The Scotsman

Watch out, Facebook and Google – Amazon is on the warpath

Comment John Mclellan

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The threat from Facebook and Google to media companies, one of the main themes of Channel 4 newsman Jon Snow’s impassione­d address to the Edinburgh TV Festival last week, is real enough but a threat to their might is looming. Snow’s demand for the tech vampires to cough up taxes which reflect the millions they suck from the UK’S advertisin­g markets is justified but will do little for publishers and broadcaste­rs who are virtually powerless as media buying agencies continue to herd clients towards them because of the precision targeting of tailored audiences they offer.

The most likely challenge to the duopoly will come not from HMRC but other techbased giants like Amazon and Rakuten who use similar digital communicat­ion tools to understand their customers. But unlike Google and Facebook, where communicat­ion is the product, for them communicat­ion is the means by which goods are sold. Control the communicat­ions and you control the markets, so, having bought Whole Foods, Amazon quietly launched a tool to encourage Youtube “influencer­s” – individual­s who have a big enough network to impact on traffic and spending patterns – to join its own influencer­s pro - gramme. So, as Amazon continues to dev- astate high streets by delivering vast ranges of cheap goods to doorsteps within hours, it now has a television channel and a social media programme targeted at the highestval­ue users. This gives it the potential to become the ultimate one- stop shop, offering a communicat­ions, marketing, transactio­n and delivery package to link manufactur­ers directly with customers in a way that Google or Facebook can’t match.

Why then, Amazon can legitimate­ly ask, should we pay millions to Google and Facebook when we know more about our customers’ buying patterns than they do? This not only poses a threat to the tech vampires, but the media buying agencies who have made fortunes advising firms where to spend their marketing budgets. The media buyers will deny they could become less relevant but it’s by no means impossible when all Amazon needs to do is recruit its own media advisers and the chain will be complete.

Few disagree that the public needs media channels independen­t of the buying chains, those trusted environmen­ts where informatio­n is untainted and balanced judgments can be reached. But as agencies continue to culvert clients’ cash to Face - book and Google, by the time they wake up to the threats to their business, it could be too late because the agencies will have helped destroy the options.

First Craigslist and Gumtree came for newspapers, then Facebook and Google came for TV and radio, then Amazon came for them. ● John Mclellan is director of the Scottish Newspaper Society and a City of Edinburgh Conservati­ve councillor

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