Home On TV & Video Programmatic Transparency Will Help CTV Scale

Programmatic Transparency Will Help CTV Scale

SHARE:
Nicole Scaglione, global VP of OTT & CTV business at PubMatic

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

TV advertising is undergoing a tectonic shift from programmed to programmatic.

Not unlike on the open web – but unlike on linear – advertisers can use programmatic to get scale across connected TV.

There’s been “pent-up demand” for biddable CTV because buyers realize they can get more flexibility, said Nicole Scaglione, global VP of PubMatic’s OTT and CTV business.

But flexible CPMs isn’t the only reason TV advertisers are embracing biddable marketplaces, Scaglione said. They’re also looking for transparency and for first-party signals from publishers in the programmatic bidstream.

The shift from IO-based buys to biddable TV buying is inevitably a shift toward more transparency, and “that’s the gate that needs to open,” Scaglione said.

Scaglione spoke with AdExchanger.

AdExchanger: Why is programmatic buying becoming more popular for CTV?

NICOLE SCAGLIONE: Programmatic CTV gives advertisers more ways to buy as opposed to locking money into insertion orders.

Buyers especially need flexibility in uncertain economic environments, and biddable buying is almost like a safe haven because buyers aren’t beholden to a spend commitment. If a media campaign isn’t panning out to an advertiser’s performance expectations, for example, they don’t have to continue spending against that campaign.

How are TV buyers using programmatic?

Buyers are largely opting for programmatic guaranteed deals for biddable CTV. Programmatic guaranteed allows buyers to optimize their campaigns by securing scarce inventory in advance for a preferred rate.

But buyers are starting to emerge from the security blanket of programmatic guaranteed and try more private marketplaces and open auctions.

Why are programmatic guaranteed deals a safety move?

Programmatic guaranteed has basically the same business rules as an IO, but it’s executed in an automated way.

Programmatic guaranteed first became popular around 2014, when the industry realized it was a way to bend the rules on programmatic by pre-reserving inventory.

But the idea makes sense: Programmatic guaranteed became the way to lock up the most premium inventory, including on CTV.

What are the benefits of a private marketplace for CTV buying?

PMPs are a little different from programmatic guaranteed because PMP buys are not, well, guaranteed. But buyers like that PMPs can give them more control over what they’re buying and how much they’re paying for it.

PMPs come in two different flavors: fixed price and floor price.

A buyer might choose fixed-price PMPs if they’re budget-conscious, for example, or otherwise don’t want to pay more than a specific amount. But another buyer might opt for a floor-price PMP because they’re not winning enough bids, and a price floor gives buyers the flexibility to bid more competitively and secure scarcer inventory.

Floor-price PMPs benefit both sides. Publishers can see higher closing CPMs, and buyers have a better chance of scaling inventory in line with their campaign goals.

Why would a CTV buyer choose PMPs over programmatic guaranteed deals and vice versa?

There’s value in programmatic guaranteed to reserve premium inventory and lock in high-value impressions. But it’s also valuable for buyers to have more control in a PMP over not just what they’re buying, but the price at which they’re willing to buy it.

The true power of biddable CTV will come from floor-price PMP executions, because that’s where buyers have more control.

The essence of programmatic is to scale buys by giving advertisers the control they need to feel more comfortable expanding beyond guaranteed deals. One way that publishers can make advertisers feel more secure with their buys is by sharing more content signals through the bidstream, including video genre and language, program ratings and content network or studio.

CTV buyers say they lack content signals in their programmatic buys, especially show-level information. Is there something holding back that degree of transparency?

Yes, and the reasons are complicated.

It’s quite realistic for buyers to ask for the signals that matter most to them when they buy inventory. If anything, CTV can generate more media transparency than linear because it uses first-party data to optimize CPMs. But there’s still no standard taxonomy as to which types of data signals publishers can or will share in a bidstream.

Does transparency differ between linear and streaming?

I don’t think linear and streaming TV are that far apart relative to transparency.

The transparency of linear is knowing what show your ad ran against and at what time, and it’s possible to know that information about streaming buys, too. It’s just a matter of the buy and sell sides coming together and agreeing to transact media in a way that’s secure and creates a higher return on investment for both sides.

The industry has the tools to become way more transparent – we just have to agree that we’re going to use them.

How can transparency help grow programmatic TV?

Programmatic blows up the idea of premium. Premium video buys aren’t just about knowing the network and genre of inventory. For buyers, a premium buy is about knowing that they’re buying against the content they want, which involves receiving content signals from publishers through the bidstream.

Programmatic helps scale premium buys, because if publishers share the signals that buyers need in the bidstream to feel more secure, buyers will become more comfortable buying against multiple supply sources in more open auction-like environments. They’ll realize they can scale premium investments in multiple ways, not just by making big investments in pre-reserved programmatic guaranteed.

For CTV, premium and scale are historically opposing forces. But by opening up more transparent signals to the industry, those forces can harmonize.

This interview has been edited and condensed.

For more articles featuring Nicole Scaglione, click here.

Must Read

Meta Is Launching An Easy Button For CAPI

Meta is simplifying its CAPI setup and teaching its pixel new tricks, including adding an AI-powered feature that automatically pulls in data from an advertiser’s website.

TelevisaUnivision Joins The Streaming Self-Service Bandwagon

TelevisaUnivision is the latest TV publisher to join the self-serve trend that’s rising in popularity across connected TV advertising. Its streaming inventory is now available to buy through fullthrottle.ai’s self-serve platform. The collaboration includes an ad bidder designed to improve both targeting and measurement.

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

For Google Advertisers Who Overpaid The Monopoly – Don’t Hate, Arbitrate

Law firm Keller Postman is leading mass arbitration suits against Google, seeking advertiser damages for alleged monopoly overpricing. The total available pot is a quarter-trillion dollars.

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

Can An AI Solution Fix Misaligned Marketing Orgs?

Opal launched Gem, a new AI solution, to help large brands unify the layers of media and tech within their organizations.

Sports Publisher On3 Tries AI Recommendations To Keep Engagement In Its Home Court

Mula’s AI native content feed helps On3 keep its engagement and RPS consistent amid traffic drop-offs to publisher sites and the growing scarcity of online attention.

Comic: Race To The Bottom

Hearst Built A Unified Ad Marketplace To Simplify Omnichannel News Buys

Hearst is stitching together its far‑flung news properties into a single programmatic marketplace to simplify buying local news and shore up its business as the ad market shifts.