An Ad Fraud Warning To Marketers From Reformed Provider, Jampp

During this 201st episode of “Marketing Today,” I interview Diego Meller, co-founder of Jampp.  

We follow up on a previous discussion about ad fraud and the $100 million Uber lawsuit. Meller clarifies the important difference between ad networks and programmatic. He also shares details about the pivot Jampp underwent to eliminate fraud. 

If you’re listening today, take this as a warning shot. Think about how you can improve your own efforts in your businesses.

Meller begins by setting the record straight on how ad networks and programmatic function differently. Then we learn how Jampp changed its business model because fraud instances were getting more frequent. Everytime they researched what was going on, fraud was not the exception, but the rule. Meller offers a fascinating insight into how marketers handled these revelations: “The most frequent scenario that we saw in our customers was a strategy of basically phasing out gradually the crappy traffic and blending it with good traffic.” Then Meller provides critical advice that will help marketers avoid ad fraud. He warns, “Buy media that gives you transparency.” This conversation reminds us that in the long-term, the market will reward us for doing the right thing.

Highlights from this week’s “Marketing Today”: 

  • Diego sets the record straight on programmatic vs. display ad networks, which was the source of fraud in the Uber lawsuit. (03:35)
  • Diego describes how his experience with Jampp taught him about both of these worlds. (06:54) 
  • Diego explains why fraud prompted a pivot in the Jampp business model. (07:56)
  • Key background information listeners need to know about how this ad fraud situation unfolded. (11:19) 
  • Diego shares what other advertisers at the table were saying when they shifted to programmatic. (13:33)
  • Learn why this pivotal moment could have killed Diego’s business. (17:10)
  • Using the new system, they don’t struggle with fraud within their traffic. (18:57) 
  • The prevalence of attribution fraud. (22:22)
  • The biggest misconceptions of ad fraud today. (24:03)
  • Diego’s advice for combating ad fraud. (25:17)
  • Diego’s opinion on marketers being fired or prosecuted for spending on fraudulent ads. (29:33)
  • Is there an experience in his past that defines who he is today? (33:27)
  • What is the advice Diego would give to his younger self? (35:59)
  • What’s the most impactful purchase he has made in the last 6-12 months of $100 or less. (39:44)
  • What are the top opportunities or threats Diego sees today? (42:13)

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https://www.linkedin.com/in/diegomeller/
https://twitter.com/diemel
https://twitter.com/jampp

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Alan B. Hart is the creator and host of “Marketing Today with Alan Hart,” a weekly podcast where he interviews leading global marketing professionals and business leaders. Alan advises leading executives and marketing teams on opportunities around brand, customer experience, innovation and growth. He has consulted with Fortune 100 companies, but he is an entrepreneur at his core, having founded or served as an executive for nine startups.

Coronavirus Causes Mission-Based Marketing To Spike

Nearly three quarters of advertising executives think coronavirus will have a greater impact on US ad spend than the 2008 financial crisis, according to a new survey from the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB), “Coronavirus Ad Spend Impact: Buy-Side.”

Seventy percent of media buyers have adjusted or paused their short-term ad plans for March-June. Seventy-three percent said the pandemic will impact their 2020-21 upfront spend commitments, estimating a 20 percent drop from their initial plans. 

The short-term impact is the greatest for traditional media as 39 percent of marketers have reduced ad spend for traditional media versus 33 percent who have decreased digital ad spend. In addition to the slightly less negative impact on digital spend, the findings suggest a faster rebound for digital in Q2.

Nearly a quarter (24 percent) of respondents have paused all advertising spend for the remainder of Q1 and Q2. Another 46 percent of respondents are adjusting ad spend for the rest of Q1 and Q2. Impact on Q3 and Q4 spending is expected to be more modest.

In response to the pandemic, 63 percent of advertisers are also changing their messaging, resulting in a 42 percent jump in mission-based marketing and a 41 percent increase in cause-related marketing.

Over a third (35 percent) of advertisers are also adjusting their in-market tactics, leading to a 38 percent increase in audience targeting, 35 percent rise in over-the-top/connected television targeting and 34 percent increase in mobile/tablet device targeting. 
Findings are based on answers from 390 respondents comprised of media planners, media buyers and brands spanning multiple categories, between March 18-24.

John S. Couch On Leveraging The Art Of Creative Rebellion

How does one protect their fragile creative ideas in the face of constant media bombardment and pressures to conform? In “The Art of Creative Rebellion: How to Champion Creativity, Change Culture, and Save Your Soul,” John S. Couch answers the question through his experience as Hulu vice president of product design and previous leadership roles at CBS, eBay and The Museum of Contemporary Art. The result is a call to practice radical candor and get comfortable with being uncomfortable in the name of pursuing creativity without having to arbitrarily please higher-ups.

We spoke with Couch about his tips for leveraging creative rebellion in the age of coronavirus, how marketers can imbue the creative spirit within their teams and how introverted marketers, designers and creators can confidently share their ideas in meetings and beyond.

You believe creative thinking requires only contemplation: how can marketers and creators today ensure they’re not getting sucked into endless screen time/work/social life and actually take the time to contemplate? What are some best practices that have worked for you and your teams?

What I have implemented heavily within my own team at work, when I was physically there, was every year I had a mindfulness meditation teacher come out and do a workshop with the whole team. We also put stand-up desks in place to make sure that people are not just sitting, like out of a scene from Wall-e where they’re just sitting there and getting fed information but not really getting any nutrition out of it. 

One of the things that I found is I don’t know what I think until I am silent until I have a moment to move away from the bombardment of information coming in. When you have nothing but information bombardment, you’re in a reactionary state and you’re reacting, but you’re not acting.

If I can stay quiet for even just 10 minutes and allow the noise to settle, then that’s where creative ideas come from. I think that’s one of the reasons why people find most of the best ideas when they’re in the shower or they’re doing something which doesn’t allow them to be distracted by media input or work demands. Then that muddy water of the mind is able to settle down into the bottom of the cup and the clarity of the water reveals what you really think.

Another thing that I do is I write, not just books, but I write down in a journal all the stuff that’s bothering me as a way of clearing out my head. And I don’t know what I think sometimes until I’ve written it down.

You have to up-level out of the momentary sense that you’re being productive into slowing down, paradoxically, in order to think strategically so you can go faster in the long run.

I find in design, whether it’s communication design or product design, there tends to be a reaction to the competition. Well, the competition is doing X so we need to react to that and do X, too. A typical example: Ten email newsletters seem to work. Let’s do 100. By increasing quantity you’re not addressing the core issue. The problem you’re trying to solve is probably four or five levels up, which is, I’m trying to communicate with my customers or I’m trying to reach people. And how do I do that? So instead of doing newsletters, maybe there’s a different way to do it.

