executive summary of its key findings from surveying primarily B2B and B2C marketers about their event marketing strategies and effectiveness. It finds that events are considered a medium to high priority investment, with the primary goals being customer engagement and demand/lead generation. More effective events with higher attendance and value for attendees lead to higher ROI and more leads. Measurement of event marketing metrics is important for satisfaction levels.
New-era Analytics for online campaignspptxmarcdhalluin1
Ad fraud, the cookieless future, campaign measurement are 3 of the ingredients forming the online ad world's perfect storm.
Legacy verification tools are seen increasingly as not fit for purpose, having for years not being able to detect significant volumes of adfraud subsequently discovered.
New era tools with post bid javascript tags get the job done.
Brands wanting to benchmark their campaign results can now do so.
Magna Global: Media Economy Report 20t4Brian Crotty
The document is a media economy report that discusses how data is changing businesses. It covers several topics:
1) Supply - Pervasive consumer connectivity generates new data that can be used for more precise targeting of audiences. Moving local TV trading to impressions-based transactions allows for more efficient buying processes and precise targeting.
2) Demand - Programmatic activity now permeates digital media buying and allows for automated execution and optimization of campaigns. Combining audience and contextual data in programmatic buying can drive results across marketing funnels.
3) New Value Drivers - Timing when reaching consumers is becoming more important, and data helps identify receptive audiences. New ways of understanding customer behavior and improving ROI with less waste are
Un estudio reciente del Boston Consulting Group (BCG) ha revelado que los editores que aprovechan por completo la oportunidad programática, que crece rápidamente, obtienen unas ganancias económicas medidas y una mejor posición en el mercado a largo plazo.
BCG completó recientemente un estudio global realizado entre 25 editores y aplicado a una serie de segmentos para entender mejor la contribución de la programática a los resultados finales de un editor.
Los resultados indicaron que los mejores editores que utilizan la programática de forma estratégica superan el promedio del mercado, lo que genera un porcentaje elevado de ventas programáticas a la vez que aumenta los CPM generales. Utilizan la tecnología con efectividad para operar de forma más eficaz y aumentar los ingresos y los márgenes.
En el informe se describen las cuatro mejores prácticas que los principales editores aplican para crear su sólido camino hacia los beneficios.
Programmatic Everywhere? Data, Technology and the Future of Audience EngagementRoar Media
The document summarizes the findings of a survey of over 260 industry executives about programmatic marketing. The key findings are:
1) Programmatic approaches have been widely adopted across advertisers and publishers, though for different reasons - advertisers want effective audience engagement, publishers want operational efficiencies.
2) Programmatic is currently being used primarily for automated, auction-based digital media buying, though it is growing to support new strategic uses like audience segmentation.
3) Internal organizational hurdles are fading but brand safety issues still inhibit some advertisers from fully adopting programmatic.
What we know_about_managing_advertising_agenciesAdCMO
Managing advertising agencies is complex and involves several key aspects:
1) The relationship between brands and agencies is changing as disintermediation increases and agencies must adapt their business models.
2) Finding and replacing agencies requires careful management of risks and costs for both clients and agencies through processes like agency searches and reviews.
3) Evaluating agency performance through clear briefs, measurable metrics, and continuous feedback cycles can help build sustainable client-agency relationships.
The document discusses various methods for paying advertising agencies, including:
1. Commissions based on a percentage of advertising spending, which were traditionally 15% but have decreased with client pressure.
2. Fees negotiated annually based on staff billing rates, though this may not reflect actual work required.
3. Payment by results including incentives if targets are met around sales, brand metrics, or client evaluations of agency performance.
4. Hybrid models combining fees and commissions, or fees with payment by results incentives.
Programmatic recruitment advertising represents a significant change in the recruitment advertising industry. It allows employers to automate the buying and placement of job openings through programmatic software that maximizes targeting efficiency. The key benefits of programmatic recruitment advertising include precision targeting of candidates, performance analytics to optimize campaigns, and only paying for real results through pay-per-click or pay-per-application models. While programmatic advertising is still evolving, it is poised to become the standard approach for buying digital recruitment advertising due to these advantages over traditional online job posting models.
ClickZ has launched an innovative new series of buyers guides, created with the aim of cutting through the complexity of the technology landscape to help our community of readers make better decisions about vendors. The first of this series is dedicated to bid management platforms, which help brands maximize the returns on their PPC, social media, and display advertising budgets.
The role of a bid management platform has changed significantly over the past decade, in line with the increased sophistication of the digital media industry. With over $90 billion spent on paid search in 2017, these software packages play a vital role in deriving maximum value from a brand’s digital media budget.
The core component of the ClickZ bid management vendor guide is our customer survey, which received over 1,600 responses.
Do the terms companion banner and quartiles cause question marks in your head? Digital advertising comes with its own vocabulary, and if you’re new to the industry, the terms can be downright puzzling.
The A to Z of Programmatic (formerly known as our Programmatic Jargon Buster) helps you look like a programmatic pro in front of your colleagues. This edition includes terms across all different facets of programmatic, from mobile to in-app to video.
Download this guide to get a refresher on programmatic terms like:
• Day N
• Negative retargeting
• Quartiles
• In-stream and out-stream video
• Companion banner
• And many more!
To download the presentation, please go to this page: https://www.sociomantic.com/the-a-to-z-of-programmatic-4th-edition/
Babelfish articles oct 16 mar 17 28-3-17 reduxBrian Crotty
In a world where it is increasingly difficult to keep up, let alone stay ahead, I am sharing a collection of meaty articles that passed my screens over the last 6 months. I have divided into 6 topics - The first articles in each section are important reading for those who can´t afford to tread water.
Ebit - Buscape- #34 webshoppers english 2016Brian Crotty
In the first half of 2016, the Brazilian e-commerce market faced challenges from the country's economic and political troubles as well as increased product prices. However, e-commerce sales still grew 5.2% nominally during this period. Major highlights included a 7% increase in average ticket size to R$403.46 and a 31% rise in active online consumers to 23.1 million. While order volumes declined slightly by 2% due to unemployment and weaker class C purchases, mobile sales grew strongly and made up 23% of sales by June 2016. Many e-commerce companies had to rethink their strategies and cut costs to survive in this difficult environment.
The blog post by Bahaa Abdul Hussein explores the essential key performance indicators (KPIs) for gauging success in the competitive fintech industry. Some important KPIs discussed include customer acquisition cost, customer retention rate, churn rate, monthly recurring revenue, average revenue per user, user engagement metrics, conversion rate, and fraud and risk metrics. Understanding these KPIs through measurement and analysis provides valuable insights to optimize strategies, refine processes, and deliver exceptional customer experiences for leading in the dynamic fintech sector.
This document discusses the growing trend of global programmatic advertising. Programmatic advertising uses automation and data to target digital ads. The summary is:
1. Programmatic advertising is no longer confined to the US, but is growing internationally as brands look to deliver targeted messages globally.
2. Drivers for adopting programmatic internationally are similar to the US - increasing efficiency to get more out of budgets. However, regional variations require localized approaches.
3. A recent forecast predicts worldwide programmatic ad spending will rise 52% in 2014 and continue growing 27% annually through 2018, totaling $53 billion.
This document outlines 17 key performance indicators (KPIs) that can be used to define the success of a virtual event, including visits and downloads, registration rates, abandonment rates, conversion rates, retention rates, traffic from referrals, interactive sessions, poll response rates, effectiveness of new features, social media engagement, sales management, feedback and surveys, click-through rates, return on investment, cost per acquisition, average daily attendance, and sponsorship revenue. It concludes by emphasizing the importance of analyzing these metrics to improve event performance and growth over time.
Marketing Land's latest publication of the "Enterprise Web Analytics Platforms 2015: A Marketer's Guide" examines the market for web analytics platforms and the considerations involved in implemention. The 37-page report reviews the growing market for web analytics platforms, plus the latest trends, opportunities and challenges.
This document discusses programmatic prospecting, which uses third-party data to target and reach potential new customers. It evaluates different data providers and DSPs to determine how to maximize their audience data and use data more efficiently. Key aspects of an effective prospecting strategy include understanding campaign objectives, selecting the right audience segments, and pairing prospecting with remarketing to support lower-funnel conversions. Prospecting should be evaluated based on media efficiency, quality of audiences reached, and ability to scale.
The document discusses how the programmatic media industry needs to shift its focus from efficiency to effective value creation in order to better align with marketers' objectives of long-term consumer engagement. It identifies the key drivers of effective value creation as efficiency, innovation, and consumer engagement. The industry needs to develop new capabilities and metrics to measure how well it is extracting useful data and insights from consumers to improve engagement over time, rather than just focusing on cost savings. This will allow it to tap into the $13 billion untapped market for online branding spending in the US.
Turn: Forrester The Total Economic Impact Of Turn April 2013Brian Crotty
This document summarizes a Forrester Consulting study on the total economic impact of using Turn Audience Suite and Campaign Suite. It interviewed one company that uses these platforms for behavioral targeted advertising. Key findings include:
- The company was able to increase the number of ad campaigns from 100 to over 287 in two years while only increasing staff by two, due to managed services from Turn.
- Click-through rates and cost per action efficiency improved by 25-35% and increased competitive advantage.
- Turn's platforms enabled identifying new audience segments and increasing potential impressions from 250,000 to billions, contributing to top-line growth.
The document is a case study report from Forrester Consulting that analyzes the total economic impact of implementing Urban Airship's Mobile Engagement Platform. It finds that for a composite organization based on interviews with Urban Airship customers, implementing the platform resulted in a 878% ROI over 3 years. Key benefits included a 30% increase in mobile product sales from push notifications, a 20% increase in customer lifetime value, and $231,660 in savings from reduced email marketing costs. Costs included $110,000 in annual platform fees and a $20,000 implementation fee.
This document is a benchmark report on event marketing that was sponsored by Cvent and conducted by Demand Metric. The report provides an executive summary of its key findings from surveying primarily B2B and B2C marketers about their event marketing strategies and effectiveness. It finds that events are considered a medium to high priority investment, with the primary goals being customer engagement and demand/lead generation. More effective events with higher attendance and value for attendees lead to higher ROI and more leads. Measurement of event marketing metrics is important for satisfaction levels.
New-era Analytics for online campaignspptxmarcdhalluin1
Ad fraud, the cookieless future, campaign measurement are 3 of the ingredients forming the online ad world's perfect storm.
Legacy verification tools are seen increasingly as not fit for purpose, having for years not being able to detect significant volumes of adfraud subsequently discovered.
New era tools with post bid javascript tags get the job done.
Brands wanting to benchmark their campaign results can now do so.
Magna Global: Media Economy Report 20t4Brian Crotty
The document is a media economy report that discusses how data is changing businesses. It covers several topics:
1) Supply - Pervasive consumer connectivity generates new data that can be used for more precise targeting of audiences. Moving local TV trading to impressions-based transactions allows for more efficient buying processes and precise targeting.
2) Demand - Programmatic activity now permeates digital media buying and allows for automated execution and optimization of campaigns. Combining audience and contextual data in programmatic buying can drive results across marketing funnels.
