Top 12 Programmatic Advertising Trends for 2020 and Beyond
Nov 05 2019 | 05:26 PM | 15 Mins Read | Level - Intermediate | Read ModeLipi Khandelwal Category Editor, Ziff Davis B2B
Connect with Author
Lipi Khandelwal is a Category Editor at MarTech Advisor. She has a diverse experience of over nine years across business operations and editing roles, with over five years as a writer, editor and journalist covering the business and HR beat. Storytelling and crafting compelling content for readers is what she enjoys most when at work. Otherwise, you'll find her busy listening to Indian classical music, or reading and composing Hindi, Urdu and English poetry. She is really fond of her collection of books and loves reading out to her naughty toddler son.
Programmatic advertising is on a disruptive ride with new technologies such as artificial intelligence, machine learning, voice search and digital OOH attracting most advertisers. With 5G promising a push to programmatic on one hand and the implementation of GDPR posing new challenges, there’s a lot more that marketers need to watch out for in the space. Here we track the top trends you need to follow in the programmatic Ad Tech space for 2020 and beyond.
Programmatic advertising is by far the most crucial component of advertising technology - one that is keeping the entire adtech fraternity on a vigil for what’s coming next. It is set to be the default media trading method in the coming years. According to Zenith’s ‘Programmatic Marketing Forecasts’ report, programmatic ad spend will reach $98 billion, amounting to 68% of the global digital media ad spend by 2020.
Introduction of technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML) and 5G are going to make programmatic advertising more efficient, while the entry of newer advertising channels such as Digital Out Of Home (DOOH), podcast and audio programmatic advertising, voice-activated ads, smart devices, and AR/VR not only gives marketers more choices but also provides a more engaging, personalized experience for consumers. It is a far cry from the TV ads of yore that segmented customers based on demographics alone!
Before 2020 comes knocking, here are 12 trends that will pave the path for new-age digital ad planning.
1. AI in programmatic advertising
Audience management strategy is already a maturing space, with many marketers having connected the dots between audience selection, targeting, campaign optimization and measurement. The deluge of data to help marketers target the right people with the right message, in the right channel and device, at the right time means that the use of artificial intelligence (AI) powered technologies will only continue to rise.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning (ML) help, by sifting through huge volumes of data in real time to find patterns, predict outcomes and suggest the next best action to each individual customer in order to move them further in their buying journey. It is not just the scale and speed that AI can bring to the process of marketing that makes it so powerful - it is also the intelligence it brings that would be impossible for a human to match at that scale and speed.
Marketers will see AI analyze customer behaviour in real-time basis multiple data points such as gender, age, location, preferences, device, platform, previous history and more. It will be able to map user data with ad viewing metrics such as when or where an ad is played, for what duration and so on, to suggest when to place an ad where and in what format. The ability of AI to identify buyer patterns accurately and then place ads accordingly, helps increase overall ad effectiveness, thereby reducing the cost of customer acquisition.
For instance, IBM’s AI based bot Watson is being continuously developed for optimized programmatic media buying and is already popular in the US and UK. In one of its official blogs IBM’s VP of Marketing Analytics, Ari Sheinkin shared that the results of programmatic media buying by Watson show a stunning 71% reduced Cost Per Click (CPC).
AI based programmatic advertising has captured the attention of advertisers significantly over the last two years. A 2018 Deloitte survey of over 1,100 US executives from early adopters of AI, reported that 82% of them saw a positive return on investment for their AI initiatives. This indicates the increasing faith in AI in programmatic advertising which will strengthen further over the next year.
Learn More: Top 5 Programmatic Advertising Platforms for 2020 and Beyond
2.GDPR ultimately proves to be advertisers’ friend, not foe
After the announcement of General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in Europe last year, what looked like a setback to advertisers is gradually turning out to be beneficial. The regulations around seeking consent and protecting the privacy of user data, initially looked limiting to adtech experts, but is resulting in cleaner and more reliable data over time.
The scale of data may have seen a downfall, but the quality of available data has increased tremendously. This trend is going to strengthen further over the years with digital platforms adding forms and policies in line with data privacy norms. As the GDPR website says, “CIOs must ensure that they have watertight consent management processes in place, whilst CMOs require effective data rights management systems to ensure they don’t lose their most valuable asset – data.”