What do you predict will be changes that will affect creatives in the coming years? 

I think creativity is probably the one area that’s going to be even more important and powerful in the future and not just because it’s my business. But because with the rise of artificial intelligence (AI), any kind of non-creative work is going to be systematized to machines.

That will require people who are used to functioning on a certain level of creativity or maybe complete lack of creativity to suddenly realize that in order to remain relevant, they need to start thinking in a creative way. And this is not a bad thing. This is actually what humans are most geared towards—is actually being creative. 

We make creativity the thing that you either have or you don’t have and I would argue, as I wrote in “The Art of Creative Rebellion,” that it’s intrinsically how you’re born. You don’t tell a kid to be creative. They’re just naturally making games and drawing and making music and banging on things. For whatever reason we downplay that as we get older and we start to move into systems which are mechanized. My armchair philosophy is that essentially, humans since the industrial revolution were put into roles in relation to a machine or assembly line. If we take away the dehumanizing effects of that kind of labor and allow human beings to be more creative, that’s the one thing that will separate us from AI in the short term, because AI will take a long time to catch up to the non-linear thinking of the human mind.

How can marketers imbue the spirit of creative rebellion within their teams?

The interesting thing about a lot of businesses and not just marketing but in general is that they tend to be hierarchical in their structure. Whoever is at the top of the heap becomes the person that everybody on the lower levels of the pyramid are trying to please on some level. It’s dangerous because on one hand, if you’re lucky then the person in the very top is a visionary and has the ability to guide things. But if you’re not lucky, then you have someone at the very top who is limited by their own biases in the way that they see the world, which sometimes can be really good if it advances you.

In reality, the best environment for being creative is a flatter one where you practice radical candor. This isn’t a free-for-all, there’s still structure in that, but there’s the ability to speak openly without fearing that whatever you’re saying could have a negative blowback on yourself. 

Within my organization, I have interns and associate designers who call me out on my bad ideas all the time, and I encourage it. This is not a license to be critically mean to somebody—it should be a stress test to the actual ideas. If the idea doesn’t survive the stress test within your company, it’ll die when it goes out into the public. So what I try to do with my team is allow them the ability to be themselves completely and truly allow an environment which is safe to speak openly and speak truth about any idea. 

In one of your blog posts, you mention being an introvert. What advice would you give to introverted marketing executives, designers and creatives who struggle to share ideas in a meeting or throw them out into the world?

I actually had this problem with my team as a whole because not only am I introverted, but designers in general tend to be introverted. A woman on my team came to me and said that she felt that within the construct of a tech company that it’s difficult sometimes to have her voice heard. As I dug into it, I realized it wasn’t just a female thing, it was a designer thing. It was people who felt terribly uncomfortable explaining what they’re doing to a larger cohort.

For me personally, at one point the thought of speaking in front of large groups terrified me, but I realized that if I didn’t get above it that I wouldn’t be able to represent the work of my team well.

At first I tried to take public speaking on like an actor in a role. That way I could hide behind it. But what I found that was really useful was that in order to address the introversion was to get in front of people and say, as an experiment, I’m actually going to be just me. When I encouraged my designers to go through the same thing, what I realized is that you can fumble your way through it, but if your story is solid, then it tends to get you through. Just know your story and speak truthfully to that.

You spearheaded Hulu’s first redesign in a decade via Hulu Experience—how, if at all, do you strike a balance between innovative and familiar when undertaking such big and strategic creative endeavors?

Thinking of how much influence Apple had on me—when the iPhone first came out everybody was using a BlackBerry or some sort of keyboard-based phone. And the immediate reaction was, no one’s going to use a glass screen that’s flat.

People are going to tell you that they want more of the same thing that they’ve always had, not realizing that there’s another thing. Steve Jobs up-leveled the whole question of what a phone is and how one interacts with it. So anything which is truly original is always ugly on first experience.

The problem for a creative director or a marketer or anybody who’s trying something different is that they have to say, yeah, I see the data, but I have up-leveled the problem and mitigated it by doing prototypes and testing. 

When acting on your ideas, you have to be able to stomach the drop from underneath your feet and be okay with putting it all on the block. If you don’t then you spend your whole life professionally trying to arbitrarily please somebody above you. Whereas if you at least believe in something that you’ve done and it goes sideways, at least you went down with the thing that you believed in versus going down with the thing you felt was a compromise. And you can always bounce back really fast from a problem like that because you’ve maintained your principles.

Can you recall the first time you deployed creative rebellion in the corporate world and what you learned from the experience?

About seven years ago, I was at a company called Magento, which is an Adobe company now. The founder Roy Rubin asked me if we can do something to affect the environment, which I thought was very forward-thinking of him.

My wife connected me to a few street artists in Los Angeles and I had them come into the offices. They made these amazing murals. I didn’t tell anybody I was doing it, I just had it done. But the rebellion part of it was I remember there was this one mural near my office featuring a giant dragon and tiger. And I had this engineer come over and get freaked out and angry about the mural. Instead of getting into a conflict with him, I said, well, tell me, what do you think about it? As we talked, he explained why it concerned him and I explained to him what the meaning was behind it and the reason why I did it. Within about fifteen minutes, it was all okay. It was really a confrontation with the unknown or the new that threw him off. Ironically, the first week or so, there was a lot of complaining about it and questions like, why does this tech company have giant murals and what do they mean? And then within about a week, the executives were coming through with groups of people and showing off the art.

I realized that part of creative rebellion for me was learning how to be very uncomfortable for a short period of time. If you’re not uncomfortable, you’re probably not growing. I believe in risk, I don’t believe in recklessness. There’s a difference. And you shouldn’t do things which are reckless that can affect people adversely. But you should do things which are calculated in the risk.

I think part of creative rebellion for leaders is the ability to be extremely yourself, tell the truth and to borrow from Brené Brown, be vulnerable. The more that you expose what you don’t know as much as what you do know, it’s not a weakness and people come to help at that point, helping alleviate the strain of whatever huge endeavor you’re doing.

If giving an idea to “a group of engaged individuals who can take the ember of the idea, add fuel to it and turn it into a bonfire” is so important for breeding creativity, how can marketers/teams be proactive in this process while teleworking?

While working from home, keep a notebook and write down ideas and Post-it notes and put them on the walls because no one’s looking. 

In a weird way, this coronavirus can help stabilize a lot of connections that people have been missing. The virtualness of it may, in a weird way, allow people to get centered around what is important. A lot of the embers that I was talking about are hard to find. When you go into a conference room and you try to say, hey, let’s have a brainstorming session around something, it almost never works. It almost becomes a one-upmanship.

