Publishers and ad networks ‘devaluing’ online industry
Publishers and advertising networks have been accused of slowing the growth of online ad revenue through heavy discounting and the move towards cost-per-click ad sales.
Stuart Pike, Nielsen’s online division Asia Pacific research director, said the fact that online revenues are down despite increases in banners and advertisers “suggests an increase in discounted online advertising rates”.
The recent Interactive Advertising Bureau/PriceWaterhouseCoopers quarterly Online Advertising Expenditure Report, showed that online display advertising revenues fell by 3.8 per cent in the three months to the end of September this year.
Despite this, Nielsen AdRelevance figures show that the number of advertisers online rose 41 per cent in the September quarter compared to same period last year. Meanwhile, the number of banners ads in the September quarter increased by 19 per cent compared to a year earlier.
Pike added that over the past five years there has been huge growth in online inventory in Australia. “This inventory growth, along with an increasing number of publishers and ad networks competing for online display advertising dollars, seems to be driving discounting.”
He said that as an industry “we are failing to communicate” the value of the online medium as effectively “as our counterparts in television”.
“It is time to change the way we evaluate the success of online advertising campaigns and focus more intently on the metrics that advertisers themselves care about, and less on outdated metrics that are more closely aligned to daily management of inventory,” he said.
Pippa Leary, MD of Fairfax Digital’s media division, said the problem lies in a combination factors which consists of an over supply of low-quality inventory and publishers historically focusing on “the ‘click’ as the only metric of success”.
“Once you start to put the focus on brand effectiveness studies as TV and magazines already do, then the focus suddenly becomes about engagement and online hasn’t done a good job of doing that, which we’ve all woken up to this year,” she said.
Ed Smith, News Digital Media chief commercial officer, added: “Quality content created by professional journalists is expensive to publish. Cost per click advertising yields a small fraction of this cost and gives no reward to the publisher for all the other value delivered to the advertiser apart from the click, such as increases in awareness, purchase intent etc.
“Cost per click isn’t a sustainable charging model for local publishers at any great scale as its yields are simply too low.”
Be careful how seriously you take Adrelevance data … it’s not exactly the most credible of tools out there.
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Whilst there is a place for Ad networks, do the vendors actually know where their ads end up when buying an ad network buy?
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In New Zealand we haven’t seen this impact to the same extent, but Stuart’s point is a good one. Online can definitely do more to demonstrate the value of the medium and also its role in an integrated campaign. The danger in using AdRel data to independently measure could be considered – multiple creatives or placement types, change in pricing models, etc all skew the result, but the growth in advertisers makes this all hard to hide behind. It’s very easy for publishers to track their own efficacy and this call to action is overdue.
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Very interesting article in the broader context of the post by Stilgherrian on Crikey last week – specifically the follow up comments on the ‘real’ trends rather than the google Labs stuff used to assit creating the original article. I had an opinion that perhaps trad media was overvalued; now this seems to see a reinforcement of that. You would’ve thought the results from online campaigns should be be more measurable than the overloved TV ads, or maybe it is just bad targetting as well as positioning online? Have a look at this article, for instance http://bit.ly/8OQbgE Perhaps the only way to prove the value of Online campaigns is to stop advertising in all other media for a period of time and see what impact that has on your brand… 😉
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Two minds on this.
I agree on this point: “He said that as an industry “we are failing to communicate” the value of the online medium as effectively “as our counterparts in television”.
and yet I’m not sure that the result of declining ad spend vs number of ads is necessarily a reflection of discounting vs primarily more inventory (which Pike does note as well.)
The problem on basic supply side economics is that the more inventory there is vs available ads, the more likely the price will go down. I’d love to see Pike add figures on available inventory to get a decent comparison on the point.
Also not mentioned is the GFC in general: discounting is a reflection on overall decreased ad spend across all types of media, perhaps seen more in the US than Australia, but none the less an equation that still should be considered here. Discounting reflects getting any ads through the door vs none at all.
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The argument seems weird. Especially coming from Nielsen as the main provider of measurement for an industry that is really struggling to measure what matters.
If there were better tools to measure the effectiveness (esp. the incremental effectivness) of online campaigns maybe we wouldn’t be in this race to the bottom.
Problem is, there isn’t.
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“He said that as an industry “we are failing to communicate” the value of the online medium as effectively “as our counterparts in television”.”
Is it just me can you rephrase this as “we need to sell it better rather than actually make it better”
Glass half empty maybe…
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Also consider that for some websites up to 50% of page/ad impressions are auto-refreshed to phantom visitors – this would obviously undermine the performance of campaigns, driving advertisers to demand discounted rates or performance deals.
