Home On TV & Video Spectacles’ Biggest Advertising Advantage Nobody Is Talking About

Spectacles’ Biggest Advertising Advantage Nobody Is Talking About

SHARE:

vincentcacaceOn TV And Video” is a column exploring opportunities and challenges in programmatic TV and video.

Today’s column is written by Vincent Cacace, founder and CEO at Vertebrae.io.

Snap Inc. wants to be the de facto camera company by taking the camera out of people’s hands and creating a frictionless portal into everyday life.

The company unveiled its first hardware product, Spectacles, the Friday before Advertising Week. Days later, Snap’s chief strategy officer, Imran Khan, took the stage at the event to pitch advertisers the new techy sunglasses.

Now that Snap is on track to normalizing the behavior of using a wearable that sits in front of your eyes, the company is teasing out plans to bring advertisers into the augmented world in front of Spectacles-sporting consumers.

Khan explained how brands can move beyond Snapchat’s previous focus on vertical-oriented video and use Spectacles to shoot circular-shaped video. There’s been good reporting on how this reshapes advertisers’ thinking on ways to leverage Snapchat videos, giving brands new ways to create video that are both vertical and horizontal.

But it’s not brands behind Spectacles shooting their own videos that offers the most upside to advertisers, but rather brands cleverly and natively inserting themselves throughout the physical-augmented world in front of people.

For a visual illustration, check out the secret filter first uncovered and reported on Twitter by @MosheIsaacian.

Snap just cracked the nut on an entirely new physical-meets-augmented world advertising market. Once you point the Spectacles at the lettering on its protective case, a filter unlocks and shows floating bubbles of snaps. Now, imagine the possibilities and future implications of Snap hardware in augmented reality (AR).

It’s not difficult to imagine the implications on sporting events and concerts alone given Snap’s event geofilters prevalence. For example, the NFL could upsell its advertising partners to sponsor special geofilters in-stadium for fans. A fan could shoot videos at a game with his Spectacles and unlock a filter that shares all the concurrent Snaps being taken by fellow fans in-stadium, all made possible by Budweiser, Samsung or you name it.

The path Snap is on offers plenty of advertising upside, but this comes with incredible technological challenges. Spectacles will help to propel the advertising industry toward unlocking creative opportunities that are no longer stuck inside the box of a typical ad unit – whether that be video or display.

To enable creative freedom in AR (and virtual reality) brand storytelling, flexible technical infrastructure – using asset bundle architecture or otherwise – needs to be standardized to allow for native ad experiences in the real and virtual worlds.

As the ad tech industry catches up to Snap, there will be exciting ways to also dynamically, and perhaps programmatically, insert subtle native ads that have contextual relevance to the augmented world in front of Spectacles-sporting users on their mobile devices, and later in true AR hardware.

One step at a time, of course. For now, Snap can rest easy knowing it succeeded where Google Glass failed. The Los Angeles-based soon-to-IPO tech giant has successfully made it cool for people to wear eyewear with tech embedded in it.

Welcome to the future of AR advertising.

Follow Vertebrae (@vertebraeinc) and AdExchanger (@adexchanger) on Twitter.

Must Read

Google Ads Will Now Use A Trusted Execution Environment By Default

Confidential matching uses a TEE built on Google Cloud infrastructure to create an isolated computing environment for ad targeting and measurement. It will now be the default setting for all uses of advertiser first-party data in Customer Match.

In 2019, Google moved to a first-price auction and also ceded its last look advantage in AdX, in part because it had to. Most exchanges had already moved to first price.

Unraveling The Mystery Of PubMatic’s $5 Million Loss From A “First-Price Auction Switch”

PubMatic’s $5 million loss from DV360’s bidding algorithm fix earlier this year suggests second-price auctions aren’t completely a thing of the past.

A comic version of former News Corp executive Stephanie Layser in the courtroom for the DOJ's ad tech-focused trial against Google in Virginia.

The DOJ vs. Google, Day Two: Tales From The Underbelly Of Ad Tech

Day Two of the Google antitrust trial in Alexandria, Virginia on Tuesday was just as intensely focused on the intricacies of ad tech as on Day One.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters
A comic depicting Judge Leonie Brinkema's view of the her courtroom where the DOJ vs. Google ad tech antitrust trial is about to begin. (Comic: Court Is In Session)

Your Day One Recap: DOJ vs. Google Goes Deep Into The Ad Tech Weeds

It’s not often one gets to hear sworn witnesses in federal court explain the intricacies of header bidding under oath. But that’s what happened during the first day of the Google ad tech-focused antitrust case in Virginia on Monday.

Comic: What Else? (Google, Jedi Blue, Project Bernanke)

Project Cheat Sheet: A Rundown On All Of Google’s Secret Internal Projects, As Revealed By The DOJ

What do Hercule Poirot, Ben Bernanke, Star Wars and C.S. Lewis have in common? If you’re an ad tech nerd, you’ll know the answer immediately.

shopping cart

The Wonderful Brand Discusses Testing OOH And Online Snack Competition

Wonderful hadn’t done an out-of-home (OOH) marketing push in more than 15 years. That is, until a week ago, when it began a campaign across six major markets to promote its new no-shell pistachio packs.