Home Daily News Roundup What’s Behind Big Platform Partnerships?; Walmart’s Vizio Vision

What’s Behind Big Platform Partnerships?; Walmart’s Vizio Vision

SHARE:

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

The Sky Bridges

Standalone walled gardens are transforming into an interconnected network of fortresses.

It’s not that walled gardens are opening up, exactly, but individual platforms are now actively partnering to allow one-to-one user targeting and other use cases among themselves – but not for the greater market. These fortresses now have what one might think of as sky bridges that only cast a greater shadow across the open web.

For instance, recipe and cooking sites are up in arms this week because a Google Search ranking tweak suddenly removed many top-performing recipes from the carousels atop search result pages. Google replaced those prized spots mostly with Pinterest recipes, according to Search Engine Roundtable.

Pinterest, by the way, cut a major advertising partnership with Google Ads last week, which now has access as a third-party buyer to Pinterest inventory. It’s a very advantageous deal for Google, and it is Pinterest’s second such deal, following an integration with Amazon last year.

There’s no official connection between Google’s search carousels and its Pinterest ad-buying partnership. But it’s the kind of tit-for-tat dealmaking that’s become commonplace between walled garden platforms.

Walmart’s Vizio-n

While we’re on the subject of walled gardens, Walmart appears to want one of its own.

See Walmart’s reported negotiations to acquire smart TV manufacturer Vizio, which is an advertising and data company as much as it is a TV manufacturer. Vizio has access to IP-address-level viewing data as well as first-party automatic content recognition capabilities to underpin its ad sales.

If Walmart were to acquire Vizio, the deal would remove the retailer’s neutral status in TV sales. Walmart would no doubt want to sell Vizio TVs and could support lower prices. It would also own a sizable chunk of CTV inventory and have automatic distribution for its owned-and-operated media. Today, Walmart must partner to achieve reach outside of its site and app. Paramount+, for example, is included with the Walmart+ membership program.

There’s also the ambition to make T-commerce (yep, T-commerce) a thing. As in, television commerce.

Walmart, with its built-in membership program and saved credit card details, would be well-placed to support shopping through one’s TV.

For more fun speculation about the implications of this potential acquisition, check out the latest Next in Media newsletter from Mike Shields.

Lost in Transition

Dentsu had a grueling year, with a markedly poorer showing than its agency holdco peers, according to Brian Wieser of Madison and Wall.

The company reported its full-year 2023 earnings on Wednesday, and it wasn’t a pretty picture. Although net revenues grew 1.6%, organic growth shrank by 4.9%. In the US, Dentsu saw declines of more than 10% in Q4 and up to 10% for the whole year. Even in its home market of Japan, organic growth was up a meager 0.9% in Q4 and 1.6% for the year.

Contributing to Dentsu’s woes in 2023 were decreased ad spend among finance and tech clients as well as greater competition for ad dollars and (as ever) macroeconomic headwinds.

Internal restructuring might also have led to turmoil. In November 2022, Dentsu hopped aboard the holdco consolidation train with its One Dentsu model, which merged Dentsu International and Dentsu Japan Network into one organization.

The transition hasn’t been smooth thus far, although Dentsu is forecasting approximately 1% organic growth for 2024.

But Wait, There’s More!

Google quietly launches Goose, an internal AI model designed to help employees write code more quickly. [Business Insider]

Lyft shows signs of life after a profitable Q4. [The Information]

Why Snapchat is pitching its platform as an alternative to social media. [Digiday]

You’re Hired!

Henry Olawoye joins Stirista as VP of audience solutions. [release]

Mobile in-game ad platform AdInMo appoints industry veteran John Rankin as CRO. [release]

Zefr promotes Jon Morra to chief AI officer. [release]

Must Read

Intent IQ Has Patents For Ad Tech’s Most Basic Functions – And It’s Not Afraid To Use Them

An unusual dilemma has programmatic vendors and ad tech platforms worried about a flurry of potential patent infringement suits.

TikTok Video For Open Web Publishers? Outbrain Built It.

Outbrain is trying to shed its chumbox rep by bringing social media-style vertical video to mobile publishers on the open web.

Billups Launches Attention Measurement For Out-Of-Home

Billups, a managed services agency that specializes in OOH, is making its attention measurement solution and a related analytics dashboard available for general use.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters
US District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, Alexandria

The Google Ad Tech Antitrust Case Is Over – And Here’s What’s Happening Next

Just three weeks after it began, the Google ad tech antitrust trial in Virginia is over. The court will now take a nearly two-month break before reconvening for closing arguments right before Thanksgiving.

Jounce Media's Chris Kane at Programmatic IO NY on Sept. 25, 2024.

The Bidstream Is A Duplicative, Chaotic Mess – But It Doesn’t Have To Be That Way

Publishers are initiating more and more auctions – but doesn’t mean DSPs are listening to more bids, according to Chris Kane.

Readers Are Flocking To Political News, Says WaPo – And Advertisers Are Missing Out

During certain periods this year, advertisers blocked more than 40% of The Washington Post’s inventory over brand safety concerns.