Marketing performance Archives | Nielsen Audience Is Everything™ Tue, 18 Jun 2024 19:41:43 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://www.nielsen.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2021/10/cropped-nielsen_favicon_512x512-1.png?w=32 Marketing performance Archives | Nielsen 32 32 197901765 The “Cowboy Carter Effect” — Increasing young Black listeners’ engagement with country music https://www.nielsen.com/insights/2024/black-country-music-cowboy-carter-effect/ Mon, 17 Jun 2024 12:00:00 +0000 https://www.nielsen.com/?post_type=insight&p=1647736 Country music - a new opportunity to engage Young Black listeners tuning into the genre.

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While some are still debating how to define country music, others like Urban One’s 93Q in Houston embraced the cultural moment sparked by Beyoncé’s latest release—and across the audio landscape, so did listeners.

On the day of Cowboy Carter’s release, music video network Vevo reported a 38% increase in views of country music videos globally. 

From Rhiannon Giddenn’s banjo to Linda Martell’s pioneering EP, every country artist featured on the album has seen an increase in first-time or catalog listeners according to Spotify.

That digital audio engagement with country music has also translated to broadcast radio, with Nielsen measurement showing a +40% increase in audience share for the Country format among Black 18-34 year olds. 1 The spike occurred across key markets in March 2024 compared to March of last year and continued into April with a +12% increase compared to 2023. 

Looking at the first quarter of 2024, country radio made up 9% of all streaming listening to AM/FM stations among Black people in the 18-34 age group—2.6x greater than adults spent streaming country stations overall. Black 18-34 year olds’ streaming of country stations was second only to the R&B and Hip-hop formats.2 This engagement reiterates additional research from Nielsen about the connection between audio content and African American communities. 

Broadly, Black audiences average more than nine hours a week with radio, with an average monthly reach among Black 18-34 year olds specifically of 86%. Nielsen’s recent report, The global Black audience: Shaping the future of media, found that Black 18-34-year-olds in the U.S. are nearly 20% more likely than the general population to discover new music by listening to traditional radio. With the attention and engagement focused on today’s Black artists within Country Music, the uptick in this demographic’s engagement with these radio stations makes sense. 

As the spotlight continues to shine on country music’s African American roots and the talents of current voices, there are a few key takeaways to keep in mind.

  • Measurement is critical to inform our strategies with data instead of preconceived notions. 
  • There are still many African American trends and traditions that go untold, like the legacy of contributions to formats like country among others. Representation matters and when these stories get centered, audiences show up. 
  • Rethink how and where you plan to connect with the diverse Black American population. With an average of over 81 hours a week spent with media, there are a multitude of opportunities for brands to connect with Black consumers in innovative and authentic ways.

Notes

1Nielsen Audio PPM Black DST Markets Mo-Su 6A-12A

2Nielsen Audio PPM Cross-Market AQH Share. Mon-Sun 6a-Mid

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Are you investing in performance marketing for the right reasons? https://www.nielsen.com/insights/2024/are-you-investing-performance-marketing-for-right-reasons/ Wed, 22 May 2024 12:00:00 +0000 https://www.nielsen.com/?post_type=insight&p=1581844 Over-indexing on performance marketing leads to a vicious cycle where brands end up neglecting top-funnel activities and...

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Campaigns rely on the seemingly delicate mix of brand and performance needed to maximize full-funnel visibility. Having analyzed hundreds of thousands of marketing mix decisions, we’ve seen the pendulum swing hard from brand to performance in recent years.

Consider that it was barely ten years ago that Binet and Field published The Long and the Short of it and proposed their famous 60:40 rule—that is, to maximize marketing effects and returns over time, 60% of a media budget should be allocated to brand marketing and 40% to performance marketing. Yet according to results from our 2024 Annual Marketing Report, 70% of marketers plan to increase performance marketing spend this year at the expense of brand building. What gives?

