Advertisers Getting Nervous About Their Marriage to Google, Facebook
Silicon Valley’s online tech giants are under pressure, and not
just from Russia investigators. This time it is the people who pay the bills:
the advertisers who are asking serious questions about whether their products
were sold alongside covert Russian propaganda.
Just as airlines pull their ads during coverage of air crashes,
advertisers have long had strict rules about the placement of their brands. But
the evolution of the automated digital ad business, including that of Facebook,
Twitter and Google, has led to some distasteful situations for advertisers,
including the placement of hundreds of their banner ads — including
those for politicians — atop jihadi videos on YouTube.
That debacle has led advertisers to be especially sensitive to
what they call the issue of “brand safety,” the effort to make sure their
commercials appear next to quality content.
This month, under intense scrutiny from legislators, Facebook
handed to Congress 3,000 ads linked to Russian meddling in the 2016
presidential election, admitting it had received upward of $100,000 in ad
spending. The ads deliberately tried to exploit the racial and religious
divisions in the United States, investigators said. Google has also found
that Russians bought ads on its platforms to influence the election, The
Washington Post reported Monday.
“The controls are not
as strong as one would like,” said Bill Koenigsberg, chief executive of Horizon
Media, an ad agency that spends around $8 billion a year for clients from Geico
to Burger King. “Facebook and Google have hired people to be brand-safety watchdogs.
Marketers are asking a lot more questions, the agencies that represent them are
trying to hold Facebook and Google a lot more accountable, and if they don’t
clean up the garden you will start to see it affect their pocketbooks.”
He said it isn’t just
the Russia investigations that are causing concern but the parade of bad news
surrounding the online advertising business. “Every day there is another
snippet that comes out, and you piece them together and you’re starting to draw
conclusions that the water isn’t as clear as we’d hoped.”
Facebook said it will
place 1,000 staff members on a team to review ads and soup up its
machine-learning abilities to address the problem. But the revelations are
dragging the company and other online firms into a huge and potentially costly
embarrassment.
No companies have
pulled their ads from Facebook yet, at least not publicly, but executives say
the sentiment is turning negative. That could have substantial implications for
the company's bottom line, which is almost entirely dependent on ad revenue.
One high-level
business strategist, Michael Kassan, chief executive of Medialink, which
advises tech companies and large media conglomerates, said that chief marketing
officers at big companies fear that their bosses will ask them what is adjacent
to their ads.
“People are on much
higher alert,” Kassan said. “I have never seen it so pronounced. It’s every one
of them.”
Kassan thinks the
Russia investigation is still too new for marketers to figure out how it
affects them.
“But you can’t argue
they’re not involved,” he said. “If your brand is supporting the inclusion of
stuff you don’t think is appropriate and you have proximity to it? One is known
by the company one keeps.”
Nonetheless, there is
still a clear reluctance in the advertising world to publicly criticize
Facebook and Google.
“The entire
advertising world is very anxious,” said Mike Paul, an independent expert in
crisis public relations, who has worked at big ad agencies, “but few will admit
publicly that the negative news is affecting Facebook because it is the
800-pound gorilla globally for ad and media buyers.”
The nervousness is not just because of the Russia inquiry. Brian
Wieser, an analyst with Pivotal Research, recently found that the
company claimed to reach an audience of 41 million people in the U.S. ages 18
to 24, though only 31 million of them exist, according to the Census Bureau.
The Video Advertising Bureau, an organization of broadcasters
and cable companies, issued a study on Oct. 2, asserting that there
are fewer people ages 18-34 living in every state than the number of people in
that age range that Facebook claims it can reach in those states.
(NBCUniversal, the parent company of NBC News, is a member of the bureau, as
are the other major networks.)
Facebook said the problem may have been caused by kids
pretending to be older, and said it does not bill advertisers on the basis of
those estimates.
Facebook bought a series of newspaper ads, which ran on
Wednesday, to explain its commitment to transparency. “We take the trust of the
Facebook community seriously,” the ads said. “We will fight any attempt to
interfere with elections or civic engagement on Facebook.”
