Home On TV & Video Local OTT Advertising Is An Untapped $137 Billion Opportunity

Local OTT Advertising Is An Untapped $137 Billion Opportunity

SHARE:
Bret Brase, managing director, Progress Partners

On TV & Video” is a column exploring opportunities and challenges in advanced TV and video. 

Today’s column is by Bret Brase, managing director at Progress Partners.

Over-the-top (OTT) television viewing is overtaking linear TV, and both national and local advertisers are scrambling to follow the eyeballs. And it’s no wonder. 

While 75% of linear TV viewers in the US are age 50 and older, the coveted 18-to-34-year-old demographic has dwindled to just 9.8% of linear viewership. Instead, this cohort now represents 54% of the connected TV (CTV) audience. Moreover, 82% of US households now have at least one CTV.

Although OTT buying solutions exist for national advertisers, local advertisers are stymied. According to some estimates, less than 10% of small-to-midsize local TV and video advertisers have used OTT.

Sure, it’s still in its infancy, but it’s baffling to see ad-supported streaming platforms cuddle up to national advertisers and ignore the multibillion-dollar local market.

What’s the scale of this opportunity? Who’s competing for these local ad dollars? And what will it take for OTT publishers to get in the game?

Local advertisers can do more than the status quo

Local advertising spend on OTT is estimated to reach only $1.2 billion in 2021. Meanwhile, linear TV will account for $15.7 billion, or 11.4% of local advertising spend in the US. This  model is breaking. 

The ABC affiliate in Kansas, KMBC-TV, can offer ABC’s best content, but if no one watches it live, then there’s no value for local advertisers.The $15.7 billion marketing channel for restaurants, personal injury lawyers, auto dealers and other local businesses is close to vanishing – poof! Yet there’s $137 billion in local OTT advertising left on the table. 

The flawed online alternative

With nowhere else to go, local businesses have shifted ads to mobile and online channels, accounting for an estimated $47.7 billion of local ad spend in 2021. Here’s the problem: The kingpins of digital publishing offer highly targeted local advertising next to the internet’s lowest-grade junk.

A local hospital can’t be thrilled to see its Facebook ad alongside Uncle Bob’s rant about how Bill Gates invented COVID-19. Google search doesn’t allow advertisers to use sight, sound and motion as they would on TV. There’s YouTube (technically OTT), but the local Ford dealer doesn’t want to introduce the new Bronco before a video about how to get hair unstuck from a vacuum cleaner.

Local advertisers like the advantages of high-tech targeting but dislike (most) user-generated content (UGC). The holy grail is a spot alongside premium TV.

The untapped opportunity

Programmatic ad buys currently represent only 24% of premium TV ad views, while publishers sell 76% of their inventory directly to advertisers – primarily national advertisers. With this approach, streaming services are losing out locally. If OTT could become more programmatic and place ads next to premium TV content, advertisers would rally to it.

Skeptics may wonder how this miracle in OTT advertising would happen. Don’t ad-free streamers like Netflix and Amazon Prime dominate? Not necessarily. In fact, time spent on ad-supported streaming services grew at a higher rate than time spent on subscription streaming in 2020. Moreover, a 2021 Piplsay survey of 28,000 Americans found that 60% have switched from a subscription service to an ad-supported service in the past year.

Local businesses would gladly move to growing, ad-supported OTT platforms to avoid advertising alongside political outrage, conspiracy theories and how-to humdrum. The problem is existing programmatic and publisher direct systems are only equipped to serve national advertisers. Like in the early internet days, selling platforms and avenues for local advertising aren’t yet developed.

Programmatic is going local – any day now 

Traditional media has long been on the expressway to digital transformation. Think back to Yellow Pages – that giant book with phone numbers and addresses. Local advertising is no different.

Rest assured, if streamers can sell inventory in a scalable, targeted way, local advertising will finally take off. The space is just waiting on ad tech platforms to make local OTT advertising programmatic. When that finally happens, local TV spend will shift inexorably to OTT. And no one will look back.

Follow Progress Partners (@progresspartner) and AdExchanger (@adexchanger) on Twitter.

Must Read

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.

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.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters
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.

How AI Can Enhance Content Without Generating It

As much as consumers complain about AI-generated content, advertising experts say AI still has an important place in video creation and production, including for ads. But using AI in content without turning off consumers is a tricky dance.

How Tovala Banks On Subscriptions And Incrementality – But Not Ads – To Profit From Its Oven

Smart TVs, refrigerators and other home appliances may pester you with marketing, but at least the hardware is cheap. Another startup taking a different approach to the same theory is Tovala, which was founded in 2015 and combines a standalone countertop oven with a weekly meal kit subscription.