Short-term pressures

Companies today are under enormous pressure to deliver short-term results. Market conditions can change on a dime: a nimble new competitor entering the market; a new spike in inflation; geopolitical uncertainties; issues with the supply chain; or simply modern consumers being modern consumers and latching onto a new trend. It’s only natural for marketing leaders to want to capitalize on the opportunity right in front of them.

The logical choice then is to focus their efforts on the bottom of the funnel. There, they can target consumers near the moment of purchase, tailor their messages for immediate action and quickly see if their media spend is paying off. Between search, display, social, retail media, podcasts or even CTV, advertisers now have many more options to trigger short-term conversions than ever before. 

But there are two major pitfalls to watch out for:

  1. The first is to forget that when a shopper clicks on a Buy Now button, it’s the result of a long string of touchpoints with the brand, not just the last impression. Too many marketers still attribute sales to that last impression, for simplicity’s sake. This leads to a vicious circle where brands end up neglecting top-funnel activities to build their brand, and spending more to convert fewer prospects at the bottom of the funnel.
  2. The second is to assume that the long-term health of the company will take care of itself. In Binet and Field’s words, “Long-term effects are not simply an accumulation of short-term effects.” The same applies to outcomes. You won’t see long-term results by amassing short-term wins. What’s more, short-term pressure will only get more intense over time for companies that don’t invest in long-term effects.

Perceived effectiveness

There’s another possibility to consider: That today’s enthusiasm for performance marketing comes from the perception that channels typically used for it are inherently more effective.

Nielsen’s Annual Marketing Report shows that marketers deem social media, search and online display and video to be the most effective digital channels in their quiver. Nearly 80% of them perceive social media to be extremely or very effective, for instance, and 72% give the same appreciation to search. Marketers don’t typically associate TV with performance marketing. Yet, when we analyze how TV fares across hundreds of marketing mix modeling studies, we find that it’s one of the only channels that performs equally well at the top and bottom of the funnel.

The point is not to cast doubt on this or that channel or to put any of them on a pedestal. All campaigns and brands are different and every channel has its strengths and weaknesses. But it is important to recognize that there can be a wide gap between the perception of performance and actual performance. The fact that a channel is addressable, relatively easy to measure and perceived to be effective doesn’t automatically make it good for performance marketing.

Measurement drives strategy

When asking if you’re investing in performance marketing for the right reasons, you want to make sure budget decisions are informed by strategic considerations and not by what is feasible, or what you believe might be feasible.

That’s why holistic measurement is so critical. Most channels are strong in either performance or brand messaging, but rarely in both. And you can only determine the right mix of brand and performance for your marketing needs if you have a clear picture of your media effectiveness across the entire funnel. In today’s complex media ecosystem, cross-channel KPIs and measurement capabilities should be a top priority, yet only 38% of marketers measure traditional and digital marketing together. There’s clearly a lot of room for improvement.

An encouraging sign is that 77% of marketers interviewed for our 2024 Global Annual Marketing Survey are planning to increase spend on newer channels (like CTV and influencer marketing) this year. Experimenting with new channels is a great way to add new marketing capabilities and keep up with consumers—as long as they’re measured consistently with the rest of the marketing mix.

There’s a right mix of brand and performance for your business. Just make sure you base your decision on hard data and not just perceptions.

For more insights into how to maximize campaign spend across the marketing funnel, read Nielsen’s 2024 Annual Marketing Report. 

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‘Data driven’ is no longer enough for your ROI strategy https://www.nielsen.com/insights/2024/data-driven-not-enough-roi-strategy-marketing-metrics-business-impact/ Thu, 09 May 2024 12:00:00 +0000 https://www.nielsen.com/?post_type=insight&p=1564721 ROI strategies hinge on capturing the right data at every stage of the customer journey. Just because data is easy to...

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Marketing metrics must reflect business impact

This is not the first time in history that marketers have been pressed to prove the impact of their work, far from it. The increase in the amount of data, growing number of sources of data, rise in synthetic data, and expectations around your ability to show the business relevance of data have skyrocketed. 

