Home On TV & Video With Digital And Linear Convergence, Advanced TV Will Soar In 2023

With Digital And Linear Convergence, Advanced TV Will Soar In 2023

SHARE:

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

Today’s column is by Elizabeth Herbst-Brady, chief revenue officer at Yahoo

The explosive growth of CTV and other digital video channels is changing the way buyers are thinking about advanced TV (ATV).

ATV presents a robust set of opportunities for data-driven advertising and measurement. As such, the roles of linear and ATV are changing in the buyer’s media mix. And the efficiencies and targeting capabilities are pushing ATV front and center.

Does that mean ATV is going to supplant linear in buyers’ marketing strategies? Well, it’s more complicated than that – and buyers need to understand how to successfully manage and optimize across both linear and streaming.

As 2022 comes to an end, it’s important to assess the trends that have brought us toward this inflection point and consider where ATV is heading in 2023. Here’s what we’ve learned so far:

Various forms of addressable TV buying are converging 

Addressable TV is legacy to linear buying teams. Meanwhile, many digital-first buyers today haven’t been dedicated to it. But brands and agencies are realizing that CTV, digital and addressable linear TV are more effective when silos are eliminated. 

TV buyers plan campaigns alongside their digital buying peers. We’re now seeing some agencies, such as Horizon and OMG, doing just that. We’re also starting to see more addressable TV buys at the upfronts, which demonstrates that convergence is picking up steam.

CTV viewership is on track to surpass linear 

Time spent viewing linear has been dropping steadily in recent years. In 2023, it’s projected to be neck and neck with time spent viewing digital. Ad spend is even farther along in a parallel trend, with digital’s share projected to top linear’s as soon as next year. 

But remember: Viewership of, and time spent with, CTV doesn’t necessarily equate to more ad opportunities. All of this time spent includes streaming via ad-free subscription services. While there are 16 minutes of ads per hour in linear, viewers may be exposed to as few as four minutes of ads per hour in streaming. 

There’s an optimal mix of linear and streaming ad spend. Buyers will need to find theirs, per their specific brand and campaign goals.

Buyers will need to reconsider live sports spending

The largest number of premium-level games have typically been reserved for linear, where they’re very highly sought after. But more and more games are making their way to streaming services.

The problem is they’re generally not optimally monetized, considering their potential value.  

Meanwhile, the fragmentation of CTV is now increasingly present in the ownership rights of live sporting events, too. To optimize spend, an omnichannel DSP is a critical tool.

Growth of interoperability in linear and streaming measurement and frequency 

Buyers need to be able to measure the impact of linear TV on business outcomes. Having automatic content recognition (ACR) and set-top box data (that is, viewership data) is essential to that. 

Buyers also need interoperable measurement to enable them to determine optimal frequencies across linear and digital. It’s crucial to see where increasing frequency leads to diminishing KPIs and to manage cross-channel frequency. Fortunately, programmatic platforms offer this ability.  

As buyers navigate these shifts throughout 2023, we’ll see a natural progression from where we are now. In 2022, the industry began to fuel the advanced TV rocket ship. In 2023, we’ll really start to see it soar.

Follow Yahoo (@yahoobusiness) and AdExchanger (@adexchanger) on Twitter.

For more articles featuring Elizabeth Herbst-Brady, click here.

Must Read

Don’t Worry About Netflix – It’s Doing Fine Without Warner Bros. Discovery

Paramount might have outlasted and outbid Netflix in the competition to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery, but Netflix is not overly fussed about the loss.

Paramount’s Upfront Pitch Is About Three Things

Paramount is merging the ad tech stacks behind Paramount+ and Pluto TV, releasing a new performance product, offering more control over ad placements and introducing dynamic ad insertion in live sports.

Hard Truths For Retail Media At The IAB Connected Commerce Summit

The IAB’s Connected Commerce event in New York City this week felt to me like the retail media industry’s first sit-down explanation to a child who is now a “big kid” and must act accordingly.

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

Meta Is Launching An Easy Button For CAPI

Meta is simplifying its CAPI setup and teaching its pixel new tricks, including adding an AI-powered feature that automatically pulls in data from an advertiser’s website.

TelevisaUnivision Joins The Streaming Self-Service Bandwagon

TelevisaUnivision is the latest TV publisher to join the self-serve trend that’s rising in popularity across connected TV advertising. Its streaming inventory is now available to buy through fullthrottle.ai’s self-serve platform. The collaboration includes an ad bidder designed to improve both targeting and measurement.

Comic: Gamechanger (Google lost the DOJ's search antitrust case)

For Google Advertisers Who Overpaid The Monopoly – Don’t Hate, Arbitrate

Law firm Keller Postman is leading mass arbitration suits against Google, seeking advertiser damages for alleged monopoly overpricing. The total available pot is a quarter-trillion dollars.