Home On TV & Video Streaming Sports Is In Desperate Need Of Standardized Measurement

Streaming Sports Is In Desperate Need Of Standardized Measurement

SHARE:

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

Today’s column is by Steve Sottile, chief revenue officer at Unruly

It’s long been accepted in our industry that as long as major live sports airs on broadcast and cable, linear will stay relevant to consumers and thus to advertisers. 

But the sports industry is now also looking to participate in high-growth areas, including streaming video and connected TV.

In general, broadcast and cable apps already stream sports on their own apps or vMVPDs (virtual multichannel video programming distributors, or services that provide access to television channels via the internet). 

However, as major streaming-first platforms (read: Apple and Amazon) get serious about trying to get a piece of the pie, they’re giving broadcast a run for its money.  

Now, this fragmentation of linear and CTV is creating issues both for consumers and advertisers, particularly in terms of cross-platform measurement and audience deduplication.

The chaos behind kickoff

With so many OEMs, operating systems, content providers and streaming devices collecting their own viewership data (and keeping it within the confines of their own walls), brands cannot holistically analyze the data in a way that paints a clear picture of who they are reaching.

And among these companies, even the definition of currency within their measurement reporting creates disjointed definitions of “success.”

Let’s break down an example:

Amazon has acquired the exclusive rights to Thursday Night Football through 2033. It is live-broadcasting 15 NFL games total this season, with all of the Thursday night games available to stream on Amazon Prime. (For the last three years, Fox owned the broadcast rights to these games, while Amazon owned the streaming rights – now Amazon owns it all.) 

In the local markets of the teams playing on any given Thursday, the games are televised for free on the Prime Video app, but out-of-market fans need an Amazon Prime subscription. Amazon is producing its own broadcast rather than using Fox’s, as it did previously.

Further, Amazon entered into an agreement with DirecTV to air the games in “more than 300,000 sports bars, restaurants, hotel lounges, retail shops and services, and many other venues nationwide.”

On Sundays, NFL games are available through NBC and their Peacock streaming platform, as well as on FOX, CBS and Paramount+. And on Monday nights, the games can be watched through Disney-owned ESPN (with a handful of games also airing on ABC).

While the Prime Video app is available on almost all smart TVs, if you’re a football fan without an Amazon Prime account, this could be aggravating. Traditionally, you could access every night of football through your linear TV or vMVPD. If you’re already paying for Peacock and/or Paramount+, you’re now going to have to fork over $139 a year to be a Prime member or $8.99 a month just for video, in addition to maintaining your cable subscription.  

Jumping over new hurdles 

While this fragmentation is frustrating for fans, imagine what it means for advertisers who already face ongoing measurement and efficiency challenges when working within the silos of the walled gardens. Multiple sources of measurement, a lack of standardization on currency and duplication unknowns are just a few of the obstacles they face.

As an advertising and media industry, we’re creating unnecessary problems for brands looking to reach an audience that’s increasingly straddling linear TV and streaming. Many in the industry are focused on offering a strong open web solution to these challenges. But we are operating in a world that lacks currency standardization.

Rather than stirring up more chaos for advertisers, the industry needs to become better aligned. Amazon partnering with Nielsen is an example of a step in the right direction. Standardization is the only path forward that will make this work, so that advertisers can actually truly understand the ROI of their spend.

Follow Unruly (@unrulyco) and AdExchanger (@adexchanger) on Twitter.

Must Read

multiple sets of eyes

Amazon DSP Adds Adelaide’s Pre-Bid Attention Targeting

Advertisers can target high- and medium-attention ad inventory in Amazon DSP while filtering out low-attention placements and made-for-advertising sites.

Marketers Are Getting Used To AI In The Ad Stack

Marketers and media buyers are gradually getting more comfortable talking about ad campaigns they’re testing on large-language models like OpenAI’s ChatGPT.

For Video Publishers, Performance And AI Go Hand In Hand

In Connected TV Ad Land, proving performance is the priority for video advertisers. To drive more demonstrable reach and results, publishers are trying to expand their reach while wringing more data and AI features into their offerings. 

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

Independent Ad Tech Is Reframing Itself Around Cloud Hardware

Nowadays, programmatic vendors, and SSPs in particular, are carving new paths of differentiation based on their type of adoption of cloud infrastructure.

Ad Performance Hinges On Kicking Fragmentation’s Butt

As performance takes center-stage in more advertising discussions, demands to solve fragmentation and cruddy measurement are reaching a fever pitch.

AdExchanger's Big Story podcast with journalistic insights on advertising, marketing and ad tech

AI Off The Rails

A word of caution to digital advertising companies, as they go all in on AI algorithms: They need to build these solutions with ownership, governance and accountability from the start – or AI could sink them with a single mistake.