I believe ideas are so delicate. This really delicate ‘ember’ of an idea, if you bring it in too quickly into a corporate environment, it can be dismissed suddenly. What’s important is to have a non-fear based environment, a sandbox, so to speak, that you can then bring the ember into. And then there’s a ceremony within your team plus the idea of what you’re doing. It’s a “yes and.” Not being in an actual physical environment with someone can alleviate some of that stress that you would feel by being in physical proximity to them. And I find that I can more easily exchange ideas that way.

Don’t Throw The Boomers Out With The Bathwater: Why Ageism Is The Enemy Of Creativity

Originally published at AW360 by 180KINGSDAY.

Creative director John Messum, 55, and art director Rachel Kennedy, 31, are calling time on ageism in advertising. With twenty years between them, the pair explain why their collaboration works and how the future of advertising needs to be built together, across generations. 

The relationship between old and young has always been tinged with contention. It was George Orwell who said, “Each generation imagines itself to be more intelligent than the one that went before it, and wiser than the one that comes after.” In recent years, this rift between old and young has widened and we’ve found ourselves in the midst of an intergenerational civil war; one that’s been given a re-up of new ammo in the form of political turmoil, a climate in crisis and social media. 

As colleagues with a twenty-five-year age gap, we have watched, initially with humor and then in horror, as the division has grown. This is evident every day, from the snide discourse around “entitled” Millennials, to “Okay Boomer–” the phrase that launched a thousand memes, fueled as many twitter rants and even found its way into politics. 

Ageism–because let’s call it what it is–has become the last acceptable prejudice. 

In the world of advertising, we’re facing our own issues. We’re an industry, as John Hegarty said, that “overly worships at the altar of youth.” An industry with a median age of 39 and one that boasts a measly 6 percent of employees over the age of 50. If you’re a woman or a minority, these numbers sadly, but unsurprisingly, look even worse.

It’s embarrassing. Advertising is a business built on innovation and imagination, yet when it comes to age, we’re shockingly short-sighted. The obvious irony here is that aging is for the many and not the few. If we don’t start addressing these discrepancies and calling out the lack of representation now, then we’re going to dent, if not destroy, an essential weapon in our arsenal: cumulative creativity. A vital catalyst for innovation. 

Cumulative creativity is far from revolutionary, yet it seems to have been sadly overlooked of late. Forty-five years ago, when Edwin Land, inventor of the Polaroid announced that he had discovered one-step instant photography, he explained that it was prompted by his daughter, who wanted to know why she couldn’t see the pictures she had taken right away. Within an hour of the question being posed, he had conceived of a way to make this happen. When interviewed later, he said, “True creativity is characterized by a succession of acts, each one dependent on the one that went before and suggesting the one after.” As collaborators, with a quarter of a century between us, it is this idea that fuels our work. 

The act of cumulative creativity is what propels us forward. It allows us to draw from our collective experiences, merge the old with the new and take advantage of cross-generational mentoring that elevates us personally and professionally. It means
that we are able to draw on the craft and experience John has accumulated during his thirty-two years in advertising and combine it with Rachel’s innovative approach and alternate perspective to carve a new path. 

Intergenerational collaboration works, and not only for us. Last April, following Billboard’s removal of twenty-year-old Lil Nas X’s song ‘Old Town Road’ from the Country music chat, Billy Ray Cyrus collaborated on a remix. That track gave the fifty-six-year-old his first number one on the Hot 100. 

When fifty-year-old Jennifer Lopez walked the runway for Versace’s Spring 2020 show in “that green dress–” the same she had worn twenty years earlier–she didn’t just “break the internet,” she reportedly made Google $9.4 million in earned media. This sent Instagram–the domain of the young–into a frenzy and generated hundreds of column inches for the sixty-four-year-old chief creative officer, Donatella. 

These types of partnerships spark the sort of creative thinking that boosts business–and isn’t that advertising in a nutshell? The work we produce exists to put our clients front and center in the mind of consumers, yet we also have a unique opportunity to shape and change perceptions. With that comes a responsibility to incorporate the lived experience of a diverse society, something we can only do if we have the right mix of people around the table.

Seventy-nine percent of us believe the advertising industry is ageist. So, let’s stop just accepting this discrimination as a fact and start to do something about it. Let’s create a tribe for the future. A tribe that isn’t built around a wise elder or a bright young thing, but a tribe that is built on collaboration across generations. Where mentorship does not rest on the shoulders of one, but all. In sharing our perspectives, we establish a knowledge exchange, we become more empathetic, more observant, and are able to see the world, not as it is, but as it could be. 

As we live and work longer, the industry’s current median age of 39 is going to seem awfully young for its next generation. So, this is a plea to everyone, what do you want the industry to look like when you’re 53, 63, 73? The ability to change rests on us. When we phase people out of our creative teams because of their age, we lose passionate older hands with the ability to guide thinking, shape ideas and form diverse foundations that, in collaboration with others, will help bring about the type of innovation we seek. The future of our work is found in the fusion between old and young, a tribe of our own design.

Five Critical Things Successful Brands Did To Survive The Retail Apocalypse

Originally published at AW360 by Hadar Paz.

Macy’s has just announced 140 company closures, and 2,000 staff layoffs through 2023. In January alone, Opening Ceremony, Express, Papyrus and JCPenney all announced they will be closing down over 300 retail locations in 2020. In 2019, a record-breaking 9,300 brick and mortar stores were shut down–a 59 percent increase over 2018–and retail layoffs were up 92 percent last month.

There’s less foot traffic in shopping malls primarily due to eCommerce, which is a major driving force behind the massive sea change that’s happening in the apparel industry. In fact, The Washington Post reported that the average US household spent $5200 online in 2018–a 50 percent increase from just five years back.

Some brands are panicking, and as a result, budgets are shrinking, and unfortunately being slashed invaluable categories like CX.

But staying competitive–and even surviving this retail apocalypse–requires a completely new mindset, involving a holistic understanding of customers and their wants and needs when they shop. Select brands that have avoided this fate by doubling down on certain elements of eCommerce: Target and Zumiez, for example, reformatted stores into localized distribution centers, which cut down waiting periods for online orders. Glossier and Carvana integrated their digital and in-store experiences and created more experiential events. The thread here is that they’re doubling down on their eCommerce strategy, and completely enhancing the customer experience, online and off.

What’s the chillingly-named business apocalypse teaching us? It’s that this is the time for brands to restrategize and create a massive shift in how they did business before–and how they will in 2020.

