Home Ad Exchange News Can TikTok Win Search Budgets?; How Ad Spend Floats Downstream

Can TikTok Win Search Budgets?; How Ad Spend Floats Downstream

SHARE:

Here’s today’s AdExchanger.com news round-up… Want it by email? Sign up here.

I Don’t Speak TikTok

TikTok introduced search ad campaigns last year. But it’s a tough sell, especially considering TikTok’s organic traction.

TikTok has a strong consumer pitch, which happens to be the focus of its new ad campaign, but advertisers are wary, Marketing Brew reports.

A potential government ban on TikTok is in the air, and it may loom through the 2024 election.

But TikTok is also a risky place to buy keywords.

The app is a hotbed of terminology packed with sinister, unforeseeable meaning. The actress Julia Fox caught a PR storm a week ago when she misinterpreted a seemingly innocuous comment from someone who said they’d “given a girl mascara and she had lent it to a friend without consent.”

“Idk why but I don’t feel bad for u,” Fox replied. Turns out the comment was a coded way for talking about rape.

Aside from the keyword minefield, TikTok doesn’t have Facebook’s and Instagram’s guardrails for pausing or rejecting emotion-based campaigns. There’s a lack of nuance. Moments of happiness and pride have been blocked along with depression or vulnerability.

Still, TikTok overindexes on ads for supplements, vitamins, facial creams, collagen, menstrual products (pretty much anything that might be marketed with a cheeky joke about nether regions). Fact is, those things sell well on TikTok, and those brands are disadvantaged on Instagram.

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

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

Stream, Baby, Stream 

TV marketing has changed a lot now that people spend so much time watching streaming content. It’s not all about premieres and seasons anymore, John Landgraf, the chairman of FX content and productions, tells Adweek.

Back in the day, roughly 90% of FX’s media budget went to promoting a premiere, he says. In linear TV land, showrunners knew they had a hit when a show had high ratings early on and generated buzz from critics.

But now that viewers can stream all of FX’s original content on Hulu and might wait to binge an entire “season” until after the last episode has dropped, a premiere typically gets half of the media spend it used to – if that. And this trend has only accelerated now that streaming platforms are upping their production of exclusive content.

The streaming epoch requires more hustle from marketers, too. Acquiring and, just as importantly, retaining customers must be top marketing priorities. Customers can churn and switch streaming platforms far more easily than they can jettison a cable or satellite linear TV package.

Feeding From The Bowl

This year’s Super Bowl is almost certain to shatter the record for most online gambling tied to a sporting event and become the highest betting day in US sports history, Bloomberg reports.

Reaching this milestone isn’t overly surprising, considering the steady spread of legal sports gambling, which is now available in 33 states, plus Washington, DC. But it’s also a consequence of some very sharp-edged marketing campaigns.

DraftKings and FanDuel are both NFL sponsors and pushing ad campaigns that are also prop bets. For example, Rob Gronkowski, a FanDuel endorser, is kicking a field goal at halftime, and anyone who places a $5 bet on the game wins a bonus if he makes it.

Here’s the playbook: Sports betting services hit the market with crazy-high promotional offers and performance marketing payouts for installs. But they’re also keen attribution hounds when it comes to customer lifetime value. (LTV can be quite lucrative when we’re talking about a new user who might end up spending years or decades pumping money into a betting app.)

FanDuel and DraftKings, in particular, have been all over innovative sports sponsorships and ad opportunities. They can see conversion results more clearly than other advertisers because user activity feeds directly into the app.

But Wait, There’s More!

The Arena Group turns to generative AI, starting with Men’s Journal pieces. [WSJ]

Pinterest missed its quarterly revenue estimates based on lower ad spend in a slowing economy. [Reuters]

WTF is the global privacy control? [Digiday]

Disney’s Iger returns to a familiar stage, but with different challenges. [NYT]

You’re Hired!

UM names Sasha Savic as global CEO. [Ad Age]

Razorfish promotes Dani Mariano to president. [release]

Must Read

Google filed a motion to exclude the testimony of any government witnesses who aren’t economists or antitrust experts during the upcoming ad tech antitrust trial starting on September 9.

Google Is Fighting To Keep Ad Tech Execs Off the Stand In Its Upcoming Antitrust Trial

Google doesn’t want AppNexus founder Brian O’Kelley – you know, the godfather of programmatic – to testify during its ad tech antitrust trial starting on September 9.

How HUMAN Uncovered A Scam Serving 2.5 Billion Ads Per Day To Piracy Sites

Publishers trafficking in pirated movies, TV shows and games sold programmatic ads alongside this stolen content, while using domain cloaking to obscure the “cashout sites” where the ads actually ran.

In 2019, Google moved to a first-price auction and also ceded its last look advantage in AdX, in part because it had to. Most exchanges had already moved to first price.

Thanks To The DOJ, We Now Know What Google Really Thought About Header Bidding

Starting last week and into this week, hundreds of court-filed documents have been unsealed in the lead-up to the Google ad tech antitrust trial – and it’s a bonanza.

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

Will Alternative TV Currencies Ever Be More Than A Nielsen Add-On?

Ever since Nielsen was dinged for undercounting TV viewers during the pandemic, its competitors have been fighting to convince buyers and sellers alike to adopt them as alternatives. And yet, some industry insiders argue that alt currencies weren’t ever meant to supplant Nielsen.

A comic depicting people in suits setting money on fire as a reference to incrementality: as in, don't set your money on fire!

How Incrementality Tests Helped Newton Baby Ditch Branded Search

In the past year, Baby product and mattress brand Newton Baby has put all its media channels through a new testing regime for incrementality. It was a revelatory experience.

Colgate-Palmolive redesigned all of its consumer-facing sites and apps to serve as information hubs about its brands and make it easier to collect email addresses and other opted-in user data.

Colgate-Palmolive’s First-Party Data Strategy Is A Study In Quality Over Quantity

Colgate-Palmolive redesigned all of its consumer-facing sites and apps to make it easier to collect opted-in first-party user data.