Don’t be surprised if media-buyers start asking publishers to verify how many ad impressions are reaching real people and not just wasting dollars churning away in a hidden browser tab. This issue is definitely on the MFA’s radar …
On the supply/demand point: A quick look at inventory growth, News & Weather Category page impressions (source: Nielsen Market Intelligence – which is cut up into AdR ad impressions).
Oct 2006: 332,125,634
Oct 2007: 584,097,184 (+75%)
Oct 2008: 809,492,389 (+38.5%)
Oct 2009: 1,004,385,039 (+24%)
I wonder how much of this growth is natural OR due to the introduction of tabbed browsers, always-on homepages and the page impression inflation arms race where anything and everything gets counted?
@Larry, Nielsen has an online ad effectiveness service with brand-shift metrics so the call for these metrics isn’t that weird.
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@digital watchdog
i know they have a product, from experience i am not sure it really measures what matters.
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The other problem with online is that marketers are not able (or not bothered) to track their campaigns in many cases.
The advertisers that have tracked their campaigns with us are generally committed repeat advertisers. But not many actually track at all.
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Re online being undervalued:
I am surprised that there has not been more debate around the business model of agencies?
Some clients might be better off with a sophisticated online presence, however their agency merely throws out a few display ad’s online via a third party ad network. They then concentrate their efforts on a large and very expensive offline campaign, because it makes far more money for them than an online campaign would – re the charges associated with offline production costs.
So many brands, big and small, are nowehere to be seen online, yet are still appearing enormously offline.
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I think this comment just shows complete ignorance of how performance metrics work in the context of a broader online media buy.
Yields were always going to come down, and some major publishers got away with a big margin for many years, and are now heavily reliant on performance deals for their underlying revenue, which has inevitably hit margin and yield.
Rather than blame the networks (and I run one of them, so am happy to declare my hand as a not completely neutral observer), I think that one of the key questions has to be what are the major publishers and portals offering to offer fantastic opportunities to advertisers? I think the big newspaper groups are doing a reasonable job, but are the big portals developing amazing new products to make their sites compelling for consumers?
I also agree with the comment above about agencies – are they doing enough to justify online? I would argue not enough
btw, good comment re glass half full scott.
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@ adam … i’d say agencies are doing a lot to ‘evangalise’ (I think that’s the wank term) digital … almost to the point of overkill.
it’s just, generally, clients decide where their budgets go and many still believe that digital isn’t the silver bullet marketing gift from the gods and continue to use channels that have performed well for decades.
blaming agencies is such a tired cliche. agencies are amongst the most committed of digital zealots.
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I agree with Stuart’s position, and would like to add a few comments re the various threads.
The issue of the lackof reliability of AdRelevance spend estimates reflects the difficulty of an online ‘ratecard’. With Nielsen AdEx they use a fomula that attempts to replicate the various ratecards. For example, for print/press they use published rates and discount according to market conditions, agency buying power and client discounts. For television they try to replicate the half-hour TV grid (which is unpublished) and again apply market conditions, agency and client dicsount estimates. For online, we have moved from an extremely naive model based around average cost-per-thousand to a slightly less naive model that takes into account the CPM varies by category. The problem with this model is that the CPMs vary wildly from month to month online as deals are done – something that the other media have managed much better.
Also, if you look at the economic theory of Adam Smith (I’m pretty sure it was him – feel free to correct me) media like TV have finite government controlled “supply” of ad inventory – 13 minutes per hour. Radio too is finite (there are only 60 minutes in any hour). Print/press are constrained by maximum book size. Out-of-home is restricted to the sites they have built or have permission to use – again a finite supply. In the online world the growth in supply seems to show no signs in slowing. In fact, supply appears to be ‘virtually infinite’. When you couple that with the the reduction in demand because of the GFC, this only spells trouble and bargain basement prices – some would even say a race to the bottom in term of advertising rates. I can’t see supply reducing – I suspect rates will not be able to buck this trend.
Regarding the ‘engagement’ metrics, when someone is able to define what ‘engagement’ is in a humanistic form that is advertising medium agnostic, then we may have a chance of developing some. This is something I have wrestled with for some years and still can not see a solution that covers all of commincations planning. While myself and everyone else believes in engagement we simply do not know how to measure it yet. However, I’m sure that the way NOT to test online’s engagement is to stop advertising on all other media – that funnel will empty pretty darned quickly. Multivariate brand-specfic econometric modelling seems to hold the best hope at the moment.