Here are some of the brilliant things brands that are thriving in the face of the 2020 Retail Apocalypse did–and didn’t do.

1. They Integrated Digital with Brick & Mortar

There’s certainly no need to panic. Brick and mortar stores are not going away any time soon–they’re just being reimagined. Many digital companies actually opened brick-and-mortar spots for customers to pick up orders or try before buying. Other traditional brands like Target reduced physical space and encouraged customers to buy online and “ship to store.” In fact, small-format-stores saw a 5 percent year over year increase in sales.

2. They Gave Their Online Customers White Glove Service

There’s not a more inefficient experience in the world than when you email a customer support team about a potential purchase–and get a response 24 hours later; or when the online representative that’s talking to you through the talk bubble can’t help you with a simple question or has no idea that you’re a longtime shopper of the brand. These are the recipes for a shopping cart disaster. Instead, brands that are winning are providing customers with convenience, a smooth shopping journey, and incredible service with a personal touch. These brands put you in touch with someone who knows you’re a valued customer and is aware of your preferences. This is the “white glove” service many are used to when shopping at luxury brick and mortar brands, except transferred online.

3. They Stuck to Products Their Customers Wanted

Successful brands got laser-focused on their digital presence and on what products were most desired by their customers. Despite closing over 100 Macy’s stores, the company sees success with its Bluemercury subsidiary. Customers can visit one of their 171 standalone storefronts to try products, get recommendations, and utilize spa services; or shop online for items they love. In fact, Macy’s pivot may be the right move–they’re maximizing the use of their best real estate and focusing on their boutique, luxury elements that have proven successful.

Brands that did not survive expanded into a variety of departments and a hodgepodge of new products with little research to find out if customers actually wanted these. Or it was business as usual, paying no attention to the changes going on in the industry or world around them.

4. They Doubled Down Budgets on Digital Channels

Brands that didn’t survive cut corners on digital budgets, while those that won invested correctly in eCommerce, on the best online retail tools, and committed to providing the same level of “white glove” service on their websites as inside their stores–particularly luxury brands like Gucci and Valentino. Truly, eCommerce overhead is significantly lower than brick-and-mortar and if properly executed could skyrocket your sales figures. Brands that opted for budget solutions pay the price later on as they struggle to keep up with competitors who did it right in the first place. Invest in only the best online retail solutions from the get-go to save valuable time and resources further down the line. eCommerce isn’t going anywhere.

5. They Avoided Mass Layoffs Through Smart Retraining

Successful brands retrained in-store staff for their online customer service team, given these teams tend to be well-educated on product information and in creating a personal customer connection. These people are your biggest brand ambassadors and simply pivoting the way that they work allows them to provide the best service online as they would in your store. This unified offline and online agent team reduces training time and lets the brick-and-mortar sales team transition easily into online sales, reducing the need for mass layoffs.

With the “death of the high street” keeping many brands up at night, it’s important to forge ahead armed with tools to do everything in your power to give the online shopper the in-store experience of their dreams. It can be done, because it’s already being done, by brands that are braving the apocalypse and opting instead to consider it an opportunity–a retail revolution.

The ‘Moment’ People See Your Ad Is More Important Than The Message Itself

Originally published at AW360 by Rachel Zalta.

As the fastest growing digital ad format in the UK, it’s no secret that marketers (and consumers) see huge value in digital video.

Although launching an effective video campaign might seem simple…

Step 1: create a powerful ad

Step 2: target the right audience

…marketers are concerned with an additional factor––one that has the potential to exceed their marketing goals or destroy their campaign altogether.

That additional factor surfaces when you’re putting together your distribution strategy and looking into the differences between platforms.

Have you ever asked yourself, “what’s my audience doing when they see my ad?

That’s another way of asking about their mindset.

As we researched this topic, one of the questions we kept hearing from advertisers was:

“What’s more important, the mindset or the creative?” 

We ran a survey, and found that mindset can actually have a greater impact than the message itself. This mindset is referred to by the advertising community as “moments.”

The four elements of mindset.

Let’s take a step back from ads for a second and imagine this scenario: You’re trying to figure out where to vacation next and someone comes up and tells you all about why you should visit Africa.

What determines whether or not you’ll be persuaded?

Putting aside the content of the message itself, here are the four things to consider:

  1. Who is the person? Do you trust them?
  2. What have they told you before and after the Africa suggestion? Did they say something smart?
  3. Are they forcing you to listen to their description of Africa, or are they pausing and giving you a chance to change the subject?
  4. Do you want to be listening to them at that moment? Or would you rather be doing something else?

These are the four determinants of the advertising mindset: trust in the source, safe environment, the ability to skip an ad (or lack thereof), and the degree of open-mindedness, which we will focus on.

Yes. Sometimes we actually want to view ads.

Although some will argue that consumers never want to see ads, studies have shown that this is not actually true.

For example, how many of you watched John Lewis’s Christmas advert this past November? Apparently, a lot of people did: search results for John Lewis spike higher than search results for the Queen’s name when the advert comes out each year.

According to one study in the US, more than half of respondents said they’d be disappointed if the Super Bowl was commercial-free.

These are examples of “moments of next.”

The neuroscience behind the moment of next.

Although our brains make up only 2 percent of our body’s weight, they consume 20 percent of our body’s energy, which makes our brains very expensive to use.

The amount of energy that our brains demand sets inherent limits on the number of things that can be processed at any given moment.

When the brain is working at low capacity, it’s called “low cognitive load” or the ‘moment of next.’ People in this moment are usually open to processing new information.

Our day-to-day lives contain countless moments of next. For instance, you might experience a moment of next while listening to the radio, or when waiting in a queue and looking up at a billboard, or on a publisher site, looking for the next thing to engage with.

How our brains react to stimuli in different moments.

Seeing a brand message when we’re in the middle of doing something means we’ll probably either ignore the ad completely or be annoyed by it. Seeing the same exact brand message in a moment of next will likely lead to a much more positive reaction and greater success for the advertiser.

Just take a look at John Lewis, who delivered 20 times the return on their original spend, and PepsiCo, who measure ROI very carefully, and who, this year alone, ran six different commercials in the Super Bowl.

In a Taboola-commissioned Nielsen study which compared the same video ads in moments of next and other moments, we found a 25 percent increase in visual attention for moments of next.

Marketers: Here’s how to make the most of your ad dollars.