This means going beyond ‘data-driven’ decisions when building your ROI strategy. You must have the right data at every step of the customer journey. And just because metrics are easy to capture, that does not mean they are the right metrics to use. Instead, they should be those that are tied to market performance and are incrementally valuable to one another. 

Bridge the gap between outcomes and tactics

Nielsen’s latest Annual Marketing Report found that global marketers’ top priorities for 2024 are long-term and full-funnel ROI. However, 70% of these same marketers said they plan to increase their performance marketing spend and reduce their brand-building investments. 

There is a clear gap in the goals marketers have and the tactics they’re using to get there. I believe a misunderstanding of metrics is at the heart of it. If you are measuring ROI only by what’s happening to the bottom line, you may be missing the bigger picture. Being too focused on short-term returns is proven to hurt your ability to improve revenue numbers down the road. Because just as consumers and users have a path they follow, your ROI has a journey, too. 

Map your ROI journey

You can get to a destination without directions, but it takes a lot more time and effort. The same is true with outcomes; they’re consistently successful when you have a comprehensive plan. But the plan is changing. 

For much of the last decade, performance has been tracked at the channel level. Did we hit our impression targets? Did we shrink the costs per click? Did we improve our bounce rate? 

This approach fails on two fronts: 

1. It confuses engagement for impact
2. It doesn’t reflect the consumer journey

ROI can’t be tracked by a range of data points at the channel level. True full-funnel ROI starts by aligning on objectives, defining KPIs from the outset, mirroring the paths consumers take and understanding how everything works together to achieve an outcome. 

From the first point of contact to refining the reach and frequency strategy and on through the point of purchase and beyond, you have to map not only the consumer actions but the impact along the way in order to see what’s genuinely working at every touchpoint. 

For example, top of funnel and bottom of funnel KPIs can often appear to be at odds. Perhaps the keyword search volume is high, but it’s not translating to pageviews. This is too narrow of a view. Instead, look at the bigger, cross-platform picture. Is the lead volume up? How are those leads contributing to the pipeline? By zooming out to look at the bigger picture, a more consistent story should emerge. 

Plotting your ROI journey must happen before anything else, because you can’t always retroactively measure outcomes. If you don’t plan to measure KPIs like Brand Lift and Sales from the beginning, you won’t be able to measure them at all. And even when you can do retroactive-looking metrics, it can be a prohibitively large effort for most teams. 

Know and report the right metrics

When trying to determine what metrics reveal impact, I’ve found this question to be a helpful litmus test: Will the results be compelling to your CFO?  

It’s not uncommon for marketers to stay focused on metrics like impressions, frequency, clicks and downloads. While valuable, they rarely translate for CFOs. Relevancy is what matters to Finance, and it’s up to marketers to draw the connecting line for them. 

This doesn’t mean you need to stop tracking things like likes, clicks and listens;  they’re a valuable gut check. But they shouldn’t be the foundation for strategic reporting. 

This has been a particularly challenging season for the advertising industry. We’ve all had to contend with change coming from every possible direction. As paths to purchase continue to fork, impact continues to be a guiding light. As long as you know where to find it.  

For more insights on how to sharpen your ROI strategy, download the Nielsen’s 2024 Annual Marketing Report. 

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Outcomes-minded metrics: The marketing KPIs your CFO cares about https://www.nielsen.com/insights/2024/marketing-kpis-cfo-cares-about/ Mon, 06 May 2024 14:06:52 +0000 https://www.nielsen.com/?post_type=insight&p=1567671 These are five outcomes-focused KPIs that help marketers show impact and unlock budget.

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How do you measure success for your advertising campaigns? Marketers care about reach and frequency, views and listens, clicks and likes. But CFOs and their colleagues at the executive table speak a very different language: ROI.

