Why This TV Network Still Prefers Linear
INSP is an example of a TV network that’s more comfortable with linear because it has an older audience. But that doesn’t mean streaming is off the table.
INSP is an example of a TV network that’s more comfortable with linear because it has an older audience. But that doesn’t mean streaming is off the table.
Programmers like free ad-supported TV channels because they’re an onramp to bring more viewers into ad-supported video-on-demand environments.
TV publishers and brands are paying extra careful attention to what their adversaries are up to. And one opportunity to get data about competitors comes with programmatic integrations.
Clean rooms are dominating ad tech conversations, and the rise of connected TV has spurred clean room adoption to new levels because of inventory fragmentation.
Hyundai considers itself to be a challenger brand, so the need to keep raising brand awareness means it can’t afford to completely scrap broad, demo-based linear buys – but it has to strike a balance.
Here’s why YouTube has legal protection from copyright infringement, and what content owners do when they detect reposted content on YouTube using the platform’s recognition tools.
Disney has its hands full bringing Hulu’s ad targeting products onto Disney+. It takes time to migrate less conventional ad formats onto both on-demand and live inventory while keeping the ad load under control.
Connected TV measurement is so messy that I was invited to perform a stand-up comedy set about it at the Cynopsis Measurement and Data conference in New York City.
Netflix is serious about getting rid of account sharing. But the backlash from subscribers might be more than Netflix bargained for.
In honor of National Streaming Day – an informal holiday cooked up by Roku in 2014 that takes place every May 20 – several streaming services celebrated by slashing the price of their subscriptions.