First-party data, which is also the cleanest and most reliable source for a marketer has become more important, and hence brands now have the onus of directly and transparently communicating with customers on how beneficial or safe it is for them to share their details. While high quality publishers or already trusted brands may not face too many challenges with this, newer brands will need to push harder for establishing trust with the customers.
Ultimately, cleaner data will mean lesser targets but more relevant and interested ones. This will in turn establish a connect of mutual trust between the publisher and the user, thereby allowing the same to the advertisers with their consumers. Here, programmatic provides the assurance of reaching out to only those prospects who will not just find the ads relevant but are also more likely to make a well-informed buying decision.
3. Digital Out Of Home (DOOH) combined with mobile location data
While out-of-home advertising is one of the oldest and most traditional advertising channels, its digital avataar- digital OOH or - DOOH combined with mobile location data has the potential to redefine how marketers can address the crucial last mile between home and store, or online and offline. Mastering this promises a direct impact on the speed and scale of conversions when it comes to closing the loop between advertising and buying.
While DOOH itself lends well to the programmatic buying model, both in terms of efficiency and scale, the real trends to watch in the space for 2020 are:
- Integrated ‘home to out-of-home’ programmatic advertising approach, which will deliver a more seamless experience for customers.
- integration between DOOH and the use of mobile locational data to drive conversions in the offline world
For example, Publicis Media had partnered with geospatial technology company Vistar Media, and identity resolution provider LiveRamp for a DOOH campaign for the clothing brand REI. With this, REI activated a cross-channel DOOH and mobile media campaign to reach customers and prospects in places where they were most likely to spend time. As a result, they saw a 7% increase in purchase intent, along with a 14% lift in brand awareness. REI’s retail outlets also experienced a 3.6 times rise in store traffic.
The coming years will see a drastic shift from merely buying or trading outdoor ad spaces to estimating audience data for targeting relevant audiences with ads where they most likely are, at any given point of time. Advertisers can expect more from their budgets, as programmatic in DOOH will allow targeted audience planning and buying, with increased efficiency, brand safety and measurement.
As it gets more measurable with first party and third party data from companies, for media buyers, programmatic DOOH is one good-for-all medium that will deliver both brand (experiential) and performance marketing.
4. Voice-activated ads go beyond in-home smart devices
Adoption of voice-based, in-home smart devices has been on the rise. Last year, Amazon reported that it had sold over a 100 million Alexa-enabled devices and that customers spoke to Alexa tens of billions more times in 2018 compared to 2017. A few years ago, Gartner predicted that by 2020, 30% of web browsing sessions will be done without a screen, through voice-first browsing.
Isn’t it turning out to be true? We often ask our voice assistants to help us with a specific product we want to purchase, and listen to it list out relevant products or platforms from where we can buy what we want. A recent survey by VoiceBot.AI revealed that 25% of respondents say everyday household items are the most ordered through voice-assistants, followed by apparel and then entertainment and games. The survey was conducted on 1,203 US consumers.
Programmatic advertising has a critical role to play in helping marketers optimize these ad spaces across in-home smart devices, to in-store and on-apps audio ad opportunities. Additionally, OOH audio advertising solutions such as Vibenomics allow brands to connect with consumers through in-store background ads, broadcasting over speakers installed at shopping stores, ads in elevators and taxis, waiting room CCTVs etc.
5. Wearables will augment programmatic advertising
One of the ‘Black Mirror’ episodes – ‘The Entire History of You’ – shows people wearing a "grain" or a memory implant behind their ear, which records everything they do, see and hear. Using a remote, a user can play back their memories directly to their eye or to a video monitor anytime they want.
Although not to the extent we saw in the Black Mirror episode, wearables already collect data on location, lifestyle, health metrics and more. Imagine the kind of insights that will be available to the advertising industry, if wearables were to become this advanced, while still respecting the privacy of the individual. Though it may still sound a bit intimidating or even invasive to some, with GDPR regulating data collection and usage norms, availability of such data with user consent will open-up huge opportunity for advertisers to target the strongest prospects, in the right place and at the right time with the most relevant messages.
The market penetration of smart watches has also grown multifold over the last few years. A 2019 report by Strategy Analytics claims that global smartwatch shipments grew to a remarkable 44% year-on-year to reach 12 million units in the second quarter this year.
