Taking Issue With Viewable Impressions
January 27, 2012 – 12:55 am
"Data-Driven Thinking" is a column written by members of the media community and containing fresh ideas on the digital revolution in media.
Today's column is written by Mark Hughes, CEO of C3 Metrics.
At the worst possible time, the digital marketing measurement business is again showing inconsistencies. The issue this time is the matter of "viewable impressions," and I'm taking issue with the information released last week by comScore. Whether we like it or not, Internet users are not seeing all served ads, and we need to find the most accurate way of painting this picture, which admittedly is not pretty.
Here's the quick background. One of the key findings delivered last week by a comScore study of 12 big brands is that 31% of the 1.7 billion ad impressions sampled recently in its study were never in view. The issue is that comScore is taking 12 big brands with huge budgets, and then sampling them on premium sites only. It would be nice if real companies could buy, plan and measure media that way. But it's not reality. It's like calling Palo Alto, CA and Greenwich, CT a true representation of America. Not accurate, and not projectable for the large majority of advertisers.
And Nielsen? Nielsen just told Adexchanger in response to comScore’s data that visibility of ads only makes up 10-15% of the importance in digital advertising. Come again? If ads didn’t show on TV, but advertisers were charged for those ads--don’t you think there would be some immediate fire and brimstone meetings?
Email This Post












