Home Online Advertising After A Long Courtship, DC And Ad Tech Are Getting Serious

After A Long Courtship, DC And Ad Tech Are Getting Serious

SHARE:

gotvEyebrows and heart rates went up in 2012 when political ad spending across digital media surpassed $150 million.

Analysts are shocked that campaigns and super PACs are projected to spend only $1.1 billion in 2016. The media research firm Borrell Associates released a report on Tuesday that demonstrates the gradual embrace of digital marketing methods by political groups, and the budgets that will be in play during the next cycle.

For all the touted progress about ad tech companies integrating with DC, consider that Borrell expects digital media spending to closely rival telemarketing in 2016, but to potentially surpass TV by 2020.

Local

Local expenditures are the “invisible force” for political ad spenders, according to Corey Elliott, Borrell’s research director. The most high-profile campaigns – for president, senator or governor – represent a combined 0.5% of all electoral contests to be held in November 2016. About 29,000 races will be for school boards, county commissions and city councils, and while the amount needed for a local or city campaign is only $62,000 (compared to a US Senate candidate, who must raise almost $4 million to remain competitive), “those add up fast,” said Elliott.

Local campaigns will account for 40% of all political ad dollars, but the fractured nature of that spending undercuts its value for digital tech companies. “Historically, very little money has been spent on digital in these types of races,” said Eli Kaplan, co-founder of the liberal digital agency Rising Tide Interactive. Kaplan said this practice is “bizarre,” since the “weirdly drawn” districts and city lines that characterize local races are ideal for digital’s geofencing and targeting capabilities.

TV/Digital

 The Borrell report said digital marketing was “pocket change” in 2008, rising from $22 million that year to $70 million in last year’s midterms. That trend of upward growth will start “going very fast, very soon,” said Elliott.

Digital channels are expected to absorb 9.5% of all political spending this cycle, which may be more than a billion dollars but is still less than the amount that will be spent on radio ads. Elliott said he was surprised that digital spending will go from being roughly equivalent to telemarketing in the 2016 campaign to on par with TV in 2020.

Politicians’ “adherence to traditional media” stems from logical priorities, said Peter Pasi, a GOP media strategist and VP of political sales at Collective. For instance, a candidate’s biggest challenge may be building name recognition, where TV’s blanket audience may be more valuable than digital’s precision.

Pasi also pointed out that while marketers have pumped money into technology and studies to demonstrate digital ROI, “there is a stunning lack of public research that connects the dots between digital investment and influencing turnout or persuasion.” Digital platforms and publishers have evolved to fill the consumer funnel for brands, but the political funnel (ending in a vote, not a sale or conversion) requires a whole new set of expectations.

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

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

Allocating budgets to TV is “a very safe bet” for politicians, agreed JC Medici, Rocket Fuel’s politics and advocacy director. Medici said he anticipates one or two more cycles before political marketers get that level of comfort with digital.

Social 

Elliott said mobile and social spending are the driving force behind digital growth. “By the 2016 election, over half spent digitally will be on social,” he predicted.

There are, however, limitations to what social can do for politicians.

Kaplan said that social feeds like Twitter and Facebook have a hard ceiling in terms of scaling campaigns. Social media enables a marketer (or candidate or super PAC) to target distinct individuals – the holy grail for political campaigns, which require census-level data – but that leads to UX concerns because users will only stomach limited sponsored political content.

There’s also the fact that digital video occupies a more valuable piece of the political funnel.

“Search and social are important,” Pasi said, “but they are much lower in the funnel, just below display and video, which are beginning to be perceived as closer to traditional media.”

Digital video fills a need for campaigns, which can’t be content to build brand share through search and display ads because they need to actually persuade new voters.

Pasi said social is competing for budgets with established get-out-the-vote techniques, such as direct mail, phone calls and door-to-door campaigning. Digital video, on the other hand, has the opportunity to carve out its own niche as DC spenders drill down into the digital world.

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.