Video at Internet Week – GRPs Are What Count

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This is “Internet Week” in New York City as MediaPost hosts a series of conferences on the heels of the the second annual Digital Content Newsfronts. This is the Internet industry’s answer to broadcast and cable television’s “Upfronts” where the major networks hype the new shows and build advertiser and agency interest in committing to making buys. Yesterday’s session focused on Internet video with a full day’s agenda packed with agency, interactive ad network, publisher and brand speakers. The bottom line, online video is a serious business at the national and regional level. For those selling online video to local accounts, the data coming out of yesterday’s session shows extremely strong validation for three things: (1) Online video works…to engage and give brand and sales lift; (2) traditional television is still the benchmark of excellence in video advertising; and (3) online video complements broadcast video to drive even higher lift.

Vinoo Vijay, EVP/CMO for TD Bank kicked off the day by highlighting an innovative online video brand campaign to drive the image of TD as a bank with “human values.” The successful online video campaign owed much to social media. As Vijay said, “If the videos are compelling, they will be shared. We figure people will find good stuff.” TD leverages their online video through Twitter, Facebook and their website. TD’s goal was to drive home their image as a bank that understands and cares about people. TD Bank finds online video to be an excellent investment to drive strong brand values for their “stores” (they prefer calling their bank branch offices “stores”).

comScore’s Josh Chasin, chief research officer, spoke to the issue of how to best measure cross-platform video campaigns. Joined by TVB’s Stacey Lunn Schulmann (chief research officer); Adam Shlachter, SVP Media, Digitas and Tony Jarvis, Olympic Media Consultancy, the answer clearly is some measure of Gross Rating Points (GRPs). That’s the easy part. The hard part is which of several definitions of GRPs to use. Nonetheless, GRPs are and will continue to be the essential metric for buying and selling cross-platform video.

Another panel considered the role of Real Time Bidding and programmatic buying in video, where some see a huge movement especially for pre-roll video. However, the panel including speakers from YuMe, TubeMogul and Lenovo, concluded that “context matters” and will trump RTB platforms. Premium video content establishes a context and value over and above the kind of value targeting by RTB and programmatic buy can offer.

What will online video look like next – is there room for innovation or is the sense that it’s better to standardize on fewer video ad formats? While there is strong support for going with standards, and notes of appreciation went IAB’s way for their leadership here, another panel concluded, “bring on the innovation.”  Speakers from AOL Video, VivaKi, Dynamic Logic, AdoTube, Innovid and Tribal while giving measured praise to the necessity of having some standards in video ad formats, the medium is too exciting to be stifled. Michelle Eule from Dynamic Logic in particular, spoke to the virtues of IAB’s new portrait video ad unit as a type of inventory that offered a lot of creativity and flexibility for agencies and brands.

BIA/Kelsey estimates local online video ad sales will grow at a 35% CAGR through 2017 to about $5 billion. Seeing the energy, commitment and excitement around online video cross-platform from speaker after speaker, we’re confident that the local online video market will benefit from innovations in ad units, measurement, successful case studies and of course, higher spending in online video as local businesses continue to get more experience with this ad format.

    Rick Ducey

    Rick Ducey is the managing director for BIA/Kelsey. He is an expert in digital media innovations, competitive strategies, new product development and new business models, including digital ecosystem collaboration strategies. Ducey oversees the firm's consulting, research and advisory services areas. He is also the program director for BIA/Kelsey's Video Local Media advisory service. This program provides coverage and analysis of how online, mobile and broadcast video technologies, competition, shifting consumer demographics and media usage trends are driving changes in the media ecosystem and SMBs and other advertisers can be successful in the new environment. Ducey assists clients with their business planning and revenue models, strategic research, market assessment, and designing and implementing digital strategies. He is also a cofounder of SpectraRep, one of BIA�s companies, which sells a patent-pending IP-based alerting system that he co-invented. Prior to joining BIA in 2000, Ducey was senior vice president of NAB's Research and Information Group. In this position, he was in charge of the association�s new technology assessment, audience and policy research, strategic planning and information systems, including all Internet operations, and he also developed publications and seminars. Before joining NAB in 1983, Ducey was a faculty member in the Department of Telecommunication at Michigan State University where he taught and did research in the areas of emerging telecommunication technologies and strategic market research. He also served on the graduate management faculties of George Mason University and George Washington University in telecommunications management and the University of Maryland, where he taught strategic market management and research methodologies. Ducey was selected as the Spring 2011 Shapiro Fellow at George Washington University where he teaches entrepreneurship in new media. He has published a number of research articles and papers in these areas and serves on editorial boards of leading scholarly journals in the communications field. He has also worked at radio stations WSOQ-AM/WEZG-FM and Upstate Cablevision in North Syracuse, New York. Ducey received his Ph.D. from Michigan State University, M.S. from Syracuse University and B.A. from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.

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