To them, impressions and engagement metrics are a means to an end. What they really want to know is whether their marketing investments are making a difference at the cash register. Of course, not everything has to be a sale or acquisition, but there should always be impact. 

Here are five CFO-approved key performance indicators (KPI) that will show impact, unlock budget and impress everyone at the next board meeting.

Cost per lead

Divide your marketing spend by the total number of leads you received. This can be done at the campaign level or for a set period of time, like a month, quarter or year. 

It’s a great metric because it draws a direct connection between marketing and purchase interest, and it’s very easy to understand for non-marketers. It’s also very healthy for the rest of your measurement efforts because it requires you to pay special attention to attribution: What platforms exactly contributed to your leads? In what proportions? At what cost?

Lead conversions

How many of your leads actually converted? It can be expressed as a rate (conversions / leads), a raw total over a given time period, or by extension as sales per lead. 

It forces you to give some thought to what lead time is reasonable for your industry (a conversion three months after an initial lead might be reasonable for auto or insurance brands, but perhaps not for snacks or pizza delivery) and how it might differ by channel and brand messaging, which is an important consideration for media allocation.

Return on ad spend (ROAS)

ROAS is the revenue brought in by a campaign divided by its cost. It’s a crucial metric because it goes to the heart of the ROI question: How much of your sales can be attributed to your marketing efforts, versus business as usual? 

Many consumers would have purchased from you without advertising. External factors like seasonality, weather, or macroeconomic variables might have played a role too, positively or negatively. ROAS is an invitation to look into media mix modeling.

Long-term ROI

Where is the cutoff between short-term and  long-term effects for your company’s products and services? Don’t blindly accept the 2X multiplier you might have seen in industry publications, or fall victim to the myth that performance campaigns only have short-term effects, and branding campaigns long-term effects. 

Every campaign follows a different curve of diminishing returns, based on factors like product category, messaging, competitors, target audiences, or the mix of platforms and ad formats you used. You can only optimize your campaigns if you understand their full effect over the long term.

Brand equity

This is a broad name for metrics like brand awareness, consideration, attitudes, favorability and relevance. It is also a KPI that needs qualifying. While not directly tied to sales outcomes, brand equity can have a positive impact on several things CFOs care about deeply. 

We’ve studied thousands of campaigns over the years, across dozens of industries, and we’ve found that the correlation between upper funnel brand metrics and marketing efficiency can be very strong: overall, we found that a 1-point gain in brand metrics like awareness and consideration typically drives a 1% increase in sales. Additionally, brand equity can influence your ability to retain clients, grow prospects and drive shareholder value. 

For more insights on how to sharpen your ROI strategy, download Nielsen’s 2024 Annual Marketing Report. 

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Full-Funnel Outcomes: How to Measure Impact Across the Changing Customer Journey https://www.nielsen.com/insights/2024/full-funnel-outcomes-how-to-measure-impact/ Wed, 01 May 2024 15:01:34 +0000 https://www.nielsen.com/?post_type=insight&p=1560222 Learn how to identify, measure and optimize ROI at every step of the new customer journey.

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Full-Funnel Outcomes: How to Measure Impact Across the Changing Customer Journey

Full-Funnel Outcomes: How to Measure Impact Across the Changing Customer Journey

Reaching audiences is only half the equation.

Between the rising usage of CTV as digital identifiers disappear and its ability to offer advertisers personalized and measurable ways to reach audiences, it will be one of the best advertising vehicles for reaching consumers at every rung of the marketing funnel. 

Watch to hear from Global Head of Marketing Mix Consulting, Josh Kowal and VP of Consulting, Arica McKinnon on what it takes to thrive in an outcomes-obsessed ad world. 

Learn more about…

Reach and frequency’s impact on outcomes 

Busting your ROI out of silos

The metrics that matter most, and why

72%

2/3

38%

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2024 Annual Marketing Report https://www.nielsen.com/insights/2024/maximizing-roi-in-a-fragmented-world-nielsen-annual-marketing-report/ Thu, 25 Apr 2024 12:00:00 +0000 https://www.nielsen.com/?post_type=insight&p=1547878 Discover how global marketers are allocating budgets, maximizing ROI and what these trends mean for your own impact...

