MediaPost
OnlineVideoInsider
Online Video Advertising: Taking a
Lesson from Sponsored Search
by Michael
Shehan, October 2nd, 2007
Sponsored
search is arguably the most revolutionary and successful ad medium. And it just
might represent how future media budgets are managed across other segments such
as television, radio, and of course, online video advertising. Granted,
sponsored search is mostly about direct response, not branding; however, it is
hard to argue against the merits of real-time optimization methods that
maximize reach and limit waste. So, what practices utilized by successful
search and interactive advertisers can be applied to other forms of
advertising, such as managing online video ad campaigns?
First,
consider the media planning process itself; it differs greatly between online
and traditional buys. Interactive marketers benefit from the rapid
(near-immediate) data feedback of their campaigns. Buy some keyword clicks,
track the results, and optimize. For many interactive marketers, a campaign can
be created, tested, and evaluated in as little as a week or two. As such,
buyers of sponsored search don't think in terms of the upfront buy or quarterly
budgets. Instead, they look at goals like ROAS and net contribution, and then
adjust spending on the fly.
Regrettably
and understandably, traditional agencies have been applying broadcast media buying
practices to their online video ad buys. However, an online video ad buy occurs
one impression at a time, just like with search and not by millions of viewers
at a time. As such, these media buyers should use the same strategy as their
interactive counterparts when planning an online video advertising buy. A media
plan for an online video ad buy actually doesn't need to look much different
than a traditional plan; it should answer some of the following questions:
- What is
the target audience?
- What
traffic sources (ad networks, individual sites, etc.) attract the desired
audience?
- What is
the desired CTR?
- What
minimum average of the commercial needs to be viewed (25 percent, 50
percent, 75 percent)?
- What are
the target geographic region(s)?
- What is
the target CPM?
- Over what
period of time should the goal impressions be achieved?
- If direct
response is important, what kinds of conversion rates are desired?
Once the
model is built, a small campaign can be launched on some or all of the sources.
Many sites will require larger buys. In that case, first test it on the sources
that will allow smaller buys, including video ad networks and exchanges.
Once
interactive agencies have collected sample data (which can take between a day
and a week), they typically analyze and measure it against the campaign goals.
They analyze their targets including keyword spend, conversion rates, etc. Then
they leverage the data to optimize and expand the campaign. Utilizing real-time
performance data and constantly optimizing the campaign is an ongoing process
for interactive marketers, and it should become standard practice for media
buyers at traditional agencies as well.
Surely that
brought a collective groan from media buyers everywhere, as they are already
resource constrained. As the industry and the audience continues to fragment,
it takes significantly more time and resources for traditional agencies to
reach their target audience, as compared to 20 years ago when the audience was
found on only a few networks. Naturally, the last thing needed is extra work.
But
consider: interactive agencies spend about 10% of their time buying media, and
about 90% managing and optimizing campaigns based on real-time performance
data. Conversely, traditional agencies spend about 90% of their time planning
and buying media. Of course, interactive marketers have the tools to manage
campaigns in such a manner, but traditional agencies do not. However, those
types of tools are beginning to emerge for online video advertising, especially
from video ad networks and exchanges. By using them, traditional media buyers
can shift their time from media buying to media optimizing.
Traditional
agencies are re-inventing themselves. That was a common theme at the OMMA and
IAB shows during Ad Week in New York. At a time when traditional agencies want
to "go digital," and when their clients are requiring more
accountability, adopting some of the above suggestions is a great and easy place
to start.
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