This trend is already followed by programmatic advertising making its way into this new medium. For instance, FitAd helps advertisers deliver automated promos that run banners to consumers on their Sony or Samsung watches. As the wearable ecosystem grows, programmatic adtech will bring in greater opportunities with its inherent ability to track, monitor and optimize campaigns based on more accurate user and ad consumption data.
6. 5G will catalyze all programmatic advertising
The cellular bandwidth landscape is expecting a boost with the commercial launch of the 5th generation of cellular mobile communications i.e. 5G. The bandwidth of 5G is expected to be over 100 gigabits per second, which is 100 times more than its predecessor — 4G.
The high bandwidth of 5G will not only allow websites or videos to load faster but will enable the adtech ecosystem to perform faster, delivering or placing ads at the right mediums and at the right time with lightning fast speed.
The high-speed and no-lag buffering will encourage a significant rise in time spent on videos on all mobile devices. This in turn will be another strong reason for advertisers to deliver more high resolution, 4K ads to their target audience.
By 2024, the adoption of 5G based adtech is predicted to grow to 1.4 billion!
This means, ample scope for programmatic advertising to be able to run sharper, more interactive ads across mediums, without any lags.
5G will augment other technologies and mediums such as augmented reality enabled ad displays, virtual reality without the heavy headsets, and innovative new digital outdoor ad mediums. Marketers must gear up to create and deliver content in multiple formats and across devices, making use of the speed and latency that 5G promises.
Learn more on the impact of 5G for marketers.
7. Personalization will remain critical but the concept will evolve
Millennials and Gen Z - two of the biggest buyer demographics - love all things customized. However, in contrast to their predecessors, Gen Z has a completely different set of considerations for making buying decisions.
From preferring an ecologically or socially responsible brand to deciding on a product because one of their favorite social media influencers or celebrities endorse it, their buying patterns are unique. As Gen Z grows in numbers and newer generations come in, personalization in advertising is going to become increasingly inevitable, given the need for smarter audience management strategies and increased segmenting, targeting and personalization.
In response to these buying patterns, programmatic customization is also on the rise, letting advertisers offer highly relevant, personalized messaging to their target group. The abundance of data that’s available now, allows dynamic ad creatives that can change as per user relevance, adopting to metrics such as location, time, demographics, device type and more.
You can now not only optimize ad spaces with programmatic adtech, but measure and improve upon it in real time. Together with AI based predictive modeling, programmatic adtech is able to serve more targeted messages in the right place at the right time.
For example, Mindshare, a media agency, developed a retargeting campaign in their Indonesia subsidiary using dynamic creative optimization technology for AirAsia. Through this, the programmatic team dynamically served over 5,500 ad versions based on the last destination travellers searched for on the site, saving around 276 days of production time for the airline.
8. Blockchain & Ads.txt will continue to guard advertising
Ad frauds have been on a high over the last few years. A 2019 report by Cheq, a cybersecurity firm, claims that ad fraud damages will touch $26 billion in 2020, $29 billion by 2021 and $32 billion the year after that.
Increased transparency in programmatic advertising is the only way to tackle these frauds. This is where blockchain and Ads.txt (an Interactive Advertising Bureau initiative - Authorized Digital Sellers), help. BlAdTech (Blockchain+AdTech) is based on the principle of decentralization. Blockchain in programmatic adtech has been able to tackle ad fraud by helping cut down the number of unnecessary middlemen, removing domain spoofing, verifying the legitimacy of publishers and allowing transactions using cryptocurrencies.
The ad reselling vendors or unnecessary middlemen are a big menace to the advertising industry. As a solution to this, preventing unauthorized reselling of ad inventory, publishers can now host ads.txt approved files on their servers, listing all the companies allowed to sell the publisher’s inventory. That said, these two pillars of cyber-hygiene in programmatic advertising are here to stay!
Learn More: What Is Native Advertising? Definition, Components, Benchmarks, & Best Practices with Examples
9. Programmatic TV, podcasts and audio programmatic are all set to grow
How we consume content on TV has changed drastically. The shift from cable to over-the-top (OTT) services such as Netflix and Amazon Prime via an internet-connected screen or TV set, has been predominant and now rules the TV viewing paradigm.
As the shift is still underway from the traditional connected TV (CTV) to OTT, programmatic advertising has a big role in ensuring marketers get the best out of both. Besides, with video content being consumed across web, mobile and other connected devices, programmatic TV is going to gain more prominence with its data-driven approach for buying and delivering ads.
