Real-Time Bidding: New era of Digital Advertising
New technologies have introduced a variety of challenges to
advertising companies. RTB, or real-time bidding, addresses many of these
challenges by providing a direct and flexible method of matching consumers to
appropriate advertising content. It offers several key benefits to the buy and
sell sides.
Real-time bidding (RTB) will be a significant factor in
fulfilling the promise of online digital advertising, which has been on the
limit of dramatic changes for many years.
RTB, as defined by Parks Associates, describes the automated
process of buying and selling online display advertising in real time, and it
incorporates enhanced solutions in targeting algorithms and data analytics in
order to deliver better targeting, greater control and more granular campaigns.
Given these strong benefits to ad buyers and sellers, RTB is
starting to claim more revenues in the online advertising industry, and by
2017, it will account for 34 percent of all online display ad revenues.
Challenges in Online
Advertising
Several industry factors will drive this shift to RTB. New
technologies have introduced a variety of challenges to advertising companies.
Consumers can skip commercials or go completely "over-the-top" in
their video viewing, and they are now using multiple screens to consume
content. Parks Associates consumer research reports over one-half of U.S. broadband
households have a smartphone and nearly one-third have a tablet. All these
extra screens make it more difficult to follow consumers and necessitate
detailed tracking solutions.
These types of tracking solutions raise privacy concerns,
often cited by advocacy groups, which could lead to customer rejection of the
online advertising industry as a whole. However, Parks Associates' report
Advertising Strategies on Connected TVs finds 45 percent of U.S. consumers are
comfortable with targeted ads based on their TV-viewing habits. Over one-third
are comfortable with targeted ads based on their online browsing habits,
according to the report Monetization of Multiscreen Video: Content Owner
Strategies.
While there are and always will be some consumer segments
unwilling to share any details of their buying and browsing habits, many
consumers are willing to provide personal details in exchange for something of
value.
The more significant challenge has been in matching
consumers with the appropriate content and, in some cases, matching consumers
with any content. For the past 10 years, companies looking to buy and place
online ads on a large scale typically have purchased blocks of ads, usually in
groups of 1,000, through ad networks. Agencies pay these ad networks a CPM-based
rate to reach audience segments with the understanding that a portion of the
online ads will not reach intended consumer targets. The industry considers ad
networks as "blind-buys": Buyers do not have full control over ad
placement; so as a result, ads can appear on any website located in the
network.
RTB addresses many of these challenges by providing a direct
and flexible method of matching consumers to appropriate advertising content.
How Does RTB Work?
RTB is a data-driven buying model through which ad agencies
place auction-based bids for individual ad impressions. This process takes
place in milliseconds, allowing agencies to adjust their strategies almost
immediately based on the performance of individual sites and ad impressions.
When a user visits a website, in addition to serving up HTML
code, the Web server delivers an ad tag to an ad server, which ultimately sends
the user's cookie ID to an SSP (supply-side platform) or ad exchange to be
auctioned using RTB APIs. Buyers use that ID data to value the ad impression
and set their bids. In an RTB environment, ad buyers analyze multiple variables
of an ad impression, such as demographics, geography, and publisher attributes.
The ad exchange determines the winner, and then the information flow goes back
to the ad server to deliver the ad to the user's browser. This entire process
is done automatically, in real time.
Below are a few examples to illustrate the meaning of RTB
and its benefits beyond the standard targeting parameters (Geo Target, Gender,
Age, Category, Demographic, etc.). Let’s say we want to set a maximum bid price
for display ads in a campaign (bid = $1 DCPM). We can set the system to change
the bids according to a set of rules, and all in real time (50 milliseconds
before the ad loads)!
For example:
- If your ad appears below the fold - bid 0.25c
- If the user is seeing the ad for the first time – bid $1
- If the user saw the ad 3 times this week – bid $0.5
- If the user saw the ad 5 times this week – bid $0.1
- If the user saw the ad 7 times this week – don’t bid
- If the user visited your site in the past (retargeted user) – bid $3
- If the user visited your site and left at the checkout – bid $5 (and show him an ad with a discount!)
- If the user usually visits sites similar to yours – bid $2
RTB offers several key benefits to the buy and sell sides.
Core Benefits of RTB
Agencies know who they want to contact due to data
management platforms (DMPs). DMPs provide audience intelligence across the
entire digital ad ecosystem, not just the RTB ad market, containing info on
variables such as purchase intentions, household demographics and behavioral
patterns. DMPs collect, manage, and evaluate online user information obtained
from multiple media sources to identify and create audience segments. They
enable the delivery of the right ad unit to the right consumer on the most
effective media channel.
The confluence of these elements boosts the overall value of
the RTB process for all players, so much that on the supply side, publishers
are beginning to release premium inventory to SSPs to capture larger shares of
ad budgets processed in RTB markets.
Facebook and Ad
Exchanges
In mid-2012, Facebook announced the expansion of its growing
display ad business into the RTB marketplace, with several DSPs already testing
the Facebook Exchange, or FBX. RTB-enabled ad exchanges aggregate ad
impressions across many online channels and connect ad sellers to buyers.
Primarily a sell-side service, ad exchanges provide ad inventory details, such
as website type, ad unit size, and user geography to ad bidders (e.g., MBDs,
DSPs, ad networks). They also manage the entire ad-auction process - receiving
the bid, determining the winner and facilitating ad placement.
Within the FBX system, brand advertisers can target Facebook
users based on their Web-browsing history, with ads displayed on a Facebook
page based on third-party Web browsing habits. It matches users more closely
with not just relevant content but with products where they have displayed
purchase intention. For example, Facebook Exchange can serve up ads about cheap
flights or local auto dealers to a user who has visited a travel site or the
Ford home page.
FBX indicates Facebook is getting more aggressive in its
advertising methods -- and is forging new ways to build revenues. According to
comScore, the social network serves approximately one-third of U.S. display ad
impressions, so the FBX could open up a large source of ad inventory to the RTB
market.
Facebook is competing with other companies in the RTB market,
notably Yahoo and Google, which have established their presence in the RTB
market through a variety of acquisitions. Yahoo acquired Right Media in 2007,
Rubicon Project purchased Fox Audience Network in 2010, and Google followed
suit in 2011 with the acquisition of Admeld.
Growth of the RTB
Market
Agency demand for cross-platform ad synergies will drive the
development and adoption of RTB sell-side platforms for emerging media,
particularly mobile, online video, and social media, but these markets will
remain small, with growth contingent on the maturation of the online display
RTB ad market. Even so, Parks Associates asserts this market will grow quickly.
RTB is a complicated process, with unfamiliarity and a lack of industry
knowledge as potential inhibitors, but even if they have any significant
impact, they will serve only to slow growth, not stop it.
The advantages of the RTB process to ad buyers and sellers
are simply too great to ignore. Ad spend will shift away from traditional
online display advertising to the RTB ad market as buyers become more
comfortable with the concept and realize benefits such as cost efficiencies,
reduced ad waste, rapid scalability, and improved control and transparency. RTB
revenues generated by online display ads in North America will reach US$1.6
billion in 2012 and $7 billion by 2017.
Source:
ecommercetimes.com and adgorithms.com
Real-Time Bidding: New era of Digital Advertising
Reviewed by Journey Of Digital Media
on
1/16/2014
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