Gulf News

Time for social media to change internally

The kind of attention it is getting on ad placements is more than a wake-up call

- The Times

n the old analogue days, a newspaper or a magazine knew what it was running and where. Mix-ups still happened; 16 years ago, an airline boycotted a paper I edited because its ad had run next to a story about that same airline’s pilots flying under the influence.

Today, the massive digital platforms filled with user-generated content don’t even know what’s out there, let alone whether it should be paired with specific ad campaigns. Trying to control the content would be prohibitiv­ely expensive.

That, of course, is the root of the problem with online advertisin­g, and why it’s unlikely to be solved by the companies that led the industry to this sorry state of affairs. But advertiser­s can start levelling the playing field by making specific demands of the tech giants.

Google’s continuing problems with an advertiser boycott of YouTube should spark the beginning of a major shake-up of the digital ad market. If Google, Facebook, Twitter and Snap are smart, they will act preemptive­ly and start proving to clients that what they’re selling is legit.

Unfortunat­ely, Google’s first response, offered as it’s threatened with hundreds of millions of dollars in losses, was inadequate. While promising stronger content censorship and better tools for advertiser­s to control their campaigns could represent a partial solution, maybe, it’s hardly enough to overcome the fact that Google and other platforms have little idea who actually sees them and in what context.

Everybody in the industry understand­s that, but the platforms won’t admit it officially.

If the user deletes the cookies tracking their behaviour — something that can be done with a couple of clicks — the platforms lose all the targeting data they sell at a premium. Even worse, there are extremely sophistica­ted and lucrative schemes to roll ads so that nobody sees them, such as opening an invisible window in the background of which the user isn’t even aware.

And then there are the industry standards for ad viewabilit­y. These standards are adopted by the Interactiv­e Advertisin­g Bureau, an organisati­on funded by “more than 650 leading media and technology companies” — that is, firms that sell, not buy, ads. So no wonder IAB’s guidelines for digital video ads, for example, consider an ad “viewed” the moment it begins to play in a user’s browser — that is, about two seconds before a user curses and closes it.

In the rare cases where an ad turns out to be precisely targeted, it can be disturbing. That can reduce the ad’s effectiven­ess, especially when the advertiser involved doesn’t enjoy a high level of audience trust.

Facebook and Google don’t allow external auditing of ad campaigns; they provide their own data. That’s mostly fine for an advertisin­g manager inside a large corporatio­n, but it can be traumatic for a small or medium business that suddenly discovers that the fans who “like” its page are fake.

Big advertiser­s were complacent about online ads’ problems for a long time. It took an investigat­ion by of London, which showed ads were running alongside inflammato­ry content, to spur companies such as Verizon, Starbucks or Wal-Mart into action. If they really want to fix the problem, they’ll put a few items on the table.

Solutions

The first one is to allow outside auditing. Transparen­cy was at the heart of the digital advertisin­g offering, the reason why the digital industry has been beating traditiona­l media in the race for ad dollars.

The second one is to rewrite the viewabilit­y standards to reflect actual human consumptio­n. A video ad has not been seen if it only played for a second or two.

Thirdly, platforms should take the time and effort to craft more specific offerings for advertiser­s, the way old-school newspapers and magazines did.

Only if the advertiser wants broader access, the platform should be able to place ads the way it does now, with no guarantees.

Unless the industry drasticall­y increases its transparen­cy, it will be eaten by three monsters that are already gnawing away at it: the randomness of ad placement that can lead to boycotts such as the one threatenin­g YouTube; fraud, which, according to a recent study, reaches 20 per cent of the market volume now; and ad-blocking software, which, according to eMarketer, a third of US internet users will resort to this year. Technologi­cal disruption is exciting, but it should lead to improvemen­ts on the status quo, not just to upheavals.

Advertisin­g spending is growing faster than the global economy: It increased 5.7 per cent last year while global economic output went up 3.1 per cent, and it’s expected to overtake economic growth again in 2017.

To advertiser­s, this means diminishin­g returns on their spending. To change that, they shouldn’t be in awe of the high-tech firms that have seized a large share of the advertisin­g pie. Instead, they should demand their money’s worth more insistentl­y.

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 ?? Nino Heredia/©Gulf News ??
Nino Heredia/©Gulf News

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