3) New Value Drivers - Timing when reaching consumers is becoming more important, and data helps identify receptive audiences. New ways of understanding customer behavior and improving ROI with less waste are
Un estudio reciente del Boston Consulting Group (BCG) ha revelado que los editores que aprovechan por completo la oportunidad programática, que crece rápidamente, obtienen unas ganancias económicas medidas y una mejor posición en el mercado a largo plazo.
BCG completó recientemente un estudio global realizado entre 25 editores y aplicado a una serie de segmentos para entender mejor la contribución de la programática a los resultados finales de un editor.
Los resultados indicaron que los mejores editores que utilizan la programática de forma estratégica superan el promedio del mercado, lo que genera un porcentaje elevado de ventas programáticas a la vez que aumenta los CPM generales. Utilizan la tecnología con efectividad para operar de forma más eficaz y aumentar los ingresos y los márgenes.
En el informe se describen las cuatro mejores prácticas que los principales editores aplican para crear su sólido camino hacia los beneficios.
Programmatic Everywhere? Data, Technology and the Future of Audience EngagementRoar Media
The document summarizes the findings of a survey of over 260 industry executives about programmatic marketing. The key findings are:
1) Programmatic approaches have been widely adopted across advertisers and publishers, though for different reasons - advertisers want effective audience engagement, publishers want operational efficiencies.
2) Programmatic is currently being used primarily for automated, auction-based digital media buying, though it is growing to support new strategic uses like audience segmentation.
3) Internal organizational hurdles are fading but brand safety issues still inhibit some advertisers from fully adopting programmatic.
What we know_about_managing_advertising_agenciesAdCMO
Managing advertising agencies is complex and involves several key aspects:
1) The relationship between brands and agencies is changing as disintermediation increases and agencies must adapt their business models.
2) Finding and replacing agencies requires careful management of risks and costs for both clients and agencies through processes like agency searches and reviews.
3) Evaluating agency performance through clear briefs, measurable metrics, and continuous feedback cycles can help build sustainable client-agency relationships.
The document discusses various methods for paying advertising agencies, including:
1. Commissions based on a percentage of advertising spending, which were traditionally 15% but have decreased with client pressure.
2. Fees negotiated annually based on staff billing rates, though this may not reflect actual work required.
3. Payment by results including incentives if targets are met around sales, brand metrics, or client evaluations of agency performance.
4. Hybrid models combining fees and commissions, or fees with payment by results incentives.
Programmatic recruitment advertising represents a significant change in the recruitment advertising industry. It allows employers to automate the buying and placement of job openings through programmatic software that maximizes targeting efficiency. The key benefits of programmatic recruitment advertising include precision targeting of candidates, performance analytics to optimize campaigns, and only paying for real results through pay-per-click or pay-per-application models. While programmatic advertising is still evolving, it is poised to become the standard approach for buying digital recruitment advertising due to these advantages over traditional online job posting models.
ClickZ has launched an innovative new series of buyers guides, created with the aim of cutting through the complexity of the technology landscape to help our community of readers make better decisions about vendors. The first of this series is dedicated to bid management platforms, which help brands maximize the returns on their PPC, social media, and display advertising budgets.
The role of a bid management platform has changed significantly over the past decade, in line with the increased sophistication of the digital media industry. With over $90 billion spent on paid search in 2017, these software packages play a vital role in deriving maximum value from a brand’s digital media budget.
The core component of the ClickZ bid management vendor guide is our customer survey, which received over 1,600 responses.
Do the terms companion banner and quartiles cause question marks in your head? Digital advertising comes with its own vocabulary, and if you’re new to the industry, the terms can be downright puzzling.
The A to Z of Programmatic (formerly known as our Programmatic Jargon Buster) helps you look like a programmatic pro in front of your colleagues. This edition includes terms across all different facets of programmatic, from mobile to in-app to video.
Download this guide to get a refresher on programmatic terms like:
• Day N
• Negative retargeting
• Quartiles
• In-stream and out-stream video
• Companion banner
• And many more!
To download the presentation, please go to this page: https://www.sociomantic.com/the-a-to-z-of-programmatic-4th-edition/
Similar to ANA programmatic-financial-fog 22-5-17 (20)
Babelfish articles oct 16 mar 17 28-3-17 reduxBrian Crotty
In a world where it is increasingly difficult to keep up, let alone stay ahead, I am sharing a collection of meaty articles that passed my screens over the last 6 months. I have divided into 6 topics - The first articles in each section are important reading for those who can´t afford to tread water.
Ebit - Buscape- #34 webshoppers english 2016Brian Crotty
In the first half of 2016, the Brazilian e-commerce market faced challenges from the country's economic and political troubles as well as increased product prices. However, e-commerce sales still grew 5.2% nominally during this period. Major highlights included a 7% increase in average ticket size to R$403.46 and a 31% rise in active online consumers to 23.1 million. While order volumes declined slightly by 2% due to unemployment and weaker class C purchases, mobile sales grew strongly and made up 23% of sales by June 2016. Many e-commerce companies had to rethink their strategies and cut costs to survive in this difficult environment.
Great mobile campaigns strive to increase brand relevance, drive emotional connections and solve problems, choose immersive, visually-compelling ad formats, create their own engagement ecosystem through apps and sites, set mobile as a cornerstone and build with other channels, and drive change and social impact. Emerging areas for growth include leveraging chatbots and virtual screen demos to drive trial, accelerating adoption of augmented and virtual reality, gaining a better understanding of engagement, and implementing targeting that's more balanced with creative quality.
The document discusses trends in content marketing and storytelling for 2017. It notes that the days of conventional brand storytelling are over due to everyone having the ability to create and share content. In 2017, brands will need to step back and let audiences shape their own stories through more personal, instant content like short videos and live streams. It also suggests that brands focus on storydoing rather than storytelling by focusing on human interactions and experiences with their brand. Live content is growing in popularity and brands will need to embrace more raw, unedited content styles to engage modern audiences.
Winterberry group the state of consumer data onboarding november 2016Brian Crotty
The document discusses consumer data onboarding, which is the process of matching owned consumer data with consumers' digital attributes to create a comprehensive identity for marketing. It details the history and evolution of onboarding from probabilistic household-level matching to increased demand for more accurate deterministic matching of individuals. The proliferation of connected devices has made identity matching more complex. Both probabilistic and deterministic processes are still required for onboarding, as deterministic is more precise but probabilistic allows for greater scale. The document provides an overview of the onboarding process and market.
The document summarizes key points from Deloitte's 2016 Tech Trends report, which examines eight technology trends that will likely disrupt businesses in the next 18-24 months. These include blockchain, augmented reality, the Internet of Things, reimagining core systems, autonomic platforms, industrialized analytics, and the social impact of exponential technologies.
It discusses how every company is now a technology company and how digital innovation is driving changes across business models and competition. It also emphasizes that CIOs have an opportunity to shape their organizations' futures by transforming business as usual and harnessing innovation responsibly.
The report challenges readers to think beyond just adopting new technologies but to use emerging trends to create real business
MEC CES 2017-key-takeaways-and-trends-finalBrian Crotty
The document provides details about CES 2017, including key facts and figures. It summarizes that CES 2017 attracted over 150,000 attendees, 3,800 exhibitors from around the world, covered over 2.6 million square feet, and launched over 20,000 new electronics products. Major themes included technologies like autonomous vehicles, robotics, VR/AR, and artificial intelligence.
This document summarizes a report by Mindshare on trends for 2017, with a focus on virtual, augmented, and mixed reality technologies (collectively referred to as VR/AR/MR). It discusses the current state of these technologies and their potential for growth. Key points include:
- VR/AR/MR have been in development for decades but are now gaining more attention due to improvements in technology. However, widespread adoption still faces barriers of cost, usability, and a lack of compelling applications and content.
- Experts provide opinions on the technologies' development and potential. They believe mobile phones will be key to scaling experiences, and that advertising could use VR to tell immersive stories and demonstrate products,
Kantar-millward-brown Media and-digital-predictions 2017Brian Crotty
Brands will step up efforts to connect with the emerging Gen Z consumer segment in 2017. Marketers will need to offer opportunities for Gen Z to interact and co-create with brands through digital platforms. Transparency about a brand's values and purpose will also be important to this demographic. Brands will also need to experiment with new formats like augmented reality and virtual reality to engage Gen Z in an imaginative and visual way. Consistency of brand experience across touchpoints will be another key focus area for marketers as consumers interact with brands through various channels. Content marketing techniques will continue to evolve through new technologies and more targeted, personalized creative content.
Edelman Digital's 2017 Trends Report explores emerging trends that will impact brands in the coming year. The report focuses on changes observed in 2016 and covers topics like paid media, influencer marketing, search, entertainment, conversational technologies, B2B marketing, and blockchain. The report provides both observations on these trends as well as recommendations for how brands can leverage new technologies and approaches to drive business results. Key trends discussed include the growth of immersive content like virtual and augmented reality, changes in mobile video consumption, the rise of live streaming video, and new opportunities for using wearable technologies in content creation.
This document summarizes 10 technology trends that are expected to become more important for marketers in 2016, focusing on the rise of closed ecosystems and the development of artificial intelligence. The trends involve the growth of "walled gardens" like Snapchat Discover and Facebook Instant Articles, new challenges for advertising from services like Netflix and ad blocking, the evolution of personalized search on mobile and through virtual assistants, the increasing role of messaging apps in sharing content and integrating other services, and the application of artificial intelligence to areas like maps, image recognition, sentiment analysis, and dynamic pricing. Marketers will need to adapt by working within these closed ecosystems, focusing on native content formats, and exploring how to provide customer service through new messaging platforms.
Sharing a collection of articles that I found interesting over the last 6 months - First 20 are important reading for those who can´t afford to tread water.
O documento discute insights sobre o comportamento digital global e regional em 2015 de acordo com relatórios da comScore. Ele fornece informações sobre audiências digitais, uso multiplataforma, categorias como vídeo online e redes sociais, e foca na geração Millennials. O relatório também analisa insights para as regiões da EMEA, LATAM e Ásia-Pacífico.
Este documento fornece um resumo do relatório WebShoppers da 32a edição do 1o semestre de 2015. O relatório contém quatro capítulos analisando o desempenho do comércio eletrônico no primeiro semestre, expectativas para o segundo semestre, pesquisa sobre dispositivos móveis e índice Fipe/Buscapé. Além disso, apresenta considerações finais e informações sobre a metodologia e benefícios da pesquisa realizada pela E-bit.
JWT The future-100--trends-and-change-to-watch-in-2016Brian Crotty
This document discusses emerging trends to watch in 2016 across various industries including culture, technology, food/drink, travel/hospitality, and brands/marketing. Some key trends highlighted are the growing emphasis on empathy in thought leadership, the increasing influence of China in Hollywood entertainment through investments and audiences, and the rise of surreal, hyper-plasticized imagery in fashion/beauty as an alternative to ultra-realism. Technology continues to permeate all industries, while consumers are demanding that brands demonstrate strong value systems and environmental stewardship.
Sharing a collection of articles that I found interesting over the last 6 months - First 20 are important reading for those who can´t afford to tread water.
Nielsen / IAB - Digital video-and-tv-advertising-viewing-budget-share-shift-a...Brian Crotty
The document summarizes findings from a study on online video viewing and TV advertising conducted by Nielsen. Some key findings include:
- Online video usage continues to grow in time spent and videos streamed while TV viewing has remained relatively flat. Younger viewers and lighter TV viewers spend more time watching online video.
