Home Commerce Retail Media Cannot Be Standardized – Yet ‘Standards’ Are Coming

Retail Media Cannot Be Standardized – Yet ‘Standards’ Are Coming

SHARE:

Hey, readers!

Thanks for reading AdExchanger’s Commerce Media newsletter. I’m Senior Editor James Hercher, and this week I’m diving into the push for retail media standards.

Some form of retail media standardization seems inevitable at this point.

Retailers want it, marketers need it, agencies are dying without it, and programmatic tech companies will happily pull the weight of product development.

But it remains to be seen whether all that pent-up energy can accomplish the impossible – the creation of standards for campaigns that defy the notion of standardization.

Standardizing the unstandard

Earlier this week, the IAB and MRC released a much-awaited retail media standards proposal, which is open for public comment until October 13. Although industry working group proposals often deal in platitudes, the IAB, to its credit, tackles the complexity head-on.

For example, the IAB is proposing taxonomies for different kinds of stores (grocery, home improvement, convenience, department store, etc.) and “sub-polygons” or zones within stores that might be targeted differently, such as a deli, a pickup area for online purchases, a garden center or a section containing coolers.

Retailers gauge viewability metrics and impressions based on foot traffic in a given zone during a set period of time for the potential viewers of an ad, which can be drawn from location vendors that track foot traffic or from sensors in the store.

But there are so many ways that retailers can reach someone in and around a store, all of which might be bundled into a retail media “digital place-based” campaign (or DPB, because, after all, there are more than 17,000 possible three-letter acronyms in the English language, and ad tech never met a TLA it didn’t love).

Some stores have dynamic ads that appear on digital screens overlaid onto coolers or, say, a Coinstar machine.

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

Get our editors’ roundup delivered to your inbox every weekday.

Coinstar, which has a retail media biz itself, of course, might own a portion of the DPB ad inventory that serves to that machine, while retailers can claim a portion of the ad supply in their store. Retailers sign similar deals with companies like Volta, an electric vehicle charging station manufacturer, which has a retail media business, too, and offers retailers a cut of inventory to build stations in their parking lots.

Some of those ads might be video, some display or even text. In fact, sometimes it’s just sound, since retailers control radio and in-store music and sell those ad units as DPB media.

Chains like Albertsons and Best Buy are piloting ways to target an individual with a personalized deal offer displayed on a smart cart or in-store screen. Is that the same as a Coinstar ad claiming viewability from every passerby?

The answer depends on the particulars of every different retailer.

Some chains tie groceries, gas and other sales together into a single loyalty program, which means people are there to buy gas and shop. Sometimes there’s a gas station within the geofenced vicinity of a grocery or convenience store, and that station could do retail media extensions with CPG video ads on its gas pumps.

Although the value proposition of these placements is very different, it’s very hard for an advertiser to tell the difference from a measurement perspective.

Who sets the bar?

There’s a parallel standardization dilemma happening in CTV Land.

Broadcasters, streaming services, YouTube and measurement arbiters like Nielsen simply can’t bridge the gaps between their media. Broadcasters say their professionally produced, 30-second commercials shouldn’t be counted the same way a skippable, six-second YouTube spot is counted. YouTube argues its ads are targeted, engaging and people actually watch them.

The big retailers will need to push for advertiser education and set a higher bar for measurement. Otherwise, their own inventory and data, which they consider so valuable, will fall into the same bucket as all sorts of shoddy placements.

Advertisers should question the ROAS of retail media, said Claire Wyatt, VP of business strategy and marketing science for the Albertsons Media Collective, speaking at the IAB Connected Commerce Summit in NYC on Wednesday.

For instance, some brands see up-and-down swings for their business in a grocery chain, while the retailer’s media network touts consistent $50 returns on ad spend or even higher.

“That’s a lie!” Wyatt said. “And I’m glad if standards will bring rigor.”

Must Read

Amazon Juices Profits, With A Big Assist From The Ads Biz

Wall Street wanted profits. Big Tech delivered. That was the case for Google, Meta, Microsoft, Apple and – more than any other US tech giant – Amazon.

Comic: Welcome Aboard

Google’s Ad Revenue Rockets Upward Again, But The Open Web Is Getting Less

Google has always been the internet waystation. People arrive to be shuttled someplace else. Increasingly, though, Google is the destination.

How Bayer Is Using Creative Analytics To Cure Its Data Divide

Bayer partnered with its data agency, fifty-five, to develop a custom in-house creative analytics dashboard built on Google Cloud to more effectively measure and evaluate creative performance.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

First-Party Data On Ice? How Conagra’s Birds Eye Brand Navigates The New Video Ecosystem

Conagra-owned brand Birds Eye brings a new approach to online video, social shopping and first-party data.

As The Open Web Wobbles, Index Exchange Is Betting On Curated Deals

Index Marketplaces activates the curation capabilities of DSPs, DMPs and RMNs – and the demand for their PMP deals – across Index Exchange’s network of publishers.

an almost handshake

LUMA: 2024 Will Be Better For M&A (No, Seriously This Time)

Overall deal activity in the ad tech market was down 10% year over year in 2023, according to LUMA Partners. But 2024 may be looking up.