Home AdExchanger Talks Measure Me This

Measure Me This

SHARE:

At this rate, streaming apps might be creating more ad formats than they are shows.

NBCUniversal is making select episodes of shows on Peacock shoppable, while Prime Video and Disney are creating new shoppable ad formats in time for upfront negotiations.

Ads that allow viewers to interact, either by clicking via their remote or scanning a QR code, are helping turn streaming into a more measurable performance marketing channel, says Mike Fisher, executive director of investment innovation at GroupM US, on this week’s episode of AdExchanger Talks.

But measurement remains a challenge, he says.

Generally speaking, TV measurement is still an unstandardized mess. And compared to traditional 15- and 30-second spots, newer formats lack the necessary performance benchmarks that come with time – and testing, Fisher says. This leaves buyers caught between what they know and the need to experiment with newer options.

GroupM is trying to encourage more advertisers to give new ad units a try. In January, it launched a working group called the Ad Innovation Accelerator to develop creative and technical standards to boost the adoption of new formats. Members include Disney, Roku, YouTube, BrightLine and Kerv.

The goal is to “get clients to start thinking about these new ad formats as a viable part of their [CTV media] planning,” Fisher says.

But are clients doing more than just thinking about it? We’ll have to wait and see what happens in September when the upfront deals being negotiated will take effect.

Also in this episode: How ad buying works for newer formats, what programmatic means in CTV land and why streaming media will never be 100% biddable.

For more articles featuring Mike Fisher, click here.

Must Read

Comic: Surveillance Advertising

The FTC Orders Companies To Disclose Info On “Surveillance Pricing”

The FTC is ordering data from eight companies, which Commissioner Lina Khan describes as part of a “shadowy ecosystem of pricing middlemen,” in pursuit of visibility into “surveillance pricing.”

Privacy Theater

Alphabet Earnings Earn A Shrug From Investors, But Nobody Else Can Keep Up

Alphabet is so big that, even when it’s growing slowly – YouTube, for example, disappointed with a lower-than-expected growth rate – it’s still outpacing competitors.

Comic: What's your pick?

Google Says It Won't Deprecate Cookies In Chrome After All (?!)

You read that headline right: Google is seriously considering scrapping its plans to deprecate third-party cookies in Chrome. Instead, it’s proposing some kind of TBD opt-out tool for third-party cookies.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters
Comic: An ID Bridge Too Far?

Programmatic Companies Wrestle With ID Bridging And What Counts As Fraud

In January, the Chrome browser removed third-party cookies for 1% of users, to facilitate testing of the Privacy Sandbox –  and a new controversy was born.

It’s Open Season On SaaS As Brands Confront Their Own Subscription Fatigue

For CFOs and CEOs, we’ve entered a kind of open hunting season on martech SaaS.

Brian Lesser Is The New Global CEO Of GroupM

If you were wondering whether Brian Lesser was planning to take some time off after handing the CEO reins of InfoSum to Lauren Wetzel last week – here’s your answer.