A PwC report titled ‘Global Entertainment & Media Outlook’ envisages that programmatic TV will represent approximately one third of global TV ad revenue by 2021. Marketers need to embrace this reality and prepare their marketing budgets and strategies to fit this new medium.
Programmatic in podcast and audio advertising is also growing significantly. The 2019 annual ‘Podcast Revenue Report’ by IAB and PwC shows increasing growth in the US podcast advertising marketplace. The 2019 report reveals marketers spent $479 million to advertise on podcasts in the U.S., an uptick of 53% from $314 million in 2017.
Apps such as Spotify and Soundcloud are also seeing increasing user acceptance. This has created a new advertising landscape that these companies are ready to monetize on. And of course, advertisers too need novelty.
10. Omnichannel or integrated programmatic is the way to go
Multichannel had its own good days, but most marketers are now moving to omnichannel as they become more cognizant of their users. Multi-device ownership is common among digital users today, but the challenge is that people use these devices for different purposes and activities.
Forrester defines omnichannel marketing as ‘the practice of digitally sequencing advertising across channels, which is connected, relevant, and consistent with the customer’s stage in their life cycle.’ This is exactly the way to go with programmatic advertising in 2020 and beyond.
Adopting an omnichannel approach, advertisers are now not only present across touchpoints such as smartphones, computers, digital assistants, TVs, and tablets or wherever the users are, but in a unified fashion which conveys to the customers a single meaningful brand story. Through programmatic adtech, a single marketing resource or an ad can be programmatically customized to suit various devices or platforms. This allows marketers to adapt to dynamic customer behavior, while making the ad buying process more effective to match pace with the omnichannel environment.
Learn More: Multichannel vs. Omnichannel Marketing: Key Differences and Similarities
11. Agencies forced to work on outcome-based pay
Media trading desks have been under the radar as ad-frauds increase and marketers suspect unusual margins on ad buying. Consequently, the long existent trust-based relationship between brands and agencies is now seeking more transparency. The discussions around switching to an outcome-based remuneration model are resurfacing. While all agencies out there promise programmatic tech, advertisers have had their doubts about how their budget was being utilized and where were the ads being placed. Indeed there was a lot of wastage in the space.
Media buying businesses are now focusing on finding ways to attribute the outcome to its activity. An article by Deloitte reports, outcome-based remuneration is gaining prominence on the agenda of many multinational brands preparing for zero-based budgeting with companies such as Unilever and Duracell giving it a try.
Gradually, advertisers will see more value in knowing the full cost chain of their programmatic buys, forcing agencies to go the outcome-based pay way.
Learn More: The Beginners Guide to Programmatic Adtech Ecosystem
12.In-house programmatic trap Vs. agency transparency
Since programmatic adtech came into existence, advertisers have wondered whether it’ll be more cost-effective and reliable to do it all in-house. Yes, could be, however in the absence of enough knowledge and expertise, both of which a good agency promises, any programmatic advertising efforts could fall flat.
A report by IAB revealed last year that in-house is now the favored advertiser model with nearly 40% executing their programmatic trading via in-house operations. As per the report, 50% publishers also have an in-house model now.
This means advertisers are increasingly trying to take control of their programmatic ad strategies, its implementation and outcome. However, there are challenges and hidden costs involved in doing so. Ideally, it makes sense to have in-house capabilities for strategizing programmatic ads along with support from an agency partner for implementing parts of it for running holistic and scalable programmatic campaigns.
It’s obviously better than setting up a full stack programmatic adtech in-house, which includes getting in the required talent, a DSP, a DMP and incurring lots of other tech and maintenance fees.
Ultimately, customer-centricity and sensitivity will win the deal
Programmatic advertising - whether inhouse or with an agency - is evolving rapidly - both in its scope and the technology that powers it! With further innovations in the space, advertisers will be able to venture deeper into their consumers’ minds to offer more relevance and better outcomes. Both identifying and influencing is going to get more efficient. As the legal norms and regulations develop further, keeping pace with the programmatic adtech space, advertisers will have to be even more customer-centric and sensitive in their approach. This way brands won’t just win deals, but their customers’ hearts, and who knows, perhaps one day not every consumer will think ‘ads as disruptive’ to their experience!