- Reallocating a portion of TV ad budgets to digital media can increase total reach for the same spending. Shifting 15% of budgets led to a 4% increase in reach on average across different advertiser categories. Online video ads also demonstrated higher brand effectiveness than TV ads on various metrics like recall and likeability.
Winterberry & USA IAB - Marketing data white paper Jan 2015Brian Crotty
The document summarizes the evolving role of data technology in marketing. It finds that while marketers have adopted many technologies over the past decade, most investment has been in tools that harness consumer data. It discusses how early adoption focused on programmatic marketing, but that full cross-channel integration is the future priority. On average, enterprises use over a dozen data tools, with some using over 30. Early adoption was driven by pilot needs and reporting gaps rather than long-term strategy. Looking ahead, marketers aim to better integrate tools through common data conduits to expand use cases and audience engagement. Success will rely not just on technology but strong people and processes to govern tools and enable long-term value from consumer data.
This document discusses trends for the year 2015 according to Ford Motor Company. It focuses on the rise of Generation Z, those born after 1993, who are the first truly global generation and are adept, self-directed researchers. Examples are provided of young entrepreneurs and innovators from Generation Z who are already making an impact. The document also discusses trends around embracing rebels and risk-takers, seeing failure as a learning experience rather than a stigma, and increasing consumer demand for privacy and mobility options. The trends outlined are meant to be relevant for consumers of all ages around the world.
As the call for for skilled experts continues to develop, investing in quality education and education from a reputable https://www.safalta.com/online-digital-marketing/best-digital-marketing-institute-in-noida Digital advertising institute in Noida can lead to a a success career on this eve
Yes, It's Your Fault Book Launch WebinarDemandbase
From Blame to Gain: Achieving Sales and Marketing Alignment to Drive B2B Growth.
Tired of the perpetual tug-of-war between your sales and marketing teams? Come hear Demandbase Chief Marketing Officer, Kelly Hopping and Chief Sales Officer, John Eitel discuss key insights from their new book, “Yes, It’s Your Fault! From Blame to Gain: Achieving Sales and Marketing Alignment to Drive B2B Growth.”
They’ll share their no-nonsense approach to bridging the sales and marketing divide to drive true collaboration — once and for all.
In this webinar, you’ll discover:
The underlying dynamics fueling sales and marketing misalignment
How to implement practical solutions without disrupting day-to-day operations
How to cultivate a culture of collaboration and unity for long-term success
How to align on metrics that matter
Why it’s essential to break down technology and data silos
How ABM can be a powerful unifier
In this dynamic session titled "Future-Proof Like Beyoncé: Syncing Email and Social Media for Iconic Brand Longevity," Carlos Gil, U.S. Brand Evangelist for GetResponse, unveils how to safeguard and elevate your digital marketing strategy. Explore how integrating email marketing with social media can not only increase your brand's reach but also secure its future in the ever-changing digital landscape. Carlos will share invaluable insights on developing a robust email list, leveraging data integration for targeted campaigns, and implementing AI tools to enhance cross-platform engagement. Attendees will learn how to maintain a consistent brand voice across all channels and adapt to platform changes proactively. This session is essential for marketers aiming to diversify their online presence and minimize dependence on any single platform. Join Carlos to discover how to turn social media followers into loyal email subscribers and ultimately, drive sustainable growth and revenue for your brand. By harnessing the best practices and innovative strategies discussed, you will be equipped to navigate the challenges of the digital age, ensuring your brand remains relevant and resonant with your audience, no matter the platform. Don’t miss this opportunity to transform your approach and achieve iconic brand longevity akin to Beyoncé's enduring influence in the entertainment industry.
Key Takeaways:
Integration of Email and Social Media: Understanding how to seamlessly integrate email marketing with social media efforts to expand reach and reinforce brand presence. Building a Robust Email List: Strategies for developing a strong email list that provides a direct line of communication to your audience, independent of social media algorithms. Data Integration for Targeted Campaigns: Leveraging combined data from email and social media to create personalized, targeted marketing campaigns that resonate with the audience. Utilization of AI Tools: Implementing AI and automation tools to enhance efficiency and effectiveness across marketing channels. Consistent Brand Voice Across Platforms: Maintaining a unified brand voice and message across all digital platforms to strengthen brand identity and user trust. Proactive Adaptation to Platform Changes: Staying ahead of social media platform changes and algorithm updates to keep engagement high and interactions meaningful. Conversion of Social Followers to Email Subscribers: Techniques to encourage social media followers to subscribe to email, ensuring a direct and consistent connection. Sustainable Growth and Minimized Platform Dependence: Strategies to diversify digital presence and reduce reliance on any single social media platform, thereby mitigating risks associated with platform volatility.
Conferences like DigiMarCon provide ample opportunities to improve our own marketing programs by learning from others. But just because everyone is jumping on board with the latest idea/tool/metric doesn’t mean it works – or does it? This session will examine the value of today’s hottest digital marketing topics – including AI, paid ads, and social metrics – and the truth about what these shiny objects might be distracting you from.
Key Takeaways:
- How NOT to shoot your digital program in the foot by using flashy but ineffective resources
- The best ways to think about AI in connection with digital marketing
- How to cut through self-serving marketing advice and engage in channels that truly grow your business
From Hope to Despair The Top 10 Reasons Businesses Ditch SEO Tactics.pptxBoston SEO Services
From Hope to Despair: The Top 10 Reasons Businesses Ditch SEO Tactics
Are you tired of seeing your business's online visibility plummet from hope to despair? When it comes to SEO tactics, many businesses find themselves grappling with challenges that lead them to abandon their strategies altogether. In a digital landscape that's constantly evolving, staying on top of SEO best practices is crucial to maintaining a competitive edge.
In this blog, we delve deep into the top 10 reasons why businesses ditch SEO tactics, uncovering the pain points that may resonate with you:
1. Algorithm Changes: The ever-changing algorithms can leave businesses feeling like they're chasing a moving target. Search engines like Google frequently update their algorithms to improve user experience and provide more relevant search results. However, these updates can significantly impact your website's visibility and ranking if you're not prepared.
2. Lack of Results: Investing time and resources without seeing tangible results can be disheartening. The absence of immediate results often leads businesses to lose faith in their SEO strategies. It's important to remember that SEO is a long-term game that requires patience and consistent effort.
3. Technical Challenges: From site speed issues to complex metadata implementation, technical hurdles can be daunting. Overcoming these challenges is crucial for SEO success, as technical issues can hinder your website's performance and user experience.
4. Keyword Competition: Fierce competition for top keywords can make it hard to rank effectively. Businesses often struggle to find the right balance between targeting high-traffic keywords and finding less competitive, niche keywords that can still drive significant traffic.
5. Lack of Understanding of SEO Basics: Many businesses dive into the complex world of SEO without fully grasping the fundamental principles. This lack of understanding can lead to several issues:
Keyword Awareness: Failing to recognize the importance of keyword research and targeting the right keywords in content.
On-Page Optimization: Ignorance regarding crucial on-page elements such as meta tags, headers, and content structure.
Technical SEO Best Practices: Overlooking essential aspects like site speed, mobile responsiveness, and crawlability.
Backlinks: Not understanding the value of high-quality backlinks from reputable sources.
Analytics: Failing to track and analyze data prevents businesses from optimizing their SEO efforts effectively.
6. Unrealistic Expectations and Timeframe: Entrepreneurs often fall prey to the allure of quick fixes and overnight success. Unrealistic expectations can overshadow the reality of the time and effort needed to see tangible results in the highly competitive digital landscape. SEO is a long-term strategy, and setting realistic goals is crucial for success.
#SEO #DigitalMarketing #BusinessGrowth #OnlineVisibility #SEOChallenges #BostonSEO
The digital marketing industry is changing faster than ever and those who don’t adapt with the times are losing market share. Where should marketers be focusing their efforts? What strategies are the experts seeing get the best results? Get up-to-speed with the latest industry insights, trends and predictions for the future in this panel discussion with some leading digital marketing experts.
Unlock the secrets to enhancing your digital presence with our masterclass on mastering online visibility. Learn actionable strategies to boost your brand, optimize your social media, and leverage SEO. Transform your online footprint into a powerful tool for growth and engagement.
Key Takeaways:
1. Effective techniques to increase your brand's visibility across various online platforms.
2. Strategies for optimizing social media profiles and content to maximize reach and engagement.
3. Insights into leveraging SEO best practices to improve search engine rankings and drive organic traffic.
Breaking Silos To Break Bank: Shattering The Divide Between Search And SocialNavah Hopkins
At Mozcon 2024 I shared this deck on bridging the divide between search and social. We began by acknowledging that search-first marketers are used to different rules of engagement than social marketers. We also looked at how both channels treat creative, audiences, bidding/budgeting, and AI. We finished by going through how they can win together including UTM audits, harvesting comments from both to inform creative, and allowing for non-login forums to be part of your marketing strategy.
I themed this deck using Baldur's Gate 3 characters: Gale as Search and Astarion as Social
We will explore the transformative journey of American Bath Group as they transitioned from a traditional monolithic CMS to a dynamic, composable martech framework using Kontent.ai. Discover the strategic decisions, challenges, and key benefits realized through adopting a headless CMS approach. Learn how composable business models empower marketers with flexibility, speed, and integration capabilities, ultimately enhancing digital experiences and operational efficiency. This session is essential for marketers looking to understand the practical impacts and advantages of composable technology in today's digital landscape. Join us to gain valuable insights and actionable takeaways from a real-world implementation that redefines the boundaries of marketing technology.
Google Ads Vs Social Media Ads-A comparative analysisakashrawdot
Explore the differences, advantages, and strategies of using Google Ads vs Social Media Ads for online advertising. This presentation will provide insights into how each platform operates, their unique features, and how they can be leveraged to achieve marketing goals.
We’ve entered a new era in digital. Search and AI are colliding, in more ways than one. And they all have major implications for marketers.
• SEOs now use AI to optimize content.
• Google now uses AI to generate answers.
• Users are skipping search completely. They can now use AI to get answers. So AI has changed everything …or maybe not. Our audience hasn’t changed. Their information needs haven’t changed. Their perception of quality hasn’t changed. In reality, the most important things haven’t changed at all. In this session, you’ll learn the impact of AI. And you’ll learn ways that AI can make us better at the classic challenges: getting discovered, connecting through content and staying top of mind with the people who matter most. We’ll use timely tools to rebuild timeless foundations. We’ll do better basics, but with the most advanced techniques. Andy will share a set of frameworks, prompts and techniques for better digital basics, using the latest tools of today. And in the end, Andy will consider - in a brief glimpse - what might be the biggest change of all, and how to expand your footprint in the new digital landscape.
