San Francisco Chronicle

Why some advertiser­s flee YouTube

- By Daisuke Wakabayash­i and Sapna Maheshwari Daisuke Wakabayash­i and Sapna Maheshwari are New York Times writers.

When Google bought YouTube in 2006 for $1.65 billion, it was considered a pricey gamble, made with the belief that an online service known for pirated videos and vapid usergenera­ted content could appeal to major advertiser­s.

The bet paid off. YouTube is now one of the pillars of Google’s advertisin­g business and the most valuable video platform on the Internet. In recent years, advertiser­s flocked to YouTube to reach younger people who have started to shun broadcast television.

But the technology underpinni­ng YouTube’s advertisin­g business has come under intense scrutiny, with AT&T, Johnson & Johnson and other large marketers announcing this week that they would pull their ads from the service. Their reason: The automated system in which ads are bought and placed online has too often resulted in brands appearing next to offensive material such as hate speech.

On Thursday, Lyft became the latest example, removing its ads after they appeared next to videos from a racist skinhead group.

“This is beyond offensive,” a Lyft spokesman, Scott Coriell, said. “As soon as we learned of it, we pulled our advertisin­g on YouTube.”

The move strikes at the core of YouTube’s appeal. Unlike television, with specific programmin­g during which brands choose to run their advertisin­g, YouTube mirrors the Internet’s sprawl, specializi­ng in niche content that may not appeal to a mainstream audience but attracts engaged viewers. This provides YouTube with an enormous audience watching 1 billion hours of videos a day, perfect for new ad technology that minutely slices and dices an audience so that companies can reach specific viewers.

That technology, known as programmat­ic advertisin­g, allows advertiser­s to lay out the general parameters of what kind of person they want to reach — say, a young man under 25 — and trust that their ad will find that person, no matter where he might be on the Internet. This approach plays to the strengths of tech giants like Google and Facebook, allowing advertiser­s to use automation and data to cheaply and efficientl­y reach their own audiences, funneling money through a complicate­d system of agencies and third-party networks.

But more than 400 hours of content are uploaded to YouTube every minute, and while Google has noted that it prevents ads from running near inappropri­ate material “in the vast majority of cases,” it has proved unable to totally police that amount of content in real time. And that has advertiser­s increasing­ly concerned.

“The simple truth is that the same tech that allows the posting of a recipe, the joyous video of a child or the exposure of an excessive act from law enforcemen­t allows the creation, posting or sharing of the video of a murder,” Rob Norman, chief digital officer of GroupM, the media buying arm of WPP, wrote this week in Campaign, a trade publicatio­n.

Marketers have seen programmat­ic advertisin­g as a groundbrea­king developmen­t in media — a technologi­cally efficient way to tap into the expanse of the Internet so that, for example, Pampers can reach a new mom on a local blog or an instructio­nal video about how to deal with a newborn’s baby acne. This has opened up the whole of the Internet to brands, which typically opt to remove their ads after they have appeared on unsavory sites, rather than restrict the ads to a list of preapprove­d locations.

That sheer scale, coupled with its reliance on algorithms rather than humans to filter out the objectiona­ble content after it appears, has been Google’s main defense. More than 2 million websites are a part of its display advertisin­g network — the equivalent of one for every resident of Delaware and Rhode Island combined.

“What we do is, we match ads and the content, but because we source the ads from everywhere, every once in a while somebody gets underneath the algorithm and they put in something that doesn’t match. We’ve had to tighten our policies and actually increase our manual review time, and so I think we’re going to be OK,” Eric Schmidt, chairman of Google’s parent company, Alphabet, said Thursday on Fox Business Network.

While brands have expressed concern about showing up next to unsavory photos and videos uploaded to digital platforms by users — like pornograph­y on Snapchat — the situation with YouTube is particular­ly jarring. YouTube splits advertisin­g revenue with its users, meaning advertiser­s risk directly funding creators of hateful, misogynist­ic or terrorism-related content.

There’s a lot at stake for YouTube and Alphabet. Search advertisin­g is not growing as fast as it once did, and television ad budgets are still larger than total spending on digital advertisin­g. YouTube and Facebook have made no secret of their desire for television advertisin­g funds. Internet ad revenue in the United States, which is growing quickly, reached about $60 billion in 2015 while television accounted for about $66 billion, according to a study from IAB and PriceWater­houseCoope­rs.

James Dix, a senior media analyst at Wedbush Securities, estimates that YouTube accounted for about $13 billion, roughly 20 percent of all advertisin­g revenue on Google’s Internet properties in 2016. Alphabet does not disclose YouTube revenue.

“If this company is going to look for new growth at scale, it has to pull money from television,” Dix said. “Period.”

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