  1. Avoid advertising in moments when people don’t want to engage with your ad. These might appear as if they’re working, achieving high viewability and completion rates, but they will almost definitely result in a negative user experience, reflecting badly on your brand. A good resource to find out which formats are interruptive is The Coalition for Better Ads, who regularly study this topic. My guess is that in a few years, these interruptive ad formats will become extinct.
  2. Make sure a significant portion of your ad budgets are allocated towards moments in which people are open to your content. Messages that appear in moments of next have a stronger impact on consumers and are generally better accepted.
  3. Higher quality moments = higher ROI. Remember that the moment of next is a mindset that will likely generate higher ROI for your campaigns, like the John Lewis ads, Super Bowl ads, and ads that reach consumers when they actually want to see them.

Even the most thoughtfully created video ad with the best-laid targeting strategy can’t succeed if it isn’t reaching consumers when they’re open to receiving it. Reach your audience when they want to explore, learn, and discover: in their moments of next.

What We’re Reading–March 2nd

We’ve searched for the most pressing marketing news so you don’t have to. Here’s what’s happening so far the week of March 2.


Instagram Influencers Are Creating Their Own TV-Style Ad Breaks
Digiday

“Instagram influencers are starting to put their own placeholders before and after their sponsored posts, similar to an ad break on TV.”

Why it matters: Concerns around disclosure could be this practice into hot water with the Advertising Standards Authority.


China’s Live Streaming Boom
Vogue Business

Rounding up the key trends propelling China’s live streaming boom.

Why it matters: Follow the money. According to a report from Deloitte, the Chinese live streaming market reached $4.4 billion in 2018, growing 37 percent over the previous year.


Can Influencers Rule Online Marketing In The Post-Cookie World?
Forbes

The direct connection that influencers have with their audiences could be a solution to the impending end of the third-party cookie.

Why it matters: “The influencers themselves have access to the first-party data from their own followers, data they can legally share in aggregated, anonymized form for a specific campaign, with a specific brand. It can be a gold mine for smart companies.”


Keds Puts A Print Catalog At The Center Of Its New Marketing Strategy
Glossy

Brands are experimenting with print campaigns as digital ads have become more prohibitive due to the array of competition.

Why it matters: “Anything and everything is fair game now. It’s a battle for engagement across all touchpoints. And sometimes an unconventional use of conventional media is a great way to relevantly connect.”


South by Southwest Is Not Canceled Despite Coronavirus Concerns
Adweek

SXSW is still scheduled despite numerous cancelations from the likes of Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, Facebook, Mashable, Amazon Studios and Intel due to fears over the spread of Coronavirus.

Why it matters: SXSW drew a crowd of 417,400 people last year, but so far organizers are undaunted by the potential spread of Coronavirus. Are you still attending or has your organization changed its plans for Austin this year? Let us know by shooting us an email at editorial@alistdaily.com.


Missguided Rapped By ASA For ‘Presenting Women As Sexual Objects’
The Drum

The ASA (Advertising Standards Authority) has banned a recent ad from retailer Missguided for being too sexually suggestive and reducing the depicted model to a “sexual object.”

Why it matters: While Missguided’s ad purports to promote female empowerment, the result of the ASA’s arbitration brands it as sexist indicating a sensitivity around even the suggestion of sex in advertisements.


Inside The 2020 Campaign Messaging War That’s Pelting Our Phones With Texts
Fast Company

A look at how P2P texts from 2020 U.S. presidential hopefuls are having an effect on voters, including how such communication is possible via a loophole in federal law.

Why it matters: In short, the effectiveness of P2P texts has a lot to do with how people use messaging versus telephone calls and emails, as well as demographics.


Will Loyalty Programs Gain Renewed Value In A Cookie-Less Era?
Marketing Dive

Brands are adopting loyalty programs, a trend that is expected to grow as third-party cookies go the way of the dodo.

Why it matters:
Loyalty programs could limit the disruptions due to major consumer privacy initiatives by providing a stop-gap for tracking and attribution. “Consumers understand, at this point, that their data is the currency by which they barter. They just want to know that everything is above board. Loyalty programs can be a lot clearer or easier to understand in terms of how that happens.”


‘Mad Men’ Fans Can Peek Inside Don Draper’s Apartment With This 3D Re-Creation
Ad Age

WeWork’s head of visualization, Greg Rogers, lovingly recreated Don Draper’s Manhattan apartment in 3D from scratch.

Why it matters: A note to the creatives out there: if you’re feeling uninspired or drained, take it offline and invest your time in a creative project like Rogers has done.


Unilever Achieves 50/50 Gender Balance Across Global Leadership
Campaign

A year ahead of its goal to achieve gender balance among its management, Unilever now has the same number of women as men in global leadership positions for the first time.

Why it matters: In the words of Unilever’s chief executive, Alan Jope: “Women’s equality is the single greatest unlock for social and economic development globally and having a gender-balanced workforce should be a given, not something that we aspire to.”


Do Most Businesses Have An Overarching Audience Data Strategy?
Marketing Profs

Recent research from Winterberry Group and the IAB (Interactive Advertising Bureau) suggests that only 16 percent of survey respondents said that they are successfully implementing an overarching strategy to govern practices around dealing with audience data.

Why it matters: Major upcoming data protection initiatives like CCPA will necessitate that marketers develop a sound strategy around collecting and managing audience data.


Tackling Identity’s Biggest Challenges In A Cookieless World
Marketing Dive

Review the basic challenges around ‘identity’ and familiarize yourself with the four components to building an identity solution in light of Google’s announcement to end support for third-party cookies.

Why it matters: Has your organization given thought to what the end of the cookie means for resolving identities?


Nonprofits And Consumer Brands Borrow From Each Other’s Playbook To Engage Millennials
Marketing Dive

Nonprofits are taking a page from consumer brands by tapping into Millennial audiences, while consumer brands are appealing to audiences with more than just their products by putting purpose first.

Why it matters: Inspiration can come from the unlikeliest of places.


Mashable And Intel Are The Latest Brands To Pull Out Of SXSW
Ad Age

Mashable and Intel won’t be attending SXSW this year due to fears about the spread of Coronavirus. SXSW officials are moving forward, nonetheless.

Why it matters: You might have a clear calendar next week, if Coronavirus has anything to do with it. Track the latest announcements to see how your trip to SXSW may be affected.


The Best Leaders Are Versatile Ones
Harvard Business Review

An examination of why the capacity for versatility is so important for leaders.

Why it matters: Versatility is an important capacity to have as a leader, since versatile leaders have “more engaged employees and higher performing teams,” among a number of other positives.


Why You Need To Break Down Marketing Silos
Ad Age

While siloing business functions makes sense in terms of decentralization, the practice can lead to a host of communication issues between teams that should share common goals.

Why it matters: Silos cause redundancy, harm business,cause a lack of cohesiveness and lead to the development of inconsistent customer experiences, among other problems.