Key Takeaways:
How to use AI to optimize your content
How to find topics that algorithms love
How to get AI to mention your content and your brand
In the digital age, businesses are inundated with tools promising to streamline operations, enhance creativity, and boost productivity. Yet, the true key to digital transformation lies not in the accumulation of tools but in strategically integrating the right AI solutions to revolutionize workflows. Join Jordache, an experienced entrepreneur, tech strategist and AI consultant, as he explores essential AI tools across three critical categories—Ideation, Creation, and Operations—that can reshape the way your business creates, operates, and scales.This talk will guide you through the practicalities of selecting and effectively using AI tools that go beyond the basics of today’s popular tools like ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Midjourney, or Dall-E. For each category of tools, Jordache will address three crucial questions: What is each tool? Why is each one valuable to you as a business leader? How can you start using it in your workflow? This approach will not only clarify the role of these tools but also highlight their strategic value, making it perfect for business leaders ready to make informed decisions about integrating AI into their workflows.
Key Takeaways:
>> Strategic Selection and Integration: Understand how to select AI tools that align with your business goals and how to conceptually integrate them into your workflows to enhance efficiency and innovation.
>> Understanding AI Tool Categories: Gain a deeper understanding of how AI tools can be leveraged in the areas of ideation, creation, and operation—transforming each aspect of your business.
>> Practical Starting Points: Learn how you can start using these tools in your business with practical tips on initial steps and integration ideas.
>> Future-Proofing Your Business: Discover how staying informed about and utilizing the latest AI tools and strategies can keep your business competitive in a rapidly evolving digital landscape.
In the face of the news of Google beginning to remove cookies from Chrome (30m users at the time of writing), there’s no longer time for marketers to throw their hands up and say “I didn’t know” or “They won’t go through with it”. Reality check - it has already begun - the time to take action is now. The good news is that there are solutions available and ready for adoption… but for many the race to catch up to the modern internet risks being a messy, confusing scramble to get back to "normal"
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1. M AY 2 017
PROGRAMMATIC:
SEEING THROUGH THE
FINANCIAL FOG
An In-Market Analysis of Programmatic Media at the Transaction Level
2. 2
Executive Summary........................................................................................................................................ 3
I. Background................................................................................................................................................. 7
II. What We Learned — From the Data...........................................................................................................10
1. Programmatic “Tech Tax” and Waterfall — Demand-Side......................................................................11
2. Programmatic “Tech Tax” and Waterfall — Full Supply Chain............................................................. 12
3. Cost and Breakdown of Programmatic Media — Display.................................................................... 13
4. Cost and Breakdown of Programmatic Media — Video........................................................................14
5. Working/Inventory Costs — By Channel............................................................................................ 15
6. Demand-Side Transaction Costs — By Channel..................................................................................16
7. Additional Data-Driven Insights..........................................................................................................17
III. What We Learned — From the Process.................................................................................................... 18
IV. Obstacles to Transparency....................................................................................................................... 19
V. Advertiser Playbook................................................................................................................................... 20
About the Study Partners.............................................................................................................................. 27
Table of Contents
3. 3
This study was a joint initiative between the Association of National Advertisers (ANA), the Association
of Canadian Advertisers (ACA), Ebiquity, and AD/FIN.
• Our goal was to investigate the costs and economics of the programmatic advertising ecosystem. We wished
to explore concerns around programmatic transparency as discussed in the K2 Intelligence report commis-
sioned by the ANA, “An Independent Study of Media Transparency in the U.S. Advertising Industry,” and the
companion report from the ANA, Ebiquity, and FirmDecisions, “Media Transparency: Prescriptions, Principles,
and Processes for Marketers.”
• Our primary source of intelligence was programmatic transaction data — specifically, winning bid log data
and associated metadata from each demand-side platform (DSP) purchasing media on behalf of participating
advertisers. This data was identified as the best available source for the actual costs and fees for each
impression purchased.
• It was agreed from the outset that participants and their partners would remain anonymous, unless they
chose otherwise.
• Ultimately, the project spanned almost 2 years, from May 2015 through April 2017.
The study analyzed 16.4 billion media impressions purchased on behalf of seven major advertisers across
five programmatic DSPs.
• The seven participants span 30 major brands in auto, banking, beauty, CPG, fashion, and travel.
• The data included both real-time bidding (RTB) and private marketplace (PMP) transactions.
• All impressions were part of fully disclosed programmatic buys. “Non-disclosed” transactions (by definition)1
were not available, as they prevent access to transactional cost and fee details.2
• The vast majority (over 95 percent) of analyzed data was not executed by an agency trading desk, but bought
directly by the media agency and/or DSP as a managed service.3
• The study did not directly investigate supply-side programmatic costs and fees incurred between the publisher
and trading partners, such as supply-side platforms (SSPs). Where needed, estimates were used.
Executive Summary
1
Per the ANA/Forrester’s The State of Programmatic Buying 2016, a non-disclosed, also known as an undisclosed model, “typically refers to an arrangement
where an agent and/or intermediary purchasing media on an advertiser’s behalf does not disclose the actual closing/winning bid prices of media purchased,
instead providing only a final price which includes margin and fees. By not disclosing the actual prices paid, margin (and potential arbitrage) are unknown and
undisclosed to the client.”
2
Typically, when an agency offers a non-disclosed model, it allegedly buys media as a principal and then resells it to the advertiser for an undisclosed
mark-up.
3
In general, a managed service DSP will assume responsibility and have expert resources to execute media campaigns based on the needs and goals of each
client. On the other hand, self-service DSPs typically leave all bidding and transactional decisions in the hands of users/clients, allowing them to manage
campaigns on their own.
4. 4
A subset of the 16.4 billion impressions — 6.6 billion — was analyzed in greater detail at the campaign level4
across 445 completed campaigns to showcase the underlying economics of disclosed programmatic
transactions.
• Across Full Supply Chain: Advertiser g Agency g Trading Desk g DSP g Exchange g SSP g
paid to Publisher
š Across the full supply chain, the overall ratio of “working” to “non-working”5
spend was found to be 58/42
percent on average, when the costs of both demand-side and supply-side fees and services6
were included.
š 58 percent was the mid-point, with the computed range of 54–61 percent.
š In other words, 58 cents of each dollar ultimately purchased media inventory and audience exposure from
a publisher, with 42 cents of programmatic investment consumed by supply chain data and transaction fees.
š This calculation yielded a lower “programmatic tech tax” (42 percent) than reported in the October 2014
analysis by the World Federation of Advertisers (WFA)7
, which estimated 60 percent. Specifically, the WFA
estimated that 60 cents of each dollar covered programmatic transaction and data fees, with 40 cents
remaining for the publisher. We believe a potential difference between the study’s findings and those of the
WFA are explained by the fact that the current study contains only disclosed programmatic buys, and had
limited inclusion of agency trading desk fees. (Less than 5 percent of analyzed data was transacted via an
agency trading desk.)
• Across Demand-Side Supply Chain: Advertiser g Agency g Trading Desk g DSP g paid to Exchange
š When demand-side costs were isolated, removing estimated supply-side fees — to focus more specifically
on costs the advertiser has greater control over8
— the ratio of “working/inventory” spend9
to “non-working”
spend was 72/28 percent.
š In other words, 72 cents of each dollar purchased media inventory from a programmatic exchange,
with 28 cents of programmatic investment consumed by demand-side data and transactional fees.
š Additionally, across the 445 analyzed completed campaigns, we saw campaigns that had demand-side
“working/inventory” to “non-working” ratios as high as 85/15 percent, and as low as 30/70 percent,
revealing the importance of analyzing transaction costs and supply chain management at the campaign
level versus the aggregate.
š Overall, when CPMs were explored in greater detail at the campaign level, the demand-side “tech tax”
added 45 percent to the advertiser’s average cost of display inventory and 35 percent to the advertiser’s
average cost of video inventory.10
4
Given that “campaigns” can be defined differently across various ecosystem partners, for the purposes of the study each campaign had a defined budget,
had defined start and end dates, and was comprised of one or more insertion order IDs. Where available, priority objective(s) and KPIs were also included.
5
Historically, fees and costs that do not directly purchase media or have direct customer impact have been referred to as “non-working” spend. In the pro-
grammatic era, this term can be difficult to apply given the value-added role that various service, tech, and data vendors can play in the process. As such,
we refer to these “non-working” costs as execution spend (which can comprise fees for the agency, trading desk, DSPs, verification vendors, ad serving, and
other ad tech), and targeting data spend (which is comprised of all identified sources of third-party data used in each impression buy). Not all services/fees/
costs are applicable to each impression buy.
6
For full supply-chain calculations, demand-side fees were directly computed based on impression logs and metadata; supply-side fees were estimated at
15–25 percent of demand-side working media based on industry averages and reported figures.
7
According to the WFA’s 2014 Programmatic Report, “after all the stakeholders in the programmatic ecosystem have taken their share of advertiser’s budgets,
there remains just 40 percent received by the publisher,” putting the “tech tax” at 60 percent.
8
Demand-side incorporates services, technology, and data costs, including but not limited to agency, trading desk, DSP(s), data provider(s), verification
provider(s), ad serving, and other buy-side ad tech. No sell-side fees and services are included (e.g., exchange, SSP, and sell-side ad tech).
9
Working/inventory spend is defined as the closing/winning bid price for media impressions purchased by a DSP on a programmatic exchange on behalf
of an advertiser.
10
The calculation of this premium includes only demand-side fees which the advertiser pays for directly. Sell-side fees are part of the cost of the inventory
when purchased at the exchange, and are considered a direct cost to the publisher. If supply side fees were also included in the calculation, the premium
would be higher.
5. 5
We did not investigate fraud, viewability, brand safety, or arbitrage.
• The calculations in this study do not include any potential effects of ad fraud, non-human traffic, viewability,
or brand safety, all of which can have a substantial impact on the final effective cost (and performance) to
advertisers.
• In addition, the study did not attempt to uncover “arbitrage” by any party (an entity buying at one rate and
selling at a higher one) nor attempt to explore non-disclosed programmatic transactions.
Based on our experience, the seven participating advertisers represent the exception rather than the rule
when it comes to an advertiser’s ability to access, analyze, and learn from programmatic transactional data.
• The number of advertisers which were able to fully participate in the study were reduced by a series of legal,
technical, and bureaucratic issues. The initial pool of advertisers consisted of 58 interested advertisers and
was reduced to 28 signed advertisers. Ultimately only seven participated fully.
• In multiple cases, signed advertisers which were unable to participate found they did not have the data rights
to conduct a financial analysis of their programmatic investments (or were uncertain if they possessed the
rights) — a key learning about the state of contracts in digital media.
• While the number of advertisers participating in this study was lower than intended, the number of analyzed
impressions (16.4 billion) and campaigns (445) is nonetheless able to paint a realistic picture of the program-
matic market in a “disclosed” environment11
(i.e., where transactional data availability is not restricted).
Beyond the analysis of programmatic transaction data, the purpose of the study was to provide practical
solutions to help advertisers take greater control of their programmatic investments.
• Insights:
š Based on the range of transparency roadblocks encountered, advertisers may find it difficult to manage,
measure, and audit their programmatic media investments with the same rigor as they manage traditional
media investments.
š If left unchecked, this could lead to substantial economic consequences for advertisers, given the continued
growth of programmatic investments.
š At the core is the widespread use of non-disclosed programmatic buying arrangements (or in some cases
a lack of knowledge about the nature of the buying arrangement12
), together with knowledge gaps around
how the programmatic ecosystem works.
