Bangkok Post

The sea changes that are upending advertisin­g

Why retail and commerce media spending is starting to soar.

- By Marc Brodherson Marc Brodherson is a senior partner in the New York office of McKinsey and Co

Advertisin­g is an amazing industry. It’s worth about a trillion dollars globally, growth exceeds GDP, and it is either the primary business model or one of the fastest-growing ones for at least five of the top 10 companies by global market capitalisa­tion.

Advertisin­g matters to traditiona­l media companies and tech giants, big brands and small businesses, agencies and other ad services and tech providers. Now it even matters to non-media consumer companies that are starting advertisin­g businesses.

There’s been a sea change that is accelerati­ng in traditiona­l brand advertisin­g as consumers spend their time differentl­y and tech giants compete with traditiona­l TV advertisin­g.

Younger audiences are spending more time watching short-form mobile videos instead of traditiona­l TV content and playing video games that are normally less amenable to advertisin­g. Combined with the rise of ad-free streaming, these trends make it harder than ever to reach audiences who can pay to avoid ads, and they raise socioecono­mic questions about who has to see them.

Another growing trend is large tech platforms launching ad-supported tiers for their streaming products and moving into the most valuable ad category of all: live sports. At a minimum, this will make the market even more competitiv­e for legacy TV and further collapse the boundaries between brand and performanc­e marketing as well as digital and TV marketing.

But the biggest trend right now is the rise of e-commerce companies building advertisin­g businesses by selling access to their consumers. We call this retail media or commerce media, and it is a new way for advertiser­s to reach consumers.

SPONSORED LISTINGS

Right now, retail brands with consumer data can reach customers at the moment they express interest in a product. They sell sponsored listings, which then pop up to consumers as suggested products. In some cases, these lines of business are worth tens of billions of dollars, with margins that can exceed 20 times traditiona­l retail margins.

The investor community is starting to recognise commerce media as a material part of company valuations, though retailers are primarily known for selling consumer goods rather than ads.

Retail media is expanding to players like rideshare and delivery companies, which know users’ locations and can put relevant ads in the apps at the right time. Hotel chains are doing it, credit card companies and banks are looking at it, and airlines have the potential to get into it — they have screens on planes and in apps, and physical media such as billboards and in-flight magazines in the terminal, on the jet bridge, or on the plane.

These seismic forces are reshaping advertisin­g. By 2028, we believe global retail and commerce media spending will be bigger than all of TV and streaming advertisin­g.

This provides an unpreceden­ted ability to do closed-loop advertisin­g, where a company can say, “I know an ad appeared, and I know it did or did not lead to a purchase.” It’s super-targeted, highly performati­ve media. This effectivel­y collapses the marketing funnel from awareness to considerat­ion to purchase into a single step.

Media and social platforms are also experiment­ing with this, collapsing the funnel the other way by turning their content into shoppable media, in which the audience can make purchases inside of the content they are consuming.

This leads to challenges on the advertiser side. In the past, a traditiona­l brand doing a lot of brand advertisin­g could call four TV networks, three newspapers, and maybe a little radio and premium digital publishing and be done. Now there is much more complexity to manage, figuring out how a whole new category of advertisin­g fits in, how to measure ad effectiven­ess, and how to budget and plan.

There’s more opportunit­y, too. These changes allow small and local businesses into this new advertisin­g ecosystem. They might not spend a million dollars on a TV campaign, but may spend a few thousand to create a video ad, maybe with the help of generative AI, and hyper-target it.

CUSTOMER DATA KEY

We’re on the precipice of a huge shift, and companies are trying to make sense of it. The solution, obviously, is to try to get as much data as you can from willing customers to serve relevant ads.

But that’s easy to say and hard to do, and there are major implicatio­ns for consumer privacy in an environmen­t where Big Tech companies are making changes to data collection, as well as more regulatory interest.

There are industry-level challenges, so there needs to be a fundamenta­l reset for chief marketing officers and chief executives to align amid a different landscape, bring in new talent with new skills, encourage experiment­ation with new ad formats, and prepare for a shift towards new marketing return-on-investment paradigms.

Right now, there’s a lot of change with more questions than answers, but it’s a very exciting time.

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