Which C-Suite Leader Has The Most Confidence In The CMO? You Won’t Believe The Answer
Forbes

“A new study from Deloitte […] of 575 executives across the C-suite found that the CEO is the C-suite leader with the greatest trust in the CMO.”

Why it matters: This one is a case of perception vs. reality, especially regarding the notion that CEOs are largely disappointed in CMOs and lack confidence in them. This new Deloitte study says otherwise.


CMOs Lose Status As Companies Shift Spending To Technology
Marketing Dive

“The number of companies that said CMOs were among their best-paid officers fell 35 percent from 1999 to 2017 as the compensation for technology executives surged, per a study of company filings by the Harvard Business Review.”

Why it matters: “The data suggests the importance of CMOs has declined, supporting the researchers’ earlier assessment that marketing is less valued today than it once was.”


Four Seasons Checks In To Podcasts With Influencer-Led Travel Series
Mobile Marketer

A new podcast series from Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts encourages travelers to make use of the extra time they have due to leap year.

Why it matters: In a 2019 study from BBC Global News, branded or corporate podcasts were found to be more effective to reach consumers than TV or radio ads. The result indicated that “podcasts out-performed TV ads by 22 percent on measures of engagement, emotional intensity and memory encoding.”


Editor’s Note: Our weekly reading list is updated daily. This installment is updated until Friday, March 6. Have a tip? We’re looking for must-read articles related to trends and insights in marketing and media. Let us know at editorial@alistdaily.com.

Brand, Rebrand And Simplicity With Margaret Molloy Of Siegel+Gale

During this 197th episode of “Marketing Today,” I interview Margaret Molloy, the global chief marketing officer and head of business development at Siegel+Gale.  She has over twenty-five years of experience as a marketing executive. 

We discuss Molloy’s background and what led her to role at Siegel+Gale. Then we have a wide-ranging discussion about rebranding and the potential benefits of a rebrand, as well as the value of brand simplicity.

Molloy explains when a company should consider a rebrand. She says that when you choose to rebrand, “It should signal a strategic change, not just a cosmetic one.” 

Then she shares some of Siegel+Gale’s philosophy when she reflects, “When simplicity is done well, it brings productivity instead of paralysis. It brings confidence instead of confusion. And ultimately, customer trust instead of angst.” 

Molloy also provides a valuable perspective on why brand matters to B2B now more than ever. Her insights into marketing trends and the surging emphasis on customer experience round out this riveting conversation.

Highlights from this week’s “Marketing Today”:

  • Margaret describes what it’s like for her to raise two teenage boys in New York City. (01:38) 
  • Learn about Margaret’s career path and how she ended up at Siegel+Gale. (02:58) 
  • Margaret advises listeners on when a company should consider a rebrand.  (06:09)
  • Hear Margaret’s take on the potential ROI of rebranding. (09:44) 
  • Margaret outlines the pitfalls dictating the failure and success of a rebrand. (12:44) 
  • How Siegel+Gale thinks about branding and the part simplicity plays in their philosophy. (14:06) 
  • Siegel+Gale’s work with B2B. (17:27)  
  • The current state of brand and B2B. (18:21)
  • Margaret provides highlights from her research on the world’s simplest brands and shares her findings of how simplicity pays off for businesses. (25:53)  
  • Margaret compares RyanAir and Southwest. (30:24)  
  • What are the priorities Margaret is seeing from her clients in early 2020? (32:08) 
  • Learn about one of Margaret’s personal projects, #wearingirish. (36:52) 
  • Is there an experience in her past that defines who she is today? (39:28) 
  • Are there any brands, companies, or causes that Margaret follows that she thinks other people should take notice of? (41:48)
  • As a marketer, what does she feel is the biggest opportunity or threat that is facing marketers? (44:34)

Resources Mentioned:

Subscribe the podcast:
Listen in iTunes (link: http://apple.co/2dbdAhV)
Listen in Google Podcasts (link: http://bit.ly/2Rc2kVa)
Listen in Spotify (Link: http://spoti.fi/2mCUGnC )

Connect with the Guest:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/margaretmolloy
https://twitter.com/MargaretMolloy
https://twitter.com/SiegelGale

Connect with Marketing Today and Alan Hart:
http://twitter.com/abhart
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https://www.facebook.com/themktgtoday/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/marketing-today-with-alan-hart/


Alan B. Hart is the creator and host of “Marketing Today with Alan Hart,” a weekly podcast where he interviews leading global marketing professionals and business leaders. Alan advises leading executives and marketing teams on opportunities around brand, customer experience, innovation and growth. He has consulted with Fortune 100 companies, but he is an entrepreneur at his core, having founded or served as an executive for nine startups.

Navigating Through The Weeds Of CBD And Cannabis Advertising

Originally published at AW360 by Gary Kibel, Esq. and Rohini Gokhale, Esq.

The cannabis industry is booming in the United States, and marketers are anxious to get in on the action. However, uncertainty over the conflicts between federal and state law and the complex regulatory landscape makes it challenging for advertisers, brands, publishers, agencies and others in the media ecosystem to navigate the terrain. While marijuana remains illegal in the United States at the federal level, the legalization of marijuana in some form in 33 states and the descheduling of hemp under the 2018 Farm Bill have led to a proliferation of legal marijuana and cannabidiol (CBD) products. However, the patchwork of state laws regulating legal marijuana products and federal rules covering CBD has led to complications for companies attempting to take advantage of this burgeoning market.

The Controlled Substances Act (CSA) categorizes marijuana as a Schedule I drug, which is the most tightly restricted category, reserved for drugs that have “no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.” As a Schedule I drug, the use, possession, manufacture, importation or distribution of marijuana is federally illegal in the United States. Despite marijuana being scheduled in the same category as LSD, heroin, ecstasy and peyote, the federal government’s approach to marijuana production, possession and use are comparatively relaxed.

A federal budget rider known as the Joyce Amendment, which has been extended through September 2020, prohibits the use of funds allocated to the Department of Justice for purposes of preventing states from “implementing their state laws that authorize the use, distribution, possession or cultivation of medical marijuana.” In essence, this Amendment means that federal enforcement of the CSA in connection with medical marijuana is unlikely in states where medical (not recreational) marijuana is legal.

Additionally, in late 2018, Congress removed hemp from the list of controlled substances regulated under the Controlled Substances Act, effectively legalizing CBD derived from hemp, which is cannabis with less than 0.3 percent tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). However, the Federal Trade Commission and Food and Drug Administration issued numerous joint warning letters to CBD manufacturers, reinforcing the critical point that, just because the product is newly legalized does not mean that advertising for products can contain unsubstantiated or deceptive claims about its benefits or medicinal properties. Additionally, though the use of CBD in foods, beverages and dietary supplements remains illegal, the FDA indicated it is open to issuing regulations to allow the use of CBD in such products, depending on the information it receives from the industry.

