Home Mobile Mobile Measurement Has Been A Challenge Since ‘Day One’

Mobile Measurement Has Been A Challenge Since ‘Day One’

SHARE:

MobileMediaSummitThe year of mobile, the decade of mobile, the year of data – none of the monikers matter if the right measurement isn’t in place.

“Clients are still looking for ROI and to connect the dots,” said Jeff Hinz, managing partner and US digital director at Mediacom, speaking at the Mobile Media Summit on Monday during Internet Week in New York City. “They can’t seem to figure out if mobile is great and successful in a traditional sense … [as in,] moving product off the shelf in a way they would want to measure it.”

Those have never been easy metrics to provide, said Scott Marsden, SVP of media at DigitasLBi, noting that “measurability of mobile has been a challenge for us since day one because of the lack of cookies.”

It’s not that cookies don’t exist on mobile, but rather that they’re ineffective. Mobile web cookies reset every time users shut their browser and in-app cookies aren’t sharable between apps.

“Consumers are saying they want this personalization, but we’re struggling with the data, which is still very much inaccurate,” Marsden said. “We struggle connecting data across screens. The idea that the data is so perfect, that it can tell who you are and where you are and how a message should be customized to you – we’re not there yet.”

The industry’s shift toward people-based marketing – a term trumpeted by Facebook with the launch of its Atlas ad server in September – is still a work in progress, Marsden said.

“We’re trying to eliminate this idea that there’s a phone screen, a tablet screen, a desktop screen,” he said. “At some point, we need to find people where they are.”

That need is driving the trend toward deterministic login models. Facebook has it, Google is reportedly testing a cross-device ID solution with its agency partners and Verizon and AOL  just merged to create their own walled fiefdom.

But it’s all still shaking out.

“Programmatic in the display space is built on cookies [and] until we are really able to move into that device ID area … programmatic will continue to struggle,” said Will Phung, VP of media at M&C Saatchi Mobile, who remarked that DR-focused advertisers in particular “are not very solid in mobile right now.”

That said, the dollars are there, and eMarketer predicts that mobile ad spend will double in 2015 to hit $28.7 billion. By 2019, mobile could make up as much as 72% of total digital ad spend in the US.

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

Get our editors’ roundup delivered to your inbox every weekday.

“We’re still talking about the disparity between time spent and investment in mobile, but it’s a fallacy. Mobile is embedded in almost everything we buy,” said Jonathan Adams, chief digital officer for North America at WPP-owned media agency Maxus.

Clients are “bullish on mobile” – with one caveat, said Shenan Reed, president of digital for North America at MEC.

“The fear at the moment is that so much of it is still so new,” she said. “Am I choosing the right partner? Am I doing it the right way? They don’t want to mess it up. Clients want ROI, but they also dream of ‘Minority Report.’ We’re not that far away from it in reality.”

Not that far away in terms of what’s possible – but sometimes the reality is a little more prosaic.

“Some clients still don’t have mobile sites or mobile-specific creative,” said Mediacom’s Hinz.

Must Read

Comic: He Sees You When You're Streaming

IP Address Match Rates Are a Joke – And It’s No Laughing Matter

According to a new report, IP-to-email matches are accurate just 16% of the time on average, while IP-to-postal matches are accurate only 13% of the time. (Oof.)

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

The DOJ And Google Sharpen Their Remedy Proposals As The Two Sides Prepare For Closing Arguments

The phrase “caution is key” has become a totem of the new age in US antitrust regulation. It was cited this week by both the DOJ and Google in support of opposing views on a possible divestiture of Google’s sell-side ad exchange.

create a network of points with nodes and connections, plain white background; use variations of green and grey for the dots and the connctions; 85% empty space

Alt Identity Provider ID5 Buys TrueData, Marking Its First-Ever Acquisition

ID5 bought TrueData mainly to tackle what ID5 CEO Mathieu Roche calls the “massive fragmentation” of digital identity, which is a problem on the user side and the provider side.

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

CTV Manufacturers Have A New Tool For Catching Spoofed Devices

The IAB Tech Lab’s new device attestation feature for its Open Measurement SDK provides a scaled way for original device manufacturers to confirm that ad impressions are associated with real devices.

Comic: "Deal ID, please."

The Trade Desk And PubMatic Are Done Pretending Deal IDs Work

The Trade Desk and PubMatic announced a new API-based integration for managing deal ID campaigns built atop TTD’s Price Discovery and Provisioning (PDP) API, which was announced earlier this year.

How Agentic Advertising Platform Aimy Uses Comcast’s Universal Ads API

On Monday, Brand Networks announced that Universal Ads would now be buyable through the company’s agentic ad buying platform, Aimy Ads.