Contenu connexe Similaire à David Hallerman | eMarketer | State of the Online Video Market: Big Growth Ahead (20) Plus de Will Richmond (13) David Hallerman | eMarketer | State of the Online Video Market: Big Growth Ahead2. How big will the digital video ad market
really become over next few years?
9. Several key factors will help or
hinder US digital video ad spending
We’ve identified 16 forces, including…
CTV and tablets: best for the audience
Fear: of cannibalization and lost revenues
Inertia: TV’s power appears everlasting
Audience: large online, but huge TV watchers
GRPs: common currency, but dumb down digital
Targeting: digital’s promise, but TV more reach
Content: TV content still attracts brand dollars
©2012 eMarketer Inc.
10. Connected TVs superbly combine the
strengths of digital and TV
The best of television and digital video attracts
both audience and advertisers.
©2012 eMarketer Inc.
11. Tablets are major game changers for
both audiences and advertisers
Digital marketers believe that tablets provide
the best advertising experience.
©2012 eMarketer Inc.
15. As seen on the web? (Nah!) TV’s power
is still unmatched for many goals
©2012 eMarketer Inc.
16. Extra costs for unique online
A sample of creative discourage many
marketers from making the most
TV’s power: of digital’s strengths.
Digital video
still depends
greatly on
TV creative
(that will
change, but
not quickly)
©2012 eMarketer Inc.
17. The TV industry fears digital video will
cannibalize its existing business
Many TV companies have a vested interest in
keeping digital video from undermining their
current revenue streams. Their tactics include:
Bandwidth metering, also called data caps, could
make digital users think twice before watching another
video, since that would cost them extra or degrade their
service. Furthermore, bandwidth metering is already a
fact of life in the mobile space.
Authentication. TV networks and cable operators
might require users to prove they are paying subscribers
before they can access video online, such as on Hulu.
©2012 eMarketer Inc.
18. The digital video audience is both very
large and somewhat illusory
Most people still spend the vast majority of
their video time in front of the TV.
©2012 eMarketer Inc.
19. Why do many people use social
The digital media while watching TV?
portion of a To get more information.
video ad
campaign
would often
do well to
expand on
the message
“as seen on
TV.”
©2012 eMarketer Inc.
20. Measurement difficulties mean what
can’t be measured can’t be sold
Most brand marketers want unified TV and
video metrics before spending more on digital.
©2012 eMarketer Inc.
21. GRPs offer a common currency to bring
digital and TV together, and yet…
Many marketers say GRPs dumb down digital,
failing to measure engagement and interaction.
©2012 eMarketer Inc.
23. Blending online video with TV—and thereby
boosting digital’s growth—will be slow
It will take several years for digital video to
integrate more completely with TV advertising.
But time is on digital’s side. The five digital screens
are where the audience increasingly watches TV and other
video content, and brands need to reach them anytime
and everywhere.
Marketers get balance. Blending digital video into
their TV messaging offers:
a way to reach audiences they might not have touched otherwise
a way to engage target customers in ways that TV doesn’t allow
a way to make their spending more cost-effective
© 2012 eMarketer Inc.