Retailers set sights on Facebook, Google ad revenue
THE EXPRESS TRIBUNE > TECHNOLOGY
By Reuters Published: July 26, 2018
Facebook, Amazon, Alibaba and Google logos are seen in this
combination photo from Reuters files. PHOTO: REUTERS
BERLIN/CHICAGO: People with hay fever hate dust. That was
the premise of a marketing drive launched by British vacuum cleaner maker Dyson
with US retailer Target.
Using data about its customers’ shopping habits, Target
homed in on shoppers who likely had allergies and showed them ads for Dyson’s
cordless V6 vacuum on social media and Target’s website. The result: sales for
the vacuums doubled among shoppers who regularly purchase anti-allergy
treatments and products such as Claritin or humidifiers on Target.com and in
stores.
Data about real people and real behaviors “actually get a
much stronger result because the fidelity of that data is so much richer,” said
Kristi Argyilan, Target’s senior vice president of media and guest engagement.
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Retailers ranging from Target and Walmart to grocers such as
Tesco are working aggressively to attract big advertisers to their websites in
a bid to drive sales, according to interviews with retailers, packaged goods
makers, consumer data firms and marketing consultants.
Specifically, they are selling more ad space, pop-up banners
and search-bar keywords to consumer goods companies such as Kraft Heinz and
Procter & Gamble. These makers of everything from soup to shampoo are
investing more to advertise on retailers’ websites where people who already
have an intent to buy are guided to specific products using their individual
shopping habits.
This online ad revenue offers significantly higher margins
for retailers than selling goods in stores.
By carving out space for themselves in the booming digital
ad market, they are taking on Alphabet’s Google and Facebook and the $114
billion they received last year in global online ad revenue. According to
research company eMarketer, Google and Facebook’s revenue accounted for nearly
half of the global market in 2017.
Supermarkets have long charged brands to place products in
the busiest parts of their stores, such as near the checkout counter.
As more shopping shifts online, e-commerce giants Amazon.com
and Alibaba pioneered replicating that strategy on their websites by mining
data to target advertising at selected customers or groups. Amazon ad revenue
alone could jump to $6.6 billion by 2019 from $2.8 billion last year, according
to JPMorgan.
While retailers have a long way to go before they come close
to Google and Facebook digital advertising prowess, their instant access to
data on what is selling puts stores in a strong position, said Joe Zawadzki,
chief executive of MediaMath, which helps brands manage ad campaigns.
“To the extent that the retailer can help the manufacturer,
it becomes a new revenue opportunity and a way forward for them,” he said.
“We’re very much at the start of this.”
Alphabet and Facebook declined to comment. To be sure, retailers
and brands for the foreseeable future will still be drawn to advertise on
Facebook and Google given the internet giants’ massive customer base in order
to drive traffic to their websites. And the Silicon Valley companies likely
will make overtures to long-time clients of theirs to avoid losing business.
BANNERS, POP-UPS, AND MONEY BACK
Retailers are offering a range of marketing options online,
including banner ads, pop-ups, and money-off deals. As with Google, suppliers
can pay for keywords to get their products listed at the top of any search.
Some industry observers expect voice aides like Amazon’s
Alexa may one day let brands pay to be the first product recommended when a
shopper asks to purchase an item such as ketchup, a feature known as “Amazon’s
Choice.” Amazon told Reuters it has no plans to let companies pay for the
distinction, “nor do we have plans to advertise on Alexa broadly.”
“We’re making sure that when consumers are typing in
‘ketchup’, our product is really above, that it comes up into that first
screen,” Nina Barton, Kraft Heinz president of global online and digital
growth, told Reuters in an interview.
Barton said Kