Viewability or fraud: which is the bigger issue?

By: Marketing Jul 13, 2017

Neil McKinnon, Head of Marketing at Infectious Media, is in discussion with Digiday about the issues with viewability and fraud.

 

“One of the ways we can evolve is to ensure that we only work with vendors who work with our standards of viewability,” said Unilever UK marketing and digital director Alex Tait, whose comments were immediately followed by a graphic from an in-room poll that showed more than 70 percent of the marketers in attendance believed that ads should be traded on viewability.

 

Although industry groups have made a big push to emphasise viewability, some executives claim that viewability isn’t as big a problem as it is made out to be. One executive, speaking on the condition of anonymity, called the industry’s focus on viewability “a red herring that fails to address the pervasiveness of fraudulent traffic.”

 

However, others see the lack of viewable ads as one of the biggest problems in the digital ad supply chain. These issues aren’t dichotomous, but because there is disagreement about which one creates more problems in the digital advertising environment, Digiday asked some advertisers what they see as a bigger scourge: whether an ad is in view on a browser or app, or whether an ad is actually being served to a human.

 

Neil McKinnon, head of marketing at Infectious Media
"Fraud is actually a different beast, because somebody is trying to deceive us. Ad fraud is difficult to put a figure on, but it is a bigger issue because the people doing it are taking money out of the industry."

 

Jonathan Barnard, head of forecasting at Zenith
Anything that prevents ads being viewed by humans wastes advertisers’ money. In terms of numbers, viewability issues are probably a bigger problem than bot fraud, but they both need to be tackled with urgency. … More human views are probably lost to ads being non-viewable than being served to bots.

 

Simon Law, chief strategy officer at Possible
The bigger issue is that digital once promised total visibility of reach and interaction. In reality, the majority of metrics are still focused on impressions, and yet, that fails on so many levels … While we debate the relative fears of below-the-fold ads versus non-human views, we’re avoiding the bigger issue of how we implement metrics that really have value.

 

Andrew Shebbeare, chief product officer at Essence
In the moment, it doesn’t matter whether your ad is missed because it was shown to a bot or served below the fold. If it is unseen by human eyes, it has no shot at influencing human minds. However, when it comes to optimizing programmatic strategy, human traffic filters should come before viewability goals or other measures of relative impression quality.

 

 

Read the full article here.

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