š Compounding this is a lack of industry standards and protocols to ensure that advertisers have the
necessary information from independent sources to analyze the costs and effectiveness of their
programmatic investments against market history, norms and benchmarks.
11
In disclosed buys, the agency and/or intermediary purchasing media on an advertiser’s behalf is buying as an agent and has the obligation (both contractu-
ally and legally) to disclose the actual closing/winning bid prices of media purchased. As discussed in footnote 2, in non-disclosed models, an agency is often
buying as a principal.
12
Our experiences support findings from the ANA/Forrester study that indicated 34 percent of advertisers had opted in to a non-disclosed arrangement,
and an additional 40 percent did not know if they had (ANA/Forrester 2016 Programmatic Media Buying Survey).
6. 6
• Overall recommendations:
š Programmatic buying should have a rigorous level of financial reporting and clear audit and analysis
protocols on par with any other media.
š Advertisers should craft and enforce a media buying agreement that meets their needs and expectations
for transparency, accountability, and results.
} For many, this will be a fully disclosed media buying agreement that defines and allows for cost and
performance transparency, embracing key principles from the ANA Master Media Planning and
Buying Services Template, or ACA Marketing Communications Services Agreement and additional
recommendations discussed therein.
} For others, this may be a non-disclosed media buying agreement that guarantees KPI achievement
but may put limits on transparency (e.g., lack of disclosure of the underlying media costs). Advertisers
who desire to enter into a non-disclosed model should receive assurances from the agency about the
buying methods for non-disclosed models to ensure that the agency is truly buying the media as
a principal without reliance on advertiser funds.
š As part of any agreement, advertisers must have a practical and scalable way to verify delivery, verify costs
and supply chain fees, verify contract compliance, and evaluate programmatic media buys. Without such
a means, contracts are impossible to enforce. These rights should encompass access to the demand side
supply chain, including all subsidiaries, divisions, and affiliates of the advertiser’s agency and the chain of
suppliers that are part of each transaction.
š It is therefore recommended that advertisers demand and secure a source of independent transactional
information for their buys. One recommended approach is to access and control your programmatic trans-
action level data — winning bid log data and metadata — to serve as the advertiser’s record of transaction
(e.g., “programmatic invoices”).
In the end, this study was an important first step in the journey to greater accountability and transparency
in programmatic media. If we learned nothing else, we learned that programmatic media can be significantly
demystified for any advertiser which demands it and takes control of their programmatic transaction level data.
Each advertiser that participated — and even a few that attempted to participate — is well positioned for better
programmatic governance and digital supply chain management.
Following are detailed recommended steps to help all advertisers take greater control of their programmatic
investments. The ANA, the ACA, Ebiquity, and AD/FIN are committed to bringing greater transparency to the
digital media supply chain. We invite others to join us, contribute to the discussion, and make the effort to
create a more measurable, accountable, and transparent digital media marketplace.
7. 7
I. Background
Programmatic Media Is Our New Reality
Programmatic media is the automation of media buying and selling processes and decisions, enhanced through
data13
. It is fast becoming the dominant approach to buying digital media, projected to “reach nearly $33 billion
in 2017, according to eMarketer’s latest forecast, which estimates that nearly four of every five U.S. display ad
dollars will transact through programmatic pipes this year…expected to increase to 84 percent by 2019.”14
Why is programmatic media buying growing so quickly? Largely because programmatically transacted media
offers many alluring benefits to advertisers: targeting precision, scalability, cost efficiency, real-time optimization,
and unprecedented leverage of big data. And as programmatic buying becomes more mainstream, higher-quality
inventory is becoming more available. Programmatic buying is our new reality.
Why the Study?
Ever since reports from the World Federation of Advertisers (WFA) and others estimated that the programmatic
“technology tax” could exceed 60 percent of an advertiser’s media budget15
, questions have been growing
around the “hidden costs” of the programmatic ecosystem and the inherent lack of transactional transparency.
These concerns have been exacerbated by non-disclosed buying agreements for programmatic media, which
do not allow for the close inspection, analysis, and auditing of a buy’s transactional details, costs, and fees.
Many advertisers find themselves in the dark around the economics of programmatic buying, an issue highlighted
in the ANA and Ebiquity/FirmDecisions report, “Media Transparency: Prescriptions, Principles, and Processes
for Marketers,” which noted: “The programmatic media market is one where non-transparent business practices
make it hard for advertisers to see where their investments are going…the flow of data within programmatic
buying is also complex, and advertisers should take the appropriate actions to understand the role and use of
data throughout the programmatic trading chain, especially as programmatic buying becomes an established
targeting and trading mechanism across the media landscape.”
Both reports added weight to fundamental questions facing advertisers:
• Do advertisers have adequate transparency around their programmatic media investments to make the
most informed business decisions?
• Do advertisers properly understand the economics of programmatic media to manage (and minimize)
the complex supply chain that underlies each transaction?
• Do advertisers have the necessary knowledge of programmatic media costs, fees (agency, trading desk,
etc.), and performance details to meet the standards of a financial audit or scrutiny of shareholders?
• Do advertisers have the necessary tools and guidance to manage and optimize their programmatic
supply chain?
• Do advertisers have contracts that provide adequate accountability and audit rights?
13
As defined in the ANA/Forrester 2016 Programmatic Media Buying Survey
14
eMarketer April 2017; Mediapost 4/18/17
15
According to the WFA’s 2014 Guide to Programmatic Media, “after all the stakeholders in the programmatic ecosystem have taken their share of advertisers’
budgets, there remains just 40 percent received by the publisher…” putting the “tech tax” at 60 percent.
8. 8
Objectives of the Study
This study — a joint effort between the Association of National Advertisers (ANA), the Association of Canadian
Advertisers (ACA), Ebiquity, and AD/FIN — set out to dissect this growing speculation. Our objective was simple,
yet ambitious — to create a data-driven fact base around the economics of programmatic media trading to
understand:
• Flow of spend from Advertiser g Agency g Trading Desk g DSP g paid to Exchange
• Actual costs of media inventory (“demand-side working media”)
• Actual costs/fees of data and execution (“demand-side non-working media”)
• Actual baseline ratios, ranges, and norms based on this data
• Assess spend activity across an anonymized, aggregated participant pool
The foundation for the study’s analysis was winning bid transaction logs generated by each DSP for every
impression purchased on an advertiser’s behalf. This data was seen by the team as the best available source
of the true “demand-side” cost for each media impression. Log data, together with its associated metadata,
records not only the transactional cost details (CPM) and characteristics for each impression (ad size, channel,
geolocation, domain, etc.), but also many of the ad-tech services deployed programmatically (targeting data,
ad serving, fraud, viewability, etc.).
Focus and Requirements of the Study
Starting in May 2015, the team initiated recruitment of advertisers in the U.S. and Canada to participate,
with the following qualifying characteristics:
• Advertisers which wanted an independent view of programmatic media costs and fees
• Advertisers with plans to run programmatic campaigns of at least $1 million in Q1–Q3 2016
• Advertisers which had not opted in to a non-disclosed programmatic model
• Advertisers which did not rely exclusively on an “in house” trading desk
Additional important scope requirements and caveats:
• The study analyzed disclosed programmatic media buys only, which may not be representative
of non-disclosed transactions where fewer controls exist to manage the supply chain.
• The study analyzed costs and associated fees for the demand side of each impression buy, specifically
from Advertiser g Agency g Trading Desk g DSP g paid to Exchange, inclusive of the service, data, and
ad-tech fees incurred.
9. 9
• The study did not directly investigate the costs and associated fees for the supply side of each impression
buy. Therefore, unless noted, figures quoted for “working media/inventory” are for the demand side and
do not include costs incurred between the publisher and trading partners, such as supply-side platforms
(SSPs) or sell-side fees from the ad exchange. Where it is noted, estimates for the supply side were used
to provide estimated calculations for the full supply chain, from Advertiser g Agency g Trading Desk g
DSP g Exchange g SSP g paid to Publisher.
• It is important to note that more than 95 percent of analyzed impressions did not utilize an agency trading
desk, potentially reducing the demand-side execution costs associated with programmatic buys in our
data set.
• For campaign-level analysis, only completed campaigns were analyzed, with partial or in-progress campaigns
used only for select analyses.
• Where participants withheld proprietary fee data, market averages were used.
• The study did not attempt to evaluate the effect of invalid traffic and campaign exposure. Hence ad fraud,
non-human traffic, viewability, and brand safety were not factored in to the calculations.
• The study did not attempt to uncover arbitrage by any participants.
Study Interest vs. Participation
After announcing the study in May 2015, the team approached over 100 major U.S. and Canadian advertisers
to gauge interest in participating. Of this group, 58 advertisers expressed sincere interest. After vetting (for
non-disclosed agreements) and further discussions, the team signed 28 major advertisers to the study, with
a combined annual media spending of over $16 billion in the U.S.16
However, participation was not guaranteed.
In fact, only seven advertisers (12 percent of the 58 advertisers who expressed interest) were ultimately able
to overcome the obstacles to access their transaction data and participate fully. The remaining 88 percent could
not (or chose not to) move ahead, and in many cases, did not have the data ownership rights to conduct a financial
analysis of their programmatic investments. For some which dropped out, this is suggestive of an accountability
gap in the contracts and processes between the advertiser and their respective media buying partners.
Importance of Industry Protocols
As our experience confirmed, accessing advertisers’ transaction data was a persistent challenge, even for adver-
tisers that had agency contracts that were broad enough to have granted rights to the data with full disclosure.
While our experience may not translate to all advertisers, we believe many are less than fully prepared to manage
their programmatic investments with the same rigor that they manage investments in other channels.
For decades, advertisers have had access to transactional details in TV, radio, print, and OOH, with clear
protocols around proof of delivery via affidavits and dual invoicing from vendors. However, in programmatic
media, equivalent protocols do not (yet) exist. Without clear protocols, the inability to audit and manage
programmatic buys could prevent advertisers from fully understanding the true effectiveness of this channel.
With the growth of digital, and more specifically programmatic media buying, this leaves advertisers with
the potential for economic risk.
16
Top 200 US Spenders of 2015, Ad Age, June 2016
10. 10
II. What We Learned — From the Data
The study data set is comprised of programmatic display and video impressions purchased between 7/15/15
and 12/31/16 across seven major advertisers representing 30 brands in automotive, beauty, CPG, fashion,
finance, and travel. It includes both real-time bidding (RTB) and private marketplace (PMP) transactions.
The overall data set was comprised of:
• 16.4 billion media impressions purchased across six agencies, one trading desk, and five DSPs
• $67.6 million in working media/inventory spend17
17
Working media/inventory spend, also referred to as demand-side working media, is the aggregation of all winning bid clearing prices paid by all utilized DSPs
to corresponding programmatic exchanges, representing the underlying cost of media inventory purchased.
18
“All-in” spend is representative of the cost an advertiser would incur on an invoice, combining all costs and fees aggregated across the supply chain inclusive
of the cost of media inventory, targeting data, and demand-side transaction costs. Sell-side transaction costs are also included, as they are inherently part of
the inventory cost when purchased at the exchange.
19
Calculations are based on measured spend, which excludes any fees that were unknown at the time of analysis. Unknown may be due to missing (log) data,
incorrect campaign setup/inputs, incorrect invoicing, changes in spend/budget during campaign, incorrect or missing third-party fees, or potential markups.
