Home Ad Exchange News Facebook’s Push Into Game Streaming Will Help Sell Ads; Walmart Embraces Experiential

Facebook’s Push Into Game Streaming Will Help Sell Ads; Walmart Embraces Experiential

SHARE:
gaming console image

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

Facebook’s Game Plan

Facebook’s new video game streaming service, launched this week, is part of a big push to sell more ads. Facebook selling more ads? Who woulda thunk it. The service, which allows games to be played from the cloud and streamed directly to a user’s device sans download, is focusing on Android’s free-to-play market, and will serve as the test bed for a new ad format called cloud playable ads, Business Insider reports. These ads, which build on Facebook’s existing HTML5 playable format, support interactive demos and a preview of the full experience pulled from a game’s native code, “blurring the line between games and ads,” Facebook VP Jason Rubin wrote in a blog post. Imagine a future in which someone is scrolling through Facebook and sees an ad for a game, say, Activision-owned “Call of Duty,” which immediately allows that person to try out a level of the game before committing to a download. In that scenario, Facebook would get a cut of the money Activision spent to promote its game, and Activision would ostensibly acquire a more qualified user – someone who can play regardless of whether they own a console or not.

Walmart Plus Experience 

Walmart is rethinking what experiential marketing means amid the coronavirus and starting to weave it more into its media mix, Digiday reports. That means working with more influencers and media partners to bring to life some of the missed “special moments” that were canceled this year. (Thanks, 2020.) For example, Walmart worked with NBC Sports to give a Seattle-based healthcare worker and his family the chance to watch the Seahawks’ first home game in the stadium. More recently, Walmart created an immersive trick-or-treat experience for one family to still have a typical Halloween experience. “We’re not doing a big in-person experiential moment, but I think it actually scales the experience to more people to be able to see it and partake than the one-time experience,” said Jill Toscano, VP of media at Walmart. Aside from the NFL, Walmart plans to use experiential marketing to acquire new customers for its  Walmart+ membership program through activations with media partners, including Allrecipes, HGTV, PARENTS, People en Español and NBC Sports Sunday Night Football.

Fighting For The Little Guys

Big tech is getting dinged for sucking local journalism dry in a new report released by Senate Democrats, The Wall Street Journal reports. Although local outlets are reeling from plummeting ad revenue exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, the report, which paints a grim picture of the state of local journalism, points a finger in another direction: Google and Facebook. The duo today control 77% of local digital ad revenue – and that trend has only been going in one direction. The report, which came on the eve of a Senate hearing set for Wednesday with the CEOs of Google, Facebook and Twitter, notes that big tech’s alleged anticompetitive behavior needs to be better policed by federal regulators and even proposes a few potential legislative fixes. A law, for example, that forces tech platforms to negotiate with local news outlets to ensure that pubs get paid for their content is one option. Facebook and Google are already facing that potentiality in markets outside of the United States, including Australia and France.

But Wait, There’s More!

You’re Hired!

Must Read

Why Vodafone Is Giving Out Grades For Its Creative

One way to get a handle on your brand creative is to, well, grade your homework, according to Anne Stilling, Vodafone’s global director of brands and media.

Inside The Fall Of Oracle’s Advertising Business

By now, the industry is well aware that Oracle, once the most prominent advertising data seller in market, will shut down its advertising division. What’s behind the ignominious end of Oracle Advertising?

Forget about asking for permission to collect cookies. Google will have to ask for permission to not collect them.

Criteo: The Privacy Sandbox Is NOT Ready Yet, But Could Be If Google Makes Certain Changes Soon

If Google were to shut off third-party cookies today and implement the current version of the Privacy Sandbox, publishers would see their ad revenue on Chrome tank by around 60% on average.

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

Platforms Are Autogenerating Creative – And It’s Going To Be Terrible

This week, we’re diving into the most important thing in advertising – the actual creative – and how major ad platforms are well on their way to an era of creative innovation. Actually, strike that. I meant creative desolation.

Comic: TFW Disney+ Goes AVOD

Disney Expands Its Audience Graph And Clean Room Tech Beyond The US

Disney expands its audience graph and clean room tech to Latin America, marking the first time it will be available outside the US. The announcement precedes this week’s launch of Disney+ with ads in Latin America.

Advertible Makes Its Case To SSPs For Running Native Channel Extensions

Companies like TripleLift that created the programmatic native category are now in their awkward tween years. Cue Advertible, a “native-as-a-service” programmatic vendor, as put by co-founder and CEO Tom Anderson.