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2024 Annual
Marketing Report

Maximizing ROI in a
fragmented world

Discover how global marketers are allocating budgets, measuring success and what these trends mean for your own impact planning.

What’s shaping the year ahead

Nielsen surveyed marketers around the world to understand where they’re spending, what their goals are and what’s getting in the way of maximizing their ROI. By analyzing these plans and priorities, we’ve developed recommendations to sharpen your own ROI strategies for 2024 and beyond. 

Our research revealed four key global themes:

Spending optimism
is up

Tactics and KPIs
are misaligned

Digital dominance
may hurt returns

Measurement
confidence is high,
but incomplete

Marketing’s great balancing act

Despite inflation, slowed consumer spending and supply chain uncertainties, marketers feel better about budgets this year. But they won’t spread that money evenly across the buyer journey, and a siloed view of performance may hurt marketers’ ability to deliver on full ROI potential.

72%

2/3

38%

Data source: 2024 Nielsen Global Marketer Survey

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Navigating AI in Marketing Mix Modeling: Risk and Rewards https://www.nielsen.com/insights/2024/navigating-ai-in-marketing-mix-modeling-risk-and-rewards/ Fri, 19 Apr 2024 19:35:45 +0000 https://www.nielsen.com/?post_type=insight&p=1554164 Are you ready to explore the transformative power of Artificial Intelligence in revolutionizing marketing measurement and...

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Navigating AI in
Marketing Mix Modeling:
Risk and Rewards

Young man looking at tablet

Navigating AI in
Marketing Mix Modeling:
Risk and Rewards

Are you ready to explore the transformative power of Artificial Intelligence in revolutionizing marketing measurement and strategy?

In this exclusive webinar, Katherine Canario, Director of Marketing Mix Modeling, and Ben Samuel, VP of Commercial for Nielsen Marketing Mix Modeling delve into the evolving landscape of AI in marketing measurement and uncover the crucial insights you need to propel your business forward. Learn how you can maximize AI’s potential while understanding and mitigating associated risks.

Learn more about…

The evolving AI trends in recent years and how perceptions have shifted, along with potential new opportunities

The pitfalls associated with AI if incorrectly applied within Marketing Mix Modeling

The essential framework for effective AI in marketing measurement  

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Unleashing the power of creator content https://www.nielsen.com/insights/2023/whalar-case-study/ Wed, 29 Nov 2023 04:00:00 +0000 https://www.nielsen.com/?post_type=insight&p=1426963 Whalar, a leading global creator company, commissioned Nielsen to measure the incrementality and ROI of their...

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Case study

Unleashing the Power of Creator Content

Nielsen + Whalar: Predictive ROI accurately estimates what creators bring to the Mix

Introduction

Measure the effectiveness of creator-specific campaigns

Whalar, a leading global creator company, specializes in unlocking the power of creators for brands in their marketing strategies. Whalar commissioned Nielsen to measure the incrementality and ROI of their creator-specific campaigns.

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Objective

Quantify results quickly to maximize investments

The objective was to swiftly and accurately quantify expected ROI and Sales Impacts, with the end goal of optimizing media plans to maximize ROI potential from creator investments.

Challenge

Harness the power of Marketing Mix Modeling

Whalar sought a solution versatile enough to cover various categories, countries and brands of all sizes. Not only did they want to harness the power of a traditional Marketing Mix Modeling (MMM) study, but they also required a highly accurate source for insight into optimization prior to campaign launch.

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Solution

Use predictive analytics to identify optimization opportunities

Nielsen introduced Predictive ROI (PROI), an advanced solution designed to provide rapid and cost-effective ROI insights, even for emerging media types like creator content. PROI harnessed the power of Compass Planner, Nielsen’s premier MMM normative database, employing media saturation curves and campaign data from prior MMM analyses to forecast ROI and gauge effectiveness.