Across the campaign-level data set, there was a total of $1.46 million in unknown/unclassified spend and $401,000 in overspend (spend that exceeded media
plan or invoices).
A subset of the 16.4 billion impressions — 6.6 billion — was analyzed more closely at the campaign level
(where transaction and data fees were also examined), comprising:
• 445 completed campaigns, with a variety of KPIs, including CPM, CPC, CPA, and awareness-driving goals
• $36.4 million in “all-in” spend (inclusive of inventory, execution, and data fees)18, 19
š $26.0 million in working media/inventory spend
š $10.4 million in execution and data fees
While the number of advertisers and the breadth of campaigns analyzed was fewer than originally envisioned,
the number of impressions (16.4 billion) and campaigns (445) is nonetheless able to paint a realistic picture of
the programmatic market in a disclosed environment. We understand that many will want to assess the data and
charts below by KPI, by audience, by time of day, and other variables, all of which is feasible, and all of which is
envisioned as we continue the journey of anonymized aggregation of cost and fee data to fuel industry
intelligence.
11. 11
1. Programmatic “Tech Tax” and Waterfall — Demand-Side
How did each programmatic dollar ($) move through the demand-side of the supply chain?
Findings: 72 cents of each dollar purchased media inventory from a programmatic exchange, with 28 cents of
programmatic investment consumed by demand-side data and transactional fees, putting the ratio on average at
72/28. Across the 445 campaigns analyzed, we identified select campaigns with ratios as high as 85/15 percent
and as low as 30/70 percent, some with significant unknown spend that would need additional evaluation to be
identified and properly classified.
Explanation: At the aggregate level, 72 percent of campaign spend for disclosed campaigns purchased media
impressions at an exchange, 6 percent went to agency fees, 12 percent went to execution costs (including DSP,
verification, and ad-serving fees), 9 percent was allocated to third-party targeting data, and 1 percent was for
other fees.
Note, this does not mean that 72 percent of spend was received by publishers, as sell-side fees must be added
to estimate that figure. It’s also important to highlight that these figures are calculated before critical adjustments for
fraudulent and non-viewable impressions, which will reduce the percentage of media that is ultimately viewable to
a human customer or prospect.
12. 12
2. Programmatic “Tech Tax” and Waterfall — Full Supply Chain
How did each programmatic dollar ($) move through the full supply chain?
Findings: When fees for supply-side technology and services are also included — estimated at 15 to 25 percent
of demand-side working media20
— a typical $1 of advertiser spend yielded $0.58 to publishers for our sample of
disclosed programmatic transactions, with a range of 54–61 percent.
Explanation: While others such as the WFA estimated that only $0.40 of each $1 investment22
was received by a
publisher, our estimate indicates a figure between 54–61 percent. It’s expected that our figure would yield a higher
percentage of working media and lower transaction costs, given our data set:
• Includes disclosed transactions only. Non-disclosed transactions may incur additional costs.
• Excludes trading desk fees for 95 percent of impressions in the study.
š As a reminder, the WFA estimated agency trading desks at 15 percent of spend in its analysis. If this fee
were included, the resulting calculation would be between 39 and 46 percent, in line with their estimate.
20
Supply-side fee estimates include costs for SSP, exchange, and sell-side ad-tech. Available industry figures for supply side fees vary widely, from 5% to
50%+. For purposes of analysis, we used a range of 15–25 percent. Sources include Labmatik and Study team analysis.
21
Percentages at the top of the supply chain chart represent the amount each component represents of an original $1 investment. Specifically, the sell-side
percentages are based on an estimated range of 15 to 25 percent of demand side working media, which equates to $.11-$.18 of the $.72 that remains of the
original $1 after demand side fees are accounted for. The final calculation of $.54 to $.61 is the amount of each $1 investment remaining after both demand
and supply side fees are accounted for (with the midpoint being $.575, which rounds to $.58).
22
Guide to Programmatic Media, World Federation of Advertisers, 2014. The WFA estimated, “in an Agency Trading Desk model, typically more than half
of the advertiser spend goes to middleman fees…after all the stakeholders present in the programmatic ecosystem have taken their share of advertisers’
budgets, there remains just 40 percent received by the publisher.”
21
13. 13
3. Cost and Breakdown of Programmatic Media — Display
What was the cost of display media purchased by participating advertisers?
Findings: The average cost of programmatic display ads in the study was $4.80 CPM, across all campaign KPIs
and audience targets in the study data.
Explanation: Of the 3.9 billion display ads purchased, the volume-weighted average cost of programmatic display
was $3.30 CPM (working/inventory cost). When demand-side fees are included ($1.49 CPM), the resulting all-in
CPM is $4.80. In effect, demand-side fees added 45 percent to the advertiser’s average cost of display inventory.23
While the cost of programmatically purchased media, as with all media, varies due to numerous variables —
purchase method (open market, direct deal, private exchange), campaign objective(s), KPI(s), day/time, audience
target, geo-target, etc. — these figures (and the expected range of costs discussed below) can provide an initial
means to assess and calibrate campaign costs. More in-depth calculations can be done at the KPI and audience
levels in future iterations of this analysis.
23
This calculation only includes demand-side fees which an advertiser directly incurs, and not sell-side fees which are a cost to the publisher passed along to
the advertiser when they purchase media inventory.
14. 14
4. Cost and Breakdown of Programmatic Media — Video
What was the cost of video media purchased by participating advertisers?
Findings: The average cost of programmatic video ads in the study was $12.64 CPM, across all campaign KPIs
and audience targets in the study data.
Explanation: Of the 859 million video impressions analyzed, the volume-weighted average cost of video was
$9.34 CPM (working/inventory cost). When demand-side fees are added for these impressions ($3.30 CPM),
the resulting all-in cost is $12.64 CPM. In effect, the demand-side fees added 35 percent to the advertiser’s
cost of video inventory.24
While the cost of programmatically purchased media, as with all media, varies due to numerous variables —
purchase method (open market, direct deal, private exchange), campaign objective(s), KPI(s), day/time, audience
target, geo-target, etc. — these figures (and the expected range of costs discussed below) can provide an initial
means to assess and calibrate campaign costs. More in-depth calculations can be done at the KPI and audience
levels in future iterations of this analysis.
24
This calculation only includes demand-side fees which an advertiser directly incurs, and not sell-side fees which are a cost to the publisher passed along to
the advertiser when they purchase media inventory.
15. 15
5. Working/Inventory Costs — By Channel
What was the range of working media/inventory costs for display and video media purchased?
Findings: Given the variety of campaign objectives, timing, and audiences targeted, there was a skewed distribu-
tion around the median, as shown below:
Explanation: The table represents the percent of campaigns that paid the value shown or less. For example,
5 percent of the 445 study campaigns had a working media/inventory cost of $1.83 CPM or less for display
inventory and $6.23 CPM or less for video inventory.
In general, the costs between the 25th and 75th percentiles provide a reasonable range for a campaign’s
working/inventory CPM. More specifically, display has a tight range ($2.77 to $5.86) and video a bit wider
range ($7.48 to $12.66). The 50th percentile (median) represents the mid-point of all campaigns analyzed.
Looking at the 5th and 95th percentiles, we can see that the display campaigns studied saw greater variability
in prices than did the video campaigns.
The average CPMs are also provided as a reference point and connection to the analyses discussed above in
#3 and #4.
25
25
In a box and whisker plot: the ends of the box are the upper and lower quartiles, so the box spans the interquartile range. The median is marked by
a vertical line inside the box. The whiskers are the two lines outside the box that extend to the 95th and 5th percentiles.
Campaign Percentiles Working/Inventory CPM ($)
z Display Video
5th
$1.83 $6.23
25th
$2.77 $7.48
50th
(Median) $3.50 $8.41
75th
$5.86 $12.66
95th
$25.00 $18.13
Average $3.30 $9.34
16. 16
6. Demand-Side Transaction Costs — By Channel
How much did demand-side fees add to the CPM of display and video media?
Findings: On average, demand-side fees to purchase inventory programmatically added 45 percent to the
cost of display inventory and 35 percent to video inventory. The overall variability in the amount added was higher
for display than for video, as shown below.
Explanation: The table represents the percent of analyzed campaigns that incurred a demand-side fee premium
of the value shown or less. For example, 25 percent of the study campaigns incurred demand side fees that
added 28 percent (or less) to the “all-in’ cost of display media and 26 percent (or less) to the “all-in” costs of
video media over the the working media/inventory CPM paid at the exchange.The 25th and 75th percentiles
provide a reasonable range of expectations for the demand-side fee percent. For display, this range is wide:
28 percent to 59 percent. For video, the interquartile range was tighter: 26 percent to 40 percent. The 50th
percentile (median) represents the mid-point of all campaigns analyzed. Looking at the 5th and 95th percentiles,
display campaigns saw much greater variability in fees — with non-outlier campaigns going all the way to
86 percent — than the video campaigns did.
The average demand-side fee premium is also provided as a reference point and connection to the analyses
discussed above in #3 and #4.
Campaign Percentiles Transaction Fees (%)
z Display Video
5th
16% 22%
25th
28% 26%
50th
(Median) 37% 33%
75th
59% 40%
95th
86% 47%
Average 45% 35%
17. 17
7. Additional Data-Driven Insights
7 to 26 Percent of Analyzed Inventory was Identified as Blind or Malformed
All but one participant had a significant percentage of their inventory labeled as ‘Blind’ or ‘Malformed’ in their
transaction logs, ranging from 7 to 26 percent of total impressions purchased.
• Blind inventory may be due to the publisher or SSP purposefully hiding domain details for competitive reasons.
• Malformed inventory may be due to log files that have not followed industry domain specifications, preventing
advertisers from knowing price, geolocation, time of day, size, and position.
• However, having Malformed and/or Blinded inventory may prevent the advertiser from knowing exactly where
the media ran, hindering audits of compliance to the advertiser’s inclusion or exclusion list and potential
optimizations, and potentially creating brand safety issues.
• It is important to monitor and work with agency and trading desk partners to minimize the percentage
of Blind or Malformed inventory.
84 Percent of Analyzed Campaigns Used Third-Party Targeting Data26
Eighty-four percent of campaigns leveraged third-party targeting data to increase audience reach and
performance.
• There was a very wide range in the percentage of each campaign’s budget allocated to third-party
targeting data:
š 16 percent of campaigns used no targeting data (0 percent)
š 29 percent of campaigns spent 1–5 percent
š 31 percent of campaigns spent 5–15 percent
š 23 percent of campaigns spent 20–35 percent
• Additionally, after a 5 percent investment level there was a clear point of diminishing returns on a normalized
KPI.27
This may not be representative of each advertiser’s experience, but it does signal that an optimal level
can be identified based on specific campaign KPIs.
• For many campaigns, the above percentages represent sizable investments that should be monitored
for performance and impact, identifying the optimal mix for each advertiser.
26
Data segments purchased or licensed from third-party data providers to enhance/improve targeting of media purchased programmatically.
27
Given the range of KPIs in play across 445 analyzed campaigns, for purposes of comparison and normalization, CTR (Click-Through Rate) was used
as a proxy KPI, as it was captured and available for all campaigns. Going forward, specific campaign KPIs should be used to gauge optimal investment
levels for any advertiser(s).
