Home On TV & Video Digital Video Can’t Thrive Until We Resolve Its Data Challenges

Digital Video Can’t Thrive Until We Resolve Its Data Challenges

SHARE:

benreidOn TV And Video” is a column exploring opportunities and challenges in programmatic TV and video.

Today’s column is written by Ben Reid, founder and CEO at elasticiti.

Nothing captures the imagination of the consumer – or aids in brand recall – better than that magic combination of sight, sound and motion.

While video is clearly a boon for the digital advertising industry as a whole, we urgently need to get serious about its glaring data challenges before it hobbles the channel.

The first challenge is the lack of a common language or vocabulary within the media industry for digital video data. That, in turn, leads to a lot of painful data munging to clean up or standardize data so that it’s useful. With every data project, the rule of thumb is that 80% of the effort is spent reconciling disparate data sets. But when you enter the video realm and work with data sets from multiple partners, this challenge becomes magnified. A lot.

Our appetite for data has driven us to collect vast amounts of data on each customer interaction with a video ad, delivering a rich data set. But without a standard nomenclature, it’s difficult to assess what really happened. As a result, understandings between parties are hampered.

For example, how should we refer to content that’s only accessible to consumers with the proper credentials? Is it “restricted” vs. “unrestricted”? “Free” vs. “paid”? “Subscriber” vs. “nonsubscriber”? It gets even more confusing when referring to content by service type, such as free content vs. authenticated consumer state. And how do we refer to content that’s distinguished by length, such as short form and long form or clip vs. full episode? What’s the threshold?

Beyond length, can we distinguish between video starts initiated by consumers rather than a video player? Pre-rolls are often included in the former, since they’re shown prior to content a consumer has opted to see. That’s very different from video that plays automatically the moment a consumer lands on a page. Clearly, advertisers will want to distinguish between the two, but to do that we need a standard nomenclature.

Lastly, how should the industry address the many forms of digital TV, such as digital simulcast of a TV feed linear start, digital simulcast of live events or a live stream start? These are often bundled together, but they’re not always the same thing.

End Apples And Oranges Comparisons

Challenge No. 2: Digital data vendors don’t always collect the dimensions and metrics of interest to clients, which means they’ll render data with fields that aren’t easy to interpret.

For instance, different vendors bucket content type differently. And many digital data vendors don’t record program starts with live or linear streams. Instead, the time recorded for a stream is often attributed to the program during which the stream started, even though several other programs might have subsequently been viewed on the stream.

When clients finally obtain the data from all of their partners, they often find they can’t process the dimensions or metrics in the same way because their definitions aren’t standardized. To be sure, this is partly due to the fact that Hulu, AppleTV, Verizon FiOS and other platforms operate differently, but platform differences don’t explain away all of the problems.

Reconciling all of these issues comes at a cost: the loss of valuable time that could be spent doing deeper analysis. For example, instead of writing filtering and aggregation rules multiple times for each data set, what if we could reduce it to one master rule set?

Time To Follow The IAB’s Lead

The IAB has started a data nomenclature project, spearheaded by David Smith at MediaSmith, aimed at solving some of these issues. It’s early innings so the scope isn’t defined. This strategy is the right way to do this since hoping for vendors to work it out among themselves is wishful thinking.

As I said earlier, video is a big deal. It’s really the one area where demand continues to outstrip supply and the performance justifies the demand. But friction anywhere in the value chain is bad for individual parties and the market itself.

With momentum growing around programmatic video, and the blurring of the lines between traditional broadcast approaches and digital paradigms, ironing this out can make the difference between lots of hype but minimal adoption and the hockey stick everyone hopes for.

Follow elasticiti (@elasticiti) and AdExchanger (@adexchanger) on Twitter.

Tagged in:

Must Read

CTV Buyers Are Getting The Show-Level Performance Optimization They’ve Always Wanted

A collaboration between InterMedia Advertising, Peer39 and Pontiac Intelligence provided show-level cost-per-acquisition data for 94% of CTV ad impressions.

Advertisers Await Programmatic Pause Ads

The IAB Tech Lab is working on standardizing programmatic signals for new streaming TV ad formats, including pause ads. Meanwhile, many brands are eager to add pause ads to their repertoire.

Why Media Mergers And Spin-Offs Don’t Always Keep Their Promises

With media megamergers, acquisitions and spin-offs left and right, the media landscape is changing at a pace that is difficult to keep up with.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters
TransUnion is partnering with Blockgraph so that advertisers can use its identity data to target, reach and measure TV households across channels.

How This Disaster Relief Nonprofit Tapped First-Party Data To Reach Donors Year-Round

Staying top of mind for potential donors is an ongoing challenge for Direct Relief. Nexxen’s audience curation helped it spread and sustain awareness.

Why Major UK Publishers Are Finally Joining Forces To Curate Ad Inventory

Atria’s collective approach is a response to growing monetization challenges and the need to protect the value of human journalism in the AI era.

Toronto Canada pride parade includes a crowd waving pride flags

Ad Performance And Politics Steered Brand Dollars Away From LGBTQ+ Communities – But The Pendulum Will Swing Back

The current administration has discouraged many marketers and organizations from showing support for the LGBTQ+ community, including during Pride month.