Despite the expanding opportunities, publishers and agencies who work with cannabis brands have learned that the use of traditional payment systems can be challenging, as many banks refuse to work with businesses whose products are illegal on the federal level. The federal SAFE Banking Act is expected to go to the U.S. Senate for a vote in 2020. If passed, it would allow banks to work with cannabis businesses that are currently forced to generally work in cash, which, in turn, often requires companies working with cannabis businesses to accept cash payments. The passage of the SAFE Banking Act would allow cannabis businesses to operate like non-cannabis businesses and pay vendors by wire transfer, credit cards and other traditional payment methods.

Despite the federal government’s approach to marijuana and CBD, states take a wide array of approaches to marijuana and hemp production and use. Certain states have legalized marijuana broadly–for recreational and medicinal use. Other states have only legalized marijuana use for medicinal purposes, and sometimes only for certain types of medical conditions. Other states have legalized CBD only, generally mirroring the 2018 Farm Bill’s categorization of hemp-based CBD. In some states, marijuana use is not legal but decriminalized, decreasing the potential liability for use, possession and production, leaving the possibility of civil liability nonetheless. Lastly, some states have not addressed these topics at all, meaning marijuana and/or CBD is fully illegal.

In 2020, it is expected that over ten states will attempt to legalize or expand the legalization of cannabis for adult use, which will further complicate the patchwork of relevant laws. In addition, existing state regulations will evolve further, as the three last holdout states are likely to legalize CBD, and several others will issue statutorily required regulations governing its production, sale and advertising. At the federal level, Congress is not expected to take any meaningful efforts to introduce legislation that would create a harmonized set of rules for the industry this year, so companies will have to continue adapting to rapidly changing state regulations.

In the meantime, members of the advertising industry who work in this field must learn to carefully navigate the myriad state laws, inherent conflicting laws and industry best practices.

On Wednesday, March 18, Davis & Gilbert attorneys Gary Kibel and Rohini Gokhale will explore the nuances, changes in policies and limitations in cannabis and CBD advertising with Eric Meth, the founder and CEO of Good Harvest Co., a cannabis audience data company. To RSVP to the next Counsel 2U: Marketing and Advertising seminar, “Guiding You through the Weeds: Hot Topics in CBD and Cannabis Advertising,” simply click here.

What We’re Reading—February 24

We’ve searched for the most pressing marketing news so you don’t have to. Here’s what’s happening so far the week of February 24th.


We Must Create New Proxies’: In The Absence Of Cookies, Advertisers Focus On Attention-Based Metrics
Digiday

The ad industry is still puzzling over solutions to a future without third-party cookies as a way to prevent losing decades worth of measurement data.

Why it matters: See which tracking alternatives Google, Microsoft and others are looking to as a replacement for third-party cookies.


Is Corona Beer Facing A Brand Crisis Because Of Coronavirus?
Adweek

Corona beer is getting a lift in search from the Coronavirus and #CoronaBeerVirus has over 1.5 million impressions. Even if the beer isn’t contagious, misinformation around Corona’s relation to Coronavirus is going viral.

Why it matters: “There has never been such a huge spike in searches for Corona beer in the past four years as it happened in January 2020,” due to the outbreak of Coronavirus.

Reports are circulating (and even cited within this Adweek piece) that 38 percent of beer-drinking consumers in America would not buy Corona now, with 16 percent of respondents confused as to whether the beer and virus are connected in any meaningful way.


Privacy Changes Are Making Mobile Advertising More Complicated
Adweek

With Apple and Google already planning to nix third-party cookies, experts anticipate similar designs for the mobile app ecosystem.

Why it matters: It’s absolutely past time to give thought to how you’ll deal with attribution and measurement without tracking through third-party cookies.


50 Stats All Marketers Must Know About Gen-Z
Forbes

Bookmark this one: Forbes shares a collection of stats measuring Gen-Z’s makeup, values and orientation towards products and brands.

Why it matters: Gen-Z is uniquely poised, due to the generation’s size and purchasing power, to greatly impact marketing in the coming years. How do you plan to reach them?


Coronavirus Concerns Hit Fashion’s Workplaces
Business of Fashion

Western fashion brands are taking steps to prevent the spread of Coronavirus with workplace provisions and travel restrictions, in light of the recent public health emergency — one that has absolutely no relation to Corona beer.

Why it matters: Taking simple precautions can save lives and set a unified recovery plan for businesses that may become impacted by the spread of COVID-19.


Brands Are Probably Paying Multiple Times For The Same Data
AdExchanger

Disorganization is a major, yet correctable factor causing marketers to pay for the same data twice.

Why it matters: Waste not, want notespecially when it comes to your marketing dollars.


Is Silicon Valley’s Love Affair With Direct-to-Consumer Brands Over?
Business Of Fashion

Silicon Valley’s attitude toward investing in DTC brands has done a 180-degree turn.

Why it matters: “A lot of investors were looking at topline without considering how much it took to get there, but now the question is, ‘At what point will you be profitable?’ And there’s more scrutiny than ever.”


Luxury Brands Go All In On TikTok
Digiday

Typically slow-to-react luxury brand marketers are quickly adopting TikTok as a marketing channel.

Why it matters: Luxury brands on TikTok “have seen the success from other platforms and know there is less risk after [being on] Snapchat, Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.”


Is Your Brand Getting The Six Best Benefits Of Working In Partnership?
The Drum

A look at survey results from over 3,000 brand partners who were asked about the benefits of working in branded partnerships.

Why it matters: “The top six benefits [marketers] see are reaching the right audience easier, better and faster, giving your brand another story, testing and learning, getting smarter, better ROI than other channels and better measurability too.”


Olympics Advertisers Hold Their Breath In Coronavirus Waiting Game
Ad Age

Despite an air of uncertainty surrounding global events in the wake of the spread of COVID-19 (and comments from senior member of the International Olympic Committee, Dick Pound, concerning the cancelation), Tokyo organizing committee CEO Toshiro Muto tried to quash concerns that the Summer Games would be altered in a way that would affect advertisers.

Why it matters: Advertisers should prepare for the worst and hope for the best. “If this is so bad they have to call off the Olympics, trust me when I tell you we’re all going to have a whole lot more to worry about than lost impressions.”


Jif Seeks To Settle The Debate About ‘GIF’ Pronunciation
Mobile Marketer

Whether it’s with a soft “G” or hard “G,” the debate over how to pronounce “GIF” is an Internet “OG.”