18. 18
III. What We Learned — From the Process
There were important learnings which can guide each advertiser’s “programmatic governance” going forward:
• Programmatic media may be complicated, but it can be demystified. Transactional transparency can be
a reality when advertisers take active control of the raw transactional data at the heart of every programmatic
purchase (winning bid log data and metadata). If you choose a disclosed approach, insist on access to, porta-
bility of, and control over your transaction data as one feasible method to verify compliance and accountability.
• Disclosure and transparency should be approached from a legal, process, and technical perspective.
The challenge of programmatic transparency is not just technical — thousands of sites, millions of impressions,
24/7 buying — but also a legal and procedural challenge, where clarity in roles and responsibilities of all
parties at the outset is vital.
• Ensure incentives and objectives are aligned. The growth of programmatic media has paralleled the growth
of the agency trading desk (ATD) and independent trading desk (ITD). Like all parts of the digital supply chain,
ATDs and ITDs can play a valuable role, but it’s important that advertisers clearly understand the relationship
between the agency of record and its affiliates and partners/vendors to determine whether there might be
a conflict of interest, and ensure all incentives and objectives are aligned across all players.
• Use of an agency trading desk almost always led to non-participation and disclosure challenges. There
was a high correlation between advertisers which used an agency trading desk and those which could not
participate in the study due to non-cooperation or non-access to transaction level data. If you choose to utilize
a trading desk, be sure you understand what impact this may or may not have on your ability to assess, audit,
and analyze your transaction data as a means of financial verification and control.
• Fee models varied far and wide and were not always understood. Across study participants (and early
exploration of partial participants), it’s clear there is no “one-size-fits-all” model for programmatic media and
the fees associated with its execution. We saw numerous models in practice deploying all combinations and
permutations of agency, trading desk, DSPs, managed service, self-service, and various ad tech. Variation
extended to payment models, where a range of formulas were deployed. The important point is that you
should explore all options when developing your programmatic approach, craft the model that is best for you,
and ensure there is a verification and audit method in place from the start.
• Advertisers with clear programmatic KPIs are in better control of their programmatic investments. Given
the inherent complexities and costs of the programmatic supply chain, the precise role and KPIs to be achieved
need to be clear to all involved. In a variety of instances, KPIs were hard to identify or prioritize, making proper
assessment difficult. KPIs will always differ based on campaign objective and location in the marketing funnel,
so alignment on this point is crucial. Those advertisers that set and then monitor against appropriately-set KPIs
are in far better position to take advantage of the benefits of programmatic media and to ensure campaigns
leveraging it are appropriate for this form of media buying.
• Disclosure and transparency will put you in greater control, but performance still drives the bottom line.
While proper disclosure puts the advertiser in a superior position with respect to governance and supply chain
management, it does not guarantee that your media partners will deliver adequate results, or better results
than in a non-disclosed arrangement. Therefore, having in place a clear methodology for financial transparency
tied to KPI performance is recommended.
19. 19
IV. Obstacles to Transparency
As discussed, the majority of those interested in the study were unable (or unwilling) to move forward to participate.
Here are some of the issues and roadblocks encountered:
• “Disclosed” vs. “non-disclosed” media buying. This was the fundamental issue that drove (or hindered)
much of the study process. Advertisers which did not explicitly plan for and address programmatic disclosure
issues were much more likely to find themselves faced with a myriad of challenges to transparency. In a few
instances, advertisers participated as an opportunity to re-address this issue.
• Discouragement from agency partners. Several advertisers declined to participate after their agency and/or
trading desk discouraged them from participating. The rationale was often that the study would be a resource
drain and/or that the study would provide no tangible value.
• Unclear escalation path. The request to access and analyze transaction data on behalf of advertisers was
new to many of the parties involved, and the request was often passed around with no concrete response
or with delays.
• Inconsistent, non-standardized practices. Unlike ad server logs, with which the industry has a long history
and greater clarity on access rights and privileges, there are currently few industry standards around owner-
ship, provisioning, and delivery of log-level programmatic bid data to advertisers, which created delays and/or
offered excuses for not proceeding.
• Variability in technical ability across DSPs and trading desks. While many DSPs contacted were highly
cooperative when proper requests were made for data delivery and transfer, in a few cases, DSPs claimed
they did not have the technical ability to generate logs and/or transfer the client’s data in a timely manner.
• Downstream disclosure discrepancies. In a few instances, a properly executed disclosure agreement between
the advertiser and agency was not carried through with one or more DSPs that had been contracted by the
agency or trading desk. As such, the disclosure agreement was not possible to enforce.
• Omission/discrepancies on required campaign details and third-party fees. To analyze each campaign,
parameters were required, including budget, KPIs, flight dates, and invoiced spend. In addition, fees incurred
that were not part of DSP log data were required as well. In multiple instances, the data received was either
incomplete or differed based on who communicated the inputs.
• Complexity mapping DSP data to ad-server data. Notwithstanding the fact that the industry leverages
ad-server logs as the de facto “truth” for campaign activity and spend, there is limited ability or consistent
processes for mapping DSP insertion order to ad-server data. Such a process — which we recommend needs
more attention — would clarify budgets being spent on programmatic media and each DSP, and how those
relate to the budget and actions being communicated by the ad server.
20. 20
V. Advertiser Playbook
For advertisers seeking greater transparency and accountability in programmatic media, we recommend the
following playbook of action steps to set the proper governance foundation within your organization.
1. Clarify the advertiser/agency relationship between the agency and third parties and ensure disclosures
of all conflicts of interest. Given the level of debate in the marketplace around the fiduciary responsibilities
of agency and buying partners, we recommend complete clarity on this topic with respect to programmatic
media, specifically:
• The primacy of relationship should be that of client (advertiser) and supplier/partner (agency).
• The agency should have, at minimum, an express responsibility to act in client’s best interest.
• The agency should have an obligation to disclose all potential conflicts of interest relating to third-party
media and technology providers.
• Advertisers should consider insisting that their agency acts as an “agent of the principal,” with the
advertiser as the principal for media bought and the technologies (ad servers, DSPs, etc.) and data used.
Even if an agency insists on acting as a principal in a transaction, that does not mean the transaction
cannot be entirely transparent. Furthermore, it does not mean that the advertiser cannot own and control
associated data. An advertiser can always demand transparency and data ownership/control when the
agency is acting as a principal by stating so in the contract.
2. Make an informed programmatic disclosure and accountability decision. Whether to engage and purchase
programmatic media on a disclosed or non-disclosed basis is a critical decision for every advertiser. We
recommend careful consideration of this decision. Advertisers which do not explicitly plan for and address
programmatic disclosure will likely find themselves faced with considerable challenges to transparency.
• As previously mentioned, in a disclosed model, you should be able to access your transaction data, fees,
and costs across the supply chain.
• In a non-disclosed model, you likely won’t be allowed access to this information, instead agreeing to
accept an aggregated report for all media and services provided. The benefits of a non-disclosed model
are not discussed here, as they are outside the scope of this study, but for some advertisers, that may
be an appropriate and preferable model based on your goals, budgets, and priorities. Even with a non-
disclosed model, you should expect, at the very least, to receive proof your ad ran in compliance with
the advertiser’s inclusion or exclusion list, be able to ensure viewability, and control for fraudulent traffic.
In addition, advertisers opting for non-disclosed models should put other protections in place to insure
that the agency’s media recommendations are in the advertiser’s best interest and that the advertiser
is purchasing media as a principal.
Eleven-Step Plan to Enhanced Programmatic Accountability
21. 21
3. Clarify what programmatic disclosure and accountability means to your organization. Be explicit about
what disclosure means to you. If we learned nothing else in this process, it is that terms such as “disclosure”
and “transparency” can take on different meanings depending on the exact language used in the controlling
contracts and SOWs.
• Be precise in what it means to your organization and in your expectations of cost, fee, and performance
data that you expect to get from your buying partners.
• Conduct a comprehensive review of all existing agreements with your media vendors, agents, and
service providers. This exercise will identify areas where disclosure restrictions may exist, are silent, or
are not clear.
• In future RFPs, insist on transparency at the outset to head off contractual impasses once a contract
is awarded.
4. Implement the “transparent” programmatic planning and buying model that’s right for your organization.
While each approach has pros and cons, advertisers do have choices on how to engage in programmatic
media buying to get the level of accountability and transparency they need. Advertisers should explore and
determine the most appropriate approach after careful examination with their agency and technology partners.
Three primary options are:
i. In-House Programmatic Buying: While there is a continuum of “in-house” variations28
, in general, the
advertiser sources programmatic personnel and technology inside the organization. This approach will
put you in maximum control, but comes with its own set of challenges and is likely not practical for many.
Pros Cons
• Maximum control over programmatic
planning and execution
• Autonomy over tech stack and ad-tech
partners
• Control over targeting and transaction data;
do not have to share details with other parties
or partners
• Hybrid models do exist to share some of the
burden with an agency partner
• Significant investment building resources and
capabilities that may not be core to the
advertiser’s business
• Need to negotiate and manage ad-tech contracts
and partners
• Potentially less spend leverage for inventory,
data, and technology
28
In-house buying exists along a continuum, with a range of responsibilities divided up between marketer and agency. Via Labmatik, 2017, one way to see
this continuum is as follows: a) full in-house activity; b) programmatic buying unit (PBU) brand-led, where the marketer oversees the bulk of related activity;
c) PBU agency-led, which involves the marketer but is driven by the agency; and d) outsourced, which completely relies on the agency and may involve the
use of principal-based trading units to procure and resell inventory.
22. 22
iii. Disclosed Agreement with Agency; Agency Control of Tech Stack: The foundation of this approach is
also a fully disclosed agreement with the agency, but in this instance the agency also owns the contracts
with service and technology providers. With the agreement enforced and verified via unfettered access
to your log-level transaction data (or another source of verified proof of cost, fees, and delivery), this is a
likely choice for many advertisers. Whether this is implemented with the agency as a dedicated trading
desk/team, a managed service model, or a hybrid, we recommend the Master Service Agreement (MSA)
be clear on all disclosure terms and verification.
Pros Cons
• High degree of control over programmatic
planning and execution
• Autonomy over tech stack and partners;
ability to choose partners based on advertiser
requirements
• No investment in internal capacity-building
outside of tech partner management
• Ability to directly control transaction data
• Reliant on disclosed agreement terms,
enforcement, and verification to ensure
adequate transparency and accountability
• Need to negotiate and manage ad-tech contracts
and partners
• Potentially less leverage for negotiating data
and technology contracts
ii. Disclosed Agreement with Agency; Advertiser Control of Tech Stack: The foundation of this approach
is a fully disclosed agreement with the media agency, with the advertiser taking the lead and ownership
of ad-tech contracts with service and technology providers, specifically the DSPs, but could be extended
to verification services, ad server(s) and third-party data providers, and others.
