Euromedia March | Page 5
flannel_flannel 24/04/2014 12:18 Page 1
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ronically, given that its purpose is to draw
attention, targeted advertising is the dog that
didn’t bark. For as long as most of us can
remember it has been talked of the great untapped
resource, just waiting to be unlocked by convergence;
the ‘Mother Load’ that would justify much investment
in technology and content. The foundation upon which
many a hopelessly optimistic business plan has been
built, and then collapsed.
Convergence has come a long way these last few years and
many of the interactions deemed necessary for targeting to work
have been achieved and exceeded as social media tied into
media content has proliferated. And yet still no big pay-off in
targeted advertising.
Some of that is because while the sexy science of weaving the
web into broadcast was all the rage, the dull stuff – collecting
and managing the vast data dumps this opened up – was
overlooked. It isn’t easy and it isn’t cheap, and that’s another
reason for the slow take-off; if advertisers are going to pay for
the sophisticated data mining required they are going to want to
know if it is working.
Two problems here; while many claim they can measure
convergent targeting advertising accurately, may others doubt
their claims. And certainly there is no standard way of doing it.
Also, the web side of convergence has a reputation for being
somewhat fast and loose with advertising data, something the
broadcasters don’t want anywhere near their pristine numbers.
And then there’s the will to make it happen. As our feature in
this issue reveals, many broadcasters see second screen
advertising as a means of extending and defending their
mainstream ad take on prime screen broadcasts. They don’t
want an alternative second screen ecosystem; who knows where
that might lead? Consequently they don’t cooperate – many
local targeting plans fall at the first hurdle as the original
content broadcaster refuses to mark up the ad slots for the
workflow.
Finally, while talk is cheap, do marketers – or indeed
consumers – value targeting? From the business side, the
answer seems to be no, or at least not highly enough to make it
work. In broadcast, they complain about wasting half their
money but not knowing which half. But on the Internet, if we
say fairly generic content and cookie driven targeting brings that
waste down to 25%, the lower CPMs on the net mean marketers
see that as goo