Now, J.M. Smucker-owned peanut-butter brand Jif has partnered with Giphy on a digital marketing campaign tapping into cultural conversations around the debate.

Why it matters: The partnership between Jif and Giphy created modern buzz for a very old school brand by leveraging limited-edition products related to the campaign.


The Evolution Of A Chief Marketing Officer
Forbes

A look at what characteristics the modern CMO embodies and how the role has evolved.

Why it matters: “As the CMO uncovers and delivers business insights, they’ll find themselves not only at the table but right next to the CEO.”


Do Shock Tactics Reek Of Brand Desperation?
Campaign Live

Creative directors, strategists and more from adland share their take on Burger King’s moldy Whopper ad and the general use of marketing with ‘shock tactics.’

Why it matters: There’s a fine line between desperation and resoundingly shocking creative work.


The Ten Tenets Of Brand Control
The Drum

The Drum shares helpful tenets for refamiliarizing yourself with the manifold aspects of brand control, including compliance for regulated industries and empowering employee unity.

Why it matters: Brand control (and its corollary, brand safety) is far more than a deck of stylistic guidelines. It doesn’t hurt that in terms of financials, brand value has “repeatedly been shown to be a direct driver of enterprise value.”


Your People Are Your Brand
The Drum

Remember these tips as you prepare to plan employee engagement efforts. Internal activation isn’t just a check-box!

Why it matters: “A brand’s employees need to be treated as a pivotal audience for any new campaign or marketing initiatives, they need to be convinced of the brand’s power, they need to be fully on board.”


Gartner Says Over 40 Percent Of Privacy Compliance Technology Will Rely On AI In The Next Three Years

Marketing Technology Insights

According to the analyst firm, over 40 percent of privacy compliance technology will rely on artificial intelligence (AI) by 2023, up from 5 percent. Privacy-driven spending on compliance is projected to rise to $8 billion worldwide through 2022.

Why it matters: According to Gartner, “More than 60 jurisdictions around the world have proposed or are drafting postmodern privacy and data protection laws.” Privacy leaders are under pressure to ensure that all personal data processed is done so in accordance with the law, which is difficult and expensive to manage without technology. 


Uber Inks Deal With Adomni To Put Ad Displays Atop Vehicles
Adweek

Uber signed a deal with the out-of-home ad-tech company Adomni to introduce ad displays on top of a thousand vehicles in Atlanta, Dallas and Phoenix by April 1. The partnership with Adomni opens a new business unit for Uber, called Uber OOH Powered by Adomni, as well as an additional revenue stream for the ride-sharing company.

Why it matters: Jonathan Gudai, CEO, Adomni told Adweek that the goal of Uber OOH is to “unlock a new ad network and medium at the street level, in many cases with video, and have advertisers be able to reach the consumers—audiences—in a very engaging way.”


The Average Age And Tenure Of C-Suite Executives
MarketingProfs

According to the study by Korn Ferry, the average tenure of a CMO is 3.5 years, compared with 6.9 years for a CEO. Tech CMOs have the shortest average tenure among the industries examined. The average age of a CMO is 54, which ties with CFOs as the youngest among c-suite executives. 

Why it matters: “Short CMO tenure is a reflection of a lack of understanding of how powerful this role can really be in terms of driving business outcomes,” said Caren Fleit, Korn Ferry leader, global marketing officers practice. “This often leads to lack of clarity around tangible deliverables and also to hiring a CMO whose skills and experiences may not be aligned with business needs.”


How Much Money A YouTube Video With 100,000 Views Makes, According To Four Creators
Business Insider

YouTube’s Partner Program allows influencers to earn money through their channels by placing ads within videos. How much money a single YouTube video with 100,000 views makes from Google ads depends on the content of the video and the audience. 

Why it matters: Pay varies widely based on factors like a video’s watch time, length and viewer demographic. For example, a lifestyle and fashion YouTube creator with over 264,000 subscribers earns between $500 to $1,000 on a single video with 100,000 views. Alternately, a content creator who posts personal finance, stock and real-estate investing content earns between $1,300 and $1,500 per video.


‘Nuclear Winter’: Ad Tech Enters The Vulture Capital Era

Digiday

As the market consolidates, distressed ad tech assets are being taken over for a fraction of those companies’ prior valuations, what Zeta Global CEO David Steinberg refers to as, “the nuclear winter of ad tech.”  

Why it matters: The nature of ad tech buyers is changing, a sign of a maturing sector that’s more about cost-saving and synergies rather than strategic growth.


Google Removes 600 Apps From Google Play To Reduce Ad Fraud

Mobile Marketer

Google has removed 600 apps from Google Play Store and banned them from its ad monetization platform for violating disruptive ad policy and disallowed interstitial policy.

Why it matters: Google says it has developed new technologies to protect against one form of disruptive ads on the rise called out-of-context ads, which is when malicious developers serve ads on a mobile device when the user is not actually active in their app.


Why Every Ad Tech Company Must Understand Differential Privacy

Ad Exchanger

Ad Exchanger examines the importance of ad tech companies adopting differential privacy, “a set of cryptographic properties that can be applied to machine learning algorithms in order to set a limit on how much information can be extracted from data before it’s possible to draw inferences about individuals.”

Why it matters: Beyond using differential privacy to randomize large data sets for researchers to access, ad tech companies should care about differential privacy because it provides a foundation for ads to be delivered to large audiences with similar interests without allowing personal data to leave the browser.


Through Tech And Acquisition, Spotify Lays Out Its Podcast Plan

The Drum

Outlook on Spotify’s recent acquisition of The Ringer podcast network for $141-$196 million.

Why it matters: Spotify is set to invest nearly $582 million in podcasting and introduced a tool to dynamically insert personalized ads into podcasts. The goal: to grow its output of exclusive content given it doesn’t take a cut of ad revenue from third-party shows.


Google Tops Facebook, Instagram E-Commerce Activity, Study Finds

Mobile Marketer

A new survey from Oribi found that Google’s paid search ads have a conversion rate of 2.7 percent and Google’s organic search is 2.1 percent versus Facebook’s 1.5 percent. It also found that cheaper products tend to sell better than expensive ones on Facebook and Instagram.

Why it matters: The findings suggest that brand strategies must vary by platform, with a direct sales focus for search engine optimization and paid search, and a branding and awareness focus on social channels.


Editor’s Note: Our weekly reading list is updated daily. This installment is updated until Friday, February 28. Have a tip? We’re looking for must-read articles related to trends and insights in marketing and media. Let us know at editorial@alistdaily.com.