Home Ad Exchange News A Spectrum Of TV Creative; PMax Concedes A Few New Advertiser Controls

A Spectrum Of TV Creative; PMax Concedes A Few New Advertiser Controls

SHARE:

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

Artificial Ads

Advertisers can use AI to generate entire TV commercials.

Wait, what?

Spectrum Reach launched an AI tool on Wednesday that clients can use to input basic company information (name and location), select the desired tone for the commercial and choose one of 11 different AI voices.

The platform also appears to look at the advertiser’s online footprint, including online reviews and pictures of inventory, to customize the commercials, Ad Age reports.

And then, voila. Spectrum claims its tool can whip up a custom video in five minutes or less.

The tech may not have a human’s unique touch (auto-generated content struggles with humor, for instance). But TV commercials are expensive – especially addressable cable spots – and Spectrum hopes AI will help pull in more ad dollars from smaller businesses that otherwise couldn’t afford TV spots.

Large advertisers often have their own in-house creative team or can lean on agencies and so wouldn’t need to rely on AI to generate whole commercials. But they do use AI tools for other purposes.

Coca-Cola, for instance, inked a deal this week with OpenAI (parent company of ChatGPT), and P&G uses AI to test ad copy and placements.

It’s unclear how far agencies will go with AI, but the trend won’t be slowing down anytime soon.

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

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

The PMinimum They Can Do

Google has announced a raft of new Performance Max features. [AdExchanger readers got the news first with our sneak peek last week.]

Ginny Marvin, a Google ads products liaison, tweeted a useful summary.

One noteworthy addition is campaign-level exclusions for branded keywords. In plain English, advertisers will be able to block PMax from bidding on their own terms while still doing so within their own search campaigns. This prevents PMax from claiming credit for easy conversions coming from branded searches.

There are also new controls for budget pacing if, say, a brand wants to advertise in a particular daypart. Previously, there were no pacing controls or analytics.

And advertisers will be able to block Google from autogenerating text and image-based creative.

“We’ve heard your feedback that you want more ways to steer how Performance Max works on Search and Shopping inventory,” Tim Frank, Google Ads senior director of product management, writes in a blog post.

That’s a sugar-coated way to describe the intense frustration advertisers have had with PMax.

But recent updates and Google’s reception to critical feedback have flipped some very negative PMax buyers to merely reluctant. Some are even cautiously optimistic. 

The News Goes Vroom

The New York Times introduced a (now-defunct) print automotive section decades ago, partly because readers were more interested in cars back then, but really due to overwhelming sponsor demand. 

It’s a reminder that carving out a valuable beat even at a big-name publication can come at the behest of a handful of advertisers or even just one dedicated sponsor. Sometimes, new beats form around climate research, health and wellness or local political coverage. Mostly, though, it means coverage of cars and sporting events.  

The Times has come full circle with the news this week that The Athletic, which it acquired last year, is launching a vertical to cover Formula One racing – sponsored by Michelob ULTRA. 

“​​With support from Michelob ULTRA, The Athletic will now have dedicated staff and increased resources to grow and expand its F1 journalism,” according to the release.

Michelob ULTRA, by the way, announced two weeks ago that it will sponsor Williams Racing, one of the F1 teams, for the 2023 season.

“F1 is having a moment, from Drive to Survive to its three US races,” Seb Tomich, The Athletic’s chief commercial officer (and former head of global advertising for The New York Times), tells Adweek. “You bring that together, and marketers love when relevance meets scale.”

But Wait, There’s More!

PE firm Bridgepoint takes a majority stake in Equativ (formerly Smart Adserver) at a roughly $370 million valuation. [Insider]

Hot takes on Instagram Reels as the platform course corrects back to images. [Adweek]

Grocers, including H-E-B and Target, are eyeing college campuses in an attempt to win over students. [Modern Retail]

Toolkits: Publishers grapple with increasingly complex subscription renewal laws. [blog]

You’re Hired!

Cameo names Matty de Castro as its new head of enterprise sales. [The Wrap]

Conversational data collection platform Typeform appoints Oji Udezue as chief product officer. [release]

Must Read

Comic: Lunch Is Searched

Based On Its Q3 Earnings, Maybe AIphabet Should Just Change Its Name To AI-phabet

Google hit some impressive revenue benchmarks in Q3. But investors seemed to only have eyes for AI.

Reddit’s Ads Biz Exploded In Q3, Albeit From A Small Base

Ad revenue grew 56% YOY even without some of Reddit’s shiny new ad products, including generative AI creative tools and in-comment ads, being fully integrated into its platform.

Freestar Is Taking The ‘Baby Carrot’ Approach To Curation

Freestar adopted a new approach to curation developed by Audigent that gives buyers a priority lane to publisher inventory with higher viewability and attention scores than most open-auction inventory.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters
Comic: Header Bidding Rapper (Wrapper!)

IAB Tech Lab Made Moves To Acquire Prebid In 2021 – And Prebid Said No

The story of how Prebid.org came to be – and almost didn’t – is an important one for the industry.

Discover Wiped Out MFA Spend By Following These Four Basic Steps

By implementing the anti-MFA playbook detailed in the ANA’s November report, brands were able to reduce the portion of their programmatic budgets going to made-for-advertising sites to about 1%.

Welcome to the Cookie Complaint Department

PAAPI Could Be As Effective For Retargeting As Third-Parties Cookies, Study Finds

There’s been plenty of mudslinging in and around the Chrome Privacy Sandbox. But the Protected Audiences API (PAAPI) maybe ain’t so bad, according to researchers at Boston University.