By leveraging Nielsen’s unparalleled MMM benchmarks and utilizing the synergistic predictive tool, Whalar empowered clients to gain immediate visibility into the anticipated ROI of their media plans and uncover opportunities for optimization, all before the campaign launch.

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Key findings

$2.63

Strong ROAS

While the ROAS across the 6 measured campaigns ranged from $1.5 – $4.5, the average ROAS across the campaigns was $2.63.

9%

ROAS comparison

The average ROAS across the campaigns ($2.63) was only 9% different compared to total platform ROAS ($2.43) measured via a prior executed MMM. This reaffirmed earlier research by Nielsen, connecting the comparability of PROI results to MMM.

25%

Underinvestment in content creator campaigns

Historical execution levels were approximately 25% of saturation levels, indicating an underinvestment in content creator campaigns within advertiser marketing plans.

20%

Key performance drivers

Weeks on air and optimal weekly impressions emerged as pivotal drivers of campaign performance. An optimization scenario implemented on one of the campaigns revealed that doubling weekly support while maintaining the same number of weeks on air could increase ROAS by approximately 20%.

Results

Optimize quickly to maximize campaign performance

The study results presented a significant opportunity for advertisers to enhance their ROIs by optimizing weekly paid media weight levels and the length of time on air, as well as reallocating resources to maximize the potential of their creator marketing campaigns.

Right sided blue shaded Triangles
Optimize quickly to maximize campaign performance

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How it works

PROI, Nielsen’s leading advanced media performance measurement solution, enabled Whalar to engage in sophisticated budget allocation and planning through the use of machine learning algorithms to estimate the outcome of media plans for their advertisers’ brands in their markets. PROI unveiled an unmatched global scale with benchmarks across 5K+ models, 25K+ curves, and hundreds of categories in 50+ countries. Its advanced modeling capabilities and validation ensure accuracy and reliability, even with less data granularity, for Whalar’s multifaceted campaign.

A Black Women looking at laptop and searching data
Improve campaign effectiveness with Nielsen's predictive analytics

Conclusion

Improve campaign effectiveness with Nielsen’s predictive analytics

Nielsen’s PROI solution demonstrated its effectiveness in providing rapid and cost-effective ROI insights for creator marketing campaigns. By leveraging MMM principles and historical data, the study shed light on the untapped potential of content creator campaigns, presenting advertisers with actionable recommendations to optimize their investments.

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The biggest challenge facing the Creator Economy is determining the impact on ROI, quickly, and at scale. Since MMM isn’t always an option, Nielsen’s PROI solution is perfect for Whalar’s brand partners. It employs methodology by tapping into Nielsen’s vast MMM database to highlight the significant impact of Whalar’s creator campaigns.

Gaz Alushi | Whalar
President of Measurement and Analytics

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Want to talk with our team of experts?

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Liberty Global’s metadata journey to super-aggregation with Gracenote https://www.nielsen.com/insights/2023/liberty-global-the-metadata-journey-to-super-aggregation-with-gracenote/ Tue, 25 Jul 2023 20:38:37 +0000 https://www.nielsen.com/?post_type=insight&p=1307224 Learn how Liberty Global and Gracenote are aggregating metadata to deliver the next chapter in immersive, content-led...

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Delivering super-aggregation is an imperative for pay TV and communications providers like Liberty Global to accelerate their position in the competitive TV and streaming market. This means offering customers a wide range of digital services and video content in one place, making it easier to discover and consume, and maximizing “stickiness” to keep users engaged. 

As one of Europe’s leading operators and a world leader in converged broadband, video and mobile communications, Liberty Global needed an entertainment metadata powerhouse to help create its next-generation entertainment platform, Horizon 4, as it rolled out across 85 million subscribers. Nielsen’s Gracenote first partnered on metadata for Liberty Global’s UK business, Virgin Media, in 2010, and has gone on to power metadata solutions across the operator’s markets, completing its support for Horizon 4 in early 2023. 