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John, I was tongue in cheek of course with my suggestion of abandoning all other media. Note with interest your points on the quantity of space available online. Also judging by some of the previous comments there seems to be a perfect storm of Brand Owner Awareness, Agency (Creative & Media?) decisions on where to place campaigns. I’m really enjoying this thread.
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Great comments from Larry and John Grono, I was pushing a side of the story and you have raised some very noteworthy points as a result.
Online is not the silver bullet and yes TV, Radio, Print etc have been around for years for a reason; the audience is there and proven to be too(.)
Some mediums are beginning to be scrutised (Yellow Pages Print) – but I wont go there because last time War and Peace was written in 22 mins after the Mumbrella email was sent out…
Sites catering for the user is mega important. Sometimes publishers can be arrogant and ignorant, assuming that they have got it right and that they know their audience. Websites need to be tested and audiences need to be consulted regularly. What would you like from my website? How can I improve the site for you? Give the audience what they want and they will come back in droves, which creates a good platform for advertisers. It is always going to be a balance though between user and advertiser – it is a fun challenge.
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Hey Gavin, I realised your comments were tongue-in-cheek, but some people read things and go … wow … I just read this GREAT idea that we should only advertise on-line. I just thought I would point out the bloody obvious!
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There is no doubt that ad networks and large publishers are pushing down the price of online inventory. Whether it’s being devalued depends on the inventory and the site.
Media agencies need to look beyond reach and recognize that each and every site and their audience when on a particular site is different and acts differently. And therefore deserves to be priced differently.
There are huge differences between a user that falls on a Fairfax or news article via a search query or a google ad, compared to a user that intentionally seeks out a quality niche site and consumes their content with great interest (yes my company is a niche publisher). The differences are evident in CTR and engagement time and I doubt anyone can argue that. So to evaluate the true value of an impression the metrics need to go beyond engagement , far beyond CTR and look pre and post impression activity.
Media agents at the end of the day need to be demanding these extra metric’s to ensure they are buying the best quality inventory and the large ad networks and top 5 need to play fair and work with the local publishers on these metrics. Let’s face it, some of the big ad networks have it very bloody easy…they sign up a few large US or UK sites, geo target their AU ads and flog impressions at the lowest possible rate as any revenue from down under is a bonus to the US head office who have already been down this path and think $15CPM is absolute gold. These networks have no need to create a brand or any technology and only some create a little local content using the US HQ’s content systems.
So perhaps the media agents and advertisers need to think Australian Made as well and stop working with the networks who are shipping 60-75% of these ad dollars overseas.
Some other good reading here: http://www.techcrunch.com/2009.....l-the-cpm/
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another key thing to note is AU publishers and networks yield expectations – ie CPM – are generally a lot higher than their overseas counterparts.
with ad networks, I’d love to know how much scrutiny agencies take in evaluating their ‘technology’ … ie their claims they can reach the right person at the right time etc. The world of behavioural targeting/retargeting/remessaging seems like a bit of a black art at times … maybe it’s basic blind buy networks polishing up the turd they sell with a bit of technbable?
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Based on the very basics of the supply/demand relationship, surely it’s possible to build quality content (attracting visitation), restrict ad impressions by limiting the number of ads per page (nice flow on is that audience experience is better), and maintaining premium rates (assuming the audience argument stacks up). This would also require clients and agencies to understand that premium opportunities with limited supply require a premium rate.
I suspect that downward pressure on agency’s costs and margins have led buyers to demand lower rates and only pay for what they get through performance based media buys.
Of course there will be those out there who push the “buy a truckload of impressions on high volume sites” barrow, taking this back to traditional media (and I’ve worked across both traditional and digital media over the last 10 years) this can be equated to midnight to dawn TV or run of book press buys. Traditional media combat this theory by restricting low rates to their less attractive inventory. When you can buy media at $1 per click that is effectively the same (or similar in most ways) to so-called “premium” inventory (sold at $25cpm) why the hell would anyone in their right mind pay $25cpm??
Publishers are shooting themselves in the foot by offering their audience up at these CPC/CPA rates. If the audience is valuable enough to an advertiser they will pay what they have to pay in order to reach them (within reason) in quality, targeted environments.
If publishers want to play in the CPC/CPA space and advertisers utilise this to their benefit, great, but as an industry, digital media (publishers and agencies) needs to do more to convince advertisers of the inherent branding value of digital media… or demand that advertisers take all the branding off their performance ads… and there’s an argument which has gone on since OzEmail were selling banner ads!
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In light of a number of comments above, interesting to read Jason Byrne’s comments on the subject as he leaves Business Week to start his own thing http://bit.ly/4nNf8G
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