Home Data-Driven Thinking Taking Issue With Viewable Impressions

Taking Issue With Viewable Impressions

SHARE:

Data-Driven Thinking“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?

This is a good debate to have mind you. Impression data vs. ads seen is important to how we price and especially how we measure performance. Look at server-side data and you see a different, more realistic picture. The data found in our most recent C3 Labs report, indicates that click-through rates on banner ads may be 179% higher than reported for marketers who are not taking viewable impression data into account. C3 Metrics analyzed a subset of data across its client base in Q4 2011 to identify viewable impressions based on new industry standard. This included several billion ad impressions as well as third-party ad server data. Rather than focusing on the nagging notion that more than 30% of ads are never seen [we see that 68% of display ads are not seen, more detail below], this report reinforces the industry need for viewable impression data to deliver new insights, more accurate reporting and less wasted ad impressions.

Historically, all server requests recorded by ad servers have been deemed impressions.  However, the IAB, ANA and 4As have recently called for a “viewable impression” standard, which outlines that ads both fully load and enter into the viewable space on a consumer’s screen for at least one second.

The C3 Metrics Labs report found that 68% of all display ads served are never ultimately seen by consumers according to the viewable impression standard.  Of the ads that are not seen, 12% never fully load.  Because click-through rates are calculated based on ads that are actually seen, CTRs that do not take viewable impression data into account may be off by as much as 179%.

These numbers from C3 Metrics align with RealVu, the only ad server accredited by the Media Rating Council for a “viewable impression,” which has found that “up to 90% of ads on major networks never appear …. the best sites in the world only show a view rates of 75%.” [from Troy Tribe, President & COO, RealVu] Bottom line:  comScore’s 30% number is a continent away from RealVu and C3 Metrics.

I would like to see two actions result from this divergent discrepancy.  First, click-through rates must be calculated on impressions viewed, not server requests. Second, attribution modeling, which is critical to display success, must also incorporate the viewable impression standard, because view-through credit is entirely based on an actual view. As a result, CPMs for viewable impressions will justifiably rise, and unviewed impressions will no longer count in display ad performance reporting.

The viewable impression standards have arrived. There’s good news and bad news whenever a new standard is adopted, but the IAB, ANA, and 4As have pushed this standard, and ultimately more dollars will pour into digital advertising with new accountability that CMOs and CFOs are looking for.  Any agency failing to adopt the new standard might be optimizing with click-through rates off by 179%, and from attribution modeling standpoint, will have results off by 68%.

Follow C3 Metrics (@C3metrics) and AdExchanger.com (@adexchanger) on Twitter.

Must Read

The Programmatic Auction Is Changing In Real Time – Here’s How

The programmatic auction has changed drastically since its first iteration. The addition of intermediaries and complex auctions across multiple verticals has created fragmentation for publishers and marketers. And AI is adding further complexity.

Publicis Acquires LiveRamp In A Major Shakeup For Indie Data Collaboration

Hundreds of exasperated and unexpected ad industry phone calls were made on Sunday, as agencies and ad tech vendors discussed the fallout of Publicis Groupe’s $2.2 billion acquisition of LiveRamp over the weekend.

Finger connecting dots on a cork board network concept

These AI Agents Want To Handle All The Annoying Parts Of Media Buying

Meet Kovva, a new AI ad tech startup tackling the unglamorous gruntwork that programmatic has never fully automated.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters
Felipe Cuevas for TelevisaUnivision

We Went To Eight Upfronts This Week. Here's What We Learned

Upfront week is officially over. In case you missed any of the dog-and-pony shows — including Chappell Roan belting out “Pink Pony Club” during YouTube’s Broadcast — don’t worry; we’ve got you covered.

Let’s Be Upfront About Performance

During upfronts, publishers flexed their ad performance muscles at media buyers all week long in an effort to appeal to the biggest demands media buyers have during their upfront negotiations: flexibility and results.

Upfronts Day Two: Dancing And Data

TelevisaUnivision and Disney took over Day Two of upfronts week in New York City on Tuesday, and the throughline was data quality.