Last month, ProPublica, the investigative news site, revealed that
Facebook advertisers were able to use self-serve tools to target “Jew haters.”
The company’s chief operating officer, Sheryl Sandberg, acknowledged the
failure.
“We never intended or anticipated this functionality being used
this way – and that is on us,” she said in a company statement.
A few days later, Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s chief executive,
admitted that he was wrong to dismiss fake news on the social network as having
had any influence on the election. “Calling that crazy was dismissive and I
regret it,” he said in a statement.
Facebook is the
second-biggest player in the digital ad market after Google. Both companies are
set to grow their share of the ad pie. Together they are often known as the
“digital duopoly,” with the kind of global scale other media companies can only
dream of. Facebook has 2 billion monthly users. YouTube, owned by Google, has
1.5 billion.
And the financials are
staggering by any measure.
This year, Google
(including YouTube) will garner $35 billion in total digital ad dollars in the
U.S., up 18.9 percent from last year, according to eMarketer, a measurement
firm. That expansion will push Google’s share of the U.S. digital ad market to
42.2 percent.
The firm forecasts
Facebook’s total digital revenues in the U.S. will grow 40.4 percent to $17.37
billion, pushing its share of all U.S. digital ad business to 20.9 percent.
Advertisers have to
take Facebook and Google’s word that they get what they pay for. “We do not
have visibility into whether we got what we bought,” said a senior marketing
executive with a Fortune 500 company, who added: “I’m really nervous. We’re in
business with Facebook and Google, they are the gateway to the audience, but
the relationships are strained.”
Meanwhile, Facebook is
on track to have yet another killer quarter. Last week a Deutsche Bank analyst,
Lloyd Walmsley, told investors: “Facebook is the new IBM (in a good way). …We
think Facebook is growing into a similar position in advertising, with
best-in-class ad systems, a large growing audience across numerous products and
a well-oiled sale machine.”
One ad executive, who did not want to be identified
because of business relationships with the online companies, said that a recent
test run of ads on YouTube found they were placed adjacent to content that
didn’t meet the firm’s requirements 30 percent of the time. After the Las Vegas
shooting last week, for example, false conspiracy theories wound up high on YouTube’s
search results, as reported in the Wall Street Journal. YouTube said it
would tweak its search results to show more reliable sources of news.
Some of YouTube’s largest advertisers in 2016 dropped their spending
by 95 percent or more, according to Pathmatics, a company that tracks online
advertising, and measured desktop ad spending.
The company says AT&T notably reduced spending on YouTube by 76
percent over the year before (January through August). Disney spent less than
$200,000 from April to August after spending more than $1 million in January,
the data showed. Overall, however, Pathmatics said that spending on desktop
YouTube was up 31 percent for the period January through August versus the same
period last year.
In August, Google said it would refund advertisers for ads placed on
dodgy websites with fraudulent traffic counts, according to a Wall Street
Journal report.
Proctor & Gamble, the packaged-goods giant, cut more than $100
million in digital spending beginning in March, the company’s chief brand
officer, Marc Pritchard, said in a speech in Orlando, Florida, on Thursday.
“There is no question ads should ever be on an ISIS video,” Pritchard
said.
Martin Sorrell, chief executive of the WPP Group, an
advertising holding company whose agencies spend billions of ad dollars around
the globe, said the pressure on Facebook is going to intensify. He said he has
urged Facebook for some time to acknowledge that it is not just a platform.
“They are a media company,” he said. “They seem to have acknowledged
the need for human review and that you can’t just rule by algorithm alone.”
Randall Rothenberg, president and chief executive of the Interactive
Advertising Bureau, which represents Google, Facebook and other big content
companies and advertising firms, said there’s an industry-wide effort to fix a
host of issues, from fraud to cybersecurity to fake news.
“What has changed over the past three to four months, thanks in no
small part to the Mueller investigation and the dribbling of information from
various parties, is a broader understanding from multiple constituents that
these things are all connected,” he said, referring to Robert Mueller, the
special counsel investigating Russian meddling in last year’s election.
“The common understanding is out there,” Rothenberg added, “and now
there is a greater will among more parties to come to the table to solve
it.”
FROM NBC.com
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