Pros Cons
• Relatively simple and fast to implement
• Requires little to no internal investment
in specialized programmatic skills
• Allows you to leverage skills, scale, and
experience of agency to select and manage
tech and data partners
• Reliant on disclosed agreement terms,
enforcement, and verification to ensure
adequate transparency and accountability
• Outsourcing programmatic planning and
execution, so need tools and processes
to oversee, audit, and assess buys
• No autonomy over tech stack and partners
• Agency has copy of your data and can leverage
and aggregate to enhance its capabilities
The above are provided as three primary options for consideration. There are of course other options, hybrid
models, and non-disclosed approaches that advertisers may choose to explore and implement based on their
specific needs and expectations.
23. 23
29
The ANA Master Media Planning and Buying Services Template (“ANA Template”) or ACA Marketing Communications Services Agreement provides language
which can be useful in addressing some of these points. Alternatively, proposed language and terms can be obtained by contacting the ANA/ACA for assistance.
30
As stated in the ANA, Ebquity, and FirmDecisions “Media Transparency: Prescriptions, Principles, and Processes for Marketers” report.
5. Enhance your MSA/media buying agreement(s) to meet your accountability needs and expectations.
Desiring a properly disclosed agreement and crafting one are two different things. We recommend you
update and/or renegotiate agreements where disclosure and/or data access is prohibited or limited.29
A few
areas to focus on include:
• Supply Chain Disclosure: Ensure your contract entitles you to full disclosure of all costs and fees incurred
in the process of buying each media impression, and allows for review and approval of contracts with
vendors, suppliers, and ad-tech partners used in the process.
• Disclosure of Third-Party Fees: Ensure your contract addresses whether third-party costs, such
as ad-server fees, data fees, and verification fees, are to be passed through at cost or if there is
an allowable markup.
• Disclosure Requirement for All Partners: Ensure your contract requires that any third-party contracts
(DSP, ad server, etc.) adhere to the same level of disclosure as your master agreement.
• Data Ownership/Control: Contracts should specify that ownership/control of campaign data lies with
the advertiser and should ensure transparency of, control of, access to, and portability of that data. If an
advertiser wants to opt in to a non-disclosed model of media buying where it gives up some control of,
access to, or portability of its data, it should do so only on a case-by-case basis. Any opt-in agreement
should expressly state what rights the advertiser has to the data and what the agency and third parties
may do with the advertiser’s data, if different than what is stated in the MSA. Contracts should be clear
whether the agency and third parties can aggregate the advertiser’s data with other data it owns.
• Audit Rights: The advertiser’s right to audit should extend to all entities covered by the master services
agreement, including the Agency of Record (AOR), its holding company, and any other affiliated and
related companies that are involved in the transactional chain on behalf of the advertiser, including Agency
Trading Desks (ATDs), barter companies, and other trading affiliates. This should extend to third-party
companies where such companies provide services for the advertiser and/or negotiate any deals with
suppliers that include the advertiser’s investment.30
Without this reach, it may be impossible to get full
transparency, and it is certainly impossible to know whether there is full transparency.
• Data Security Requirements: Ensure your contract requires the agency and its suppliers to have adequate
data security protections in place, at minimum, consistent with your other corporate policies.
24. 24
31
Sections 15.1 and 15.2 of the ANA Template are drafted in a manner to allow the advertiser to get more granular with specifics about programmatic buying
and other data.
6. Ensure your MSA/media buying agreement(s) address(es) critical programmatic media specifics. Given
the complex nature of programmatic media buying, advertisers need a practical and scalable way to verify
compliance of contractual terms, and evaluate and optimize media investments. As one viable approach,
we recommend that advertisers demand and secure control of their programmatic transaction-level data —
winning bid log data and metadata — to serve as each advertiser’s record of transaction (e.g., “programmatic
invoices”). To this end, we strongly recommend that the following points be clearly addressed in your MSA or
buying agreements31
:
• Log and Metadata Access: Ensure your contract entitles you to unfettered access to log-level transaction
data (event logs and associated metadata) as a key verification source of fees and costs from all buying/
inventory sources, including each DSP used to execute the advertiser’s media buys.
• Log Data Hygiene: Ensure your contract requires that each source of log-level transaction data and
metadata (e.g., DSPs) attest that the data they are providing is accurate to the best of their knowledge
and has not been manipulated in any manner.
• Log Data Partitioned: Ensure your contract requires your log-level transaction data and metadata to be
properly partitioned and siloed from that of other, potentially competitive advertisers and media buyers.
• Log Data Delivery: Ensure your contract requires each DSP (or buying technology/team/tool) being used
by the agency and/or trading desk on your behalf to make available the requested transaction data on
a timely basis.
• Log Data Retention: Ensure your contract requires each DSP (or buy-side technology/team/tool) used
by the agency and/or trading desk on your behalf to retain this transaction data for a minimum timeframe
(e.g., 12 months).
• Log and Metadata Definition Clarity: Ensure your contract requires all vendors and DSPs to clearly
define all data fields and attributes in their transaction logs and metadata (and any other data provided),
especially any fields related to costs and fees.
7. Put disclosure to work for you — access, monitor, and evaluate all your programmatic buying.
Programmatic media buying can and should have rigorous financial reporting and audit protocols.
Winning bid logs (and associated metadata) are practical and scalable proxies that can serve as your
“programmatic invoices” and financial receipts for media purchased on your behalf. Put disclosure
to work for you, and at a minimum:
• Access and securely store your transaction data (e.g., for rolling 12 months).
• Analyze and review your transaction data (e.g., quarterly).
• Leverage your transaction data for audit purposes (e.g., as necessary).
25. 25
32
Note: this can/should be augmented with ad server data and/or data from attribution services.
33
An inclusion list is a list of all approved websites, pages, and/or apps that an advertiser is allowing their ads to appear on or in.
Once you are in receipt of your transaction data, you can better verify contract compliance and analyze,
track, and optimize your investments across your digital supply chain, knowing much more about:
• Costs and Fees
š Media/inventory — cost of each impression purchased (clearing price)
š Targeting data — cost and vendor of each third-party data segment
š Verification services — cost and vendor for each service deployed
š Other ad tech (implemented via DSP) — cost and vendor for each service deployed
• Ratios and Benchmarks
š Working/non-working spend ratio
š Inventory/execution spend ratio
š Data/inventory spend ratio
š Other custom ratios
• Media Inventory Delivery and CPM details
š Domain/URL
š Geolocation
š Time/date
š Size/position
š DSP/SSP
š Video/mobile details
š Action per impression (view, click, purchase, etc.)32
• Optimization Opportunities (a few examples)
š Identify most efficient paths to purchase inventory (DSPs, SSPs, publishers)
š Identify targeting data performers and investment thresholds
š Identify and minimize blinded and malformed inventory
š Identify optimal budget mix and supply chain
š Other custom analysis
8. Build and manage a site/publisher inclusion list. An inclusion list33
is a powerful way for advertisers
to maintain control of the sites, pages, and apps their ads appear on or in. Whether digital media buying
is done directly or programmatically, your ad still appears on or in an app, page, video, or podcast. Who
that publisher is has a lot to do with how well your ad will perform or what happens if it doesn’t. If you are
a major advertiser, publishers have a big incentive to be on your inclusion list and stay there.
26. 26
9. Assess and audit for compliance and to identify opportunities to improve. There are many types of audits,
and they can be tailored to the advertiser’s specific requirements and objectives. Audits track and measure
performance achievements against agreed-upon KPIs (financial and/or process). Digital media audits differ
from traditional media audits due to the collection methods of advertiser’s data.
• A financial audit requires the technology to process the volume of data of what was purchased, at what
price, and the access to that transaction data.
š The advertiser may believe that the agency’s trading desk stores all the transaction data, while the
agency may believe that the transaction data lies within the billing management system. This can
get even more complex if the agency uses a service provider to buy search or social media.
š The agency may even suggest that the only data to be audited is delivery data from the ad server;
however, this does not contain any financial transaction data, nor does it provide a guarantee that the
media ran on the specific site it was supposed to. It is essential that the advertiser and the agency
agree on what the definition of transaction data is, where it is located, and what access to that data
is available to the advertiser and auditor.
• A process audit checks the planning, buying, trafficking, and reporting processes, and the technology
that underpins them, to ensure the MSA is being implemented.
• Some of the technology used in campaign management may have undergone an audit from the Media
Rating Council. This should not be confused with an agency audit. However, the use of MRC-audited
and MRC-accredited technology could be defined within the MSA.
• Be aware of all potential conflicts of interest while also ensuring that all data and technology can be
validated independent from your media partners.
10. Support the creation and nurturing of cost and fee benchmarks and norms in programmatic media.
For decades, advertisers and agencies have contributed to benchmarking pools on an anonymized basis
to establish norms and comparison points for media costs and performance. This valuable process could
justifiably be expanded to include programmatic media.
• By contributing anonymized data, advertisers will be in a stronger position to understand the true costs
of media as well as the costs and benefits associated with each part of the digital supply chain.
• Access to market benchmarks and norms should lead to the setting of more robust KPIs.
• Members of the ANA and the ACA should take the lead in contributing to pooling and benchmarking.
11. Stay vigilant — “trust but verify.” Given the changing landscape of digital media, and the potential for new
service providers, DSPs, tech providers, data providers, and so on to be added (or dropped) from your media
stack, we recommend a data and disclosure review on a recurring basis.
27. 27
About the Study Partners
About The ANA
The ANA (Association of National Advertisers) makes a difference for individuals, brands, and the industry by
advancing the interests of marketers and promoting and protecting the well-being of the marketing community.
Founded in 1910, the ANA provides leadership that advances marketing excellence and shapes the future of
the industry. The ANA’s membership includes more than 1,000 companies with 15,000 brands that collectively
spend or support more than $250 billion in marketing and advertising annually. The membership is comprised
of more than 700 client-side marketers and nearly 300 associate members, which include leading agencies,
law firms, suppliers, consultants, and vendors. Further enriching the ecosystem is the work of the nonprofit
Advertising Educational Foundation (AEF), an ANA subsidiary, which has the mission of enhancing the
understanding of advertising and marketing within the academic and marketing communities.
About The ACA
The Association of Canadian Advertisers (ACA) is a national, not-for-profit association exclusively dedicated to
representing the interests of client companies that market and advertise their products and services in Canada.
Its members, over 200 companies and divisions, represent a wide range of industry sectors, including manufac-
turing, retailing, packaged goods, financial services, and communications. They are the top marketers in Canada
with collective annual sales of more than $300 billion.
About Ebiquity
Ebiquity (www.ebiquity.com) is a world-leading, technology-enabled, independent consultancy, specializing
in marketing and media analytics. We employ over 900 people across 19 offices in 14 countries worldwide.
Ebiquity partners with 80 of the top 100 advertisers in utilizing data, tools, and insights to optimize their media
and marketing investments. Ebiquity was founded in 1997 and is listed on the AIM Market of the London Stock
Exchange (EBQ).
About AD/FIN
AD/FIN (www.adfin.com) is a media intelligence company for the programmatic era. As digital media continues to
grow exponentially, new approaches are needed to deliver transparency, accountability, and unbiased cost, fee,
and performance insights across the digital supply chain. AD/FIN is the solution. AD/FIN is the only purpose-built
independent intelligence platform capable of processing the scale and complexity of programmatic media. The
result: next-generation insights, recommendations, and decisioning power for digital media buyers and sellers.
Based in NYC, AD/FIN is backed by Cantor Ventures and Julserra Holdings.