Download the case study to learn how Liberty Global and Gracenote are aggregating metadata to deliver the next chapter in immersive, content-led visual experiences. 

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Audiences transcend marketing channels; measurement can do the same https://www.nielsen.com/insights/2023/audiences-transcend-marketing-channels-measurement-can-do-the-same/ Fri, 23 Jun 2023 12:00:00 +0000 https://www.nielsen.com/?post_type=insight&p=1253826 Streaming may be the most top-of-mind today, but the future of cross-media measurement will need to be adaptive to many...

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There is no shortchanging the complexity of today’s media industry, or the impact that the ever-expanding range of choice has on effective cross-media measurement. That complexity, however, doesn’t grant marketers any leeway when it comes to delivering on business objectives. In reality, we know that increased complexity simply amplifies accountability.

And managing complexity isn’t enough. Marketers need to find ways to keep things simple, streamlined and clear—oftentimes with reduced budgets and fewer resources. Marketers are on the hook to deliver for their businesses and justify their investments along the way. In that way, the complexity of today’s media landscape has become both a unique and a universal challenge.

The proliferation and growth of new media channels presents one of the most pressing difficulties in the quest for effective cross-media measurement, especially as audiences increase their connected TV (CTV)1 usage, which provides access to streaming services. Streaming may be the most top-of-mind today, but the future of cross-media measurement will need to be adaptive to many new channels as they emerge.

Today, however, marketers know that streaming is where the audience is, and they’re adjusting their marketing plans accordingly. In fact, the survey supporting the 2023 Nielsen Annual Marketing Report found that 45% of ad budgets globally, on average, are shifting to CTV channels. The flipside, however, is that marketers don’t yet see the value in their CTV spending, as only 49% of marketers say CTV is either very or extremely effective.

Given the appeal of streaming with audiences, it makes sense that marketers are leaning in—even though the perceived effectiveness is currently low. When any new channel gains audiences, marketers need to balance between spending where they know the audience is and the risk associated with learning what they need to know to prove their investment there.

But measuring audiences across the streaming landscape won’t be marketers’ last hurdle. It’s simply the one they’re facing now. Widespread connectivity will continue opening the doors to new options, all of which will have their own measurement needs. That’s where the real cross-media measurement challenge is.

Tools and solutions that measure engagement at the channel level have never been able to provide marketers with a holistic view of how individual people are engaging across all channels. Historically, the road to cross-media measurement has relied on marketers’ ability to aggregate channel measurement and then surmise what a complete consumer journey looked like. Channel proliferation and increasing privacy regulations make that an increasingly tall order, and sentiment from global marketers reflects the increasing difficulty: Only 50%, on average, say they’re extremely or very confident in their ability to measure for full-funnel ROI across channels.

Confidence aside, marketers know they need to address the challenge, as 71% overwhelmingly acknowledge the importance of arriving at a single view of audience engagement across channels (i.e., comparable, deduplicated measurement).

If marketers truly desire that single view of audience engagement across every touchpoint, they’ll need to abandon any tool or solution that isn’t complementary from a data perspective. Marketers should consider leveraging as few tools as possible to arrive at that single view of audience engagement. Undoubtedly, a shift like this could be unsettling for many. But as marketing dollars span an increasing number of channels, disparate datasets from channel-specific tools will require an increasing amount of manual reconciling.

With confidence in arriving at full-funnel ROI measurement at relatively low levels today, an increasingly rich media landscape in the years ahead suggests the need for transformative thinking based on data and solutions that are both trusted and channel agnostic. With audiences adding and seamlessly switching from channel to channel, it makes sense that measurement should be able to do the same.

For additional insight, download the 2023 Nielsen Annual Marketing Report.

Note

Connected TV (CTV) refers to any television that is connected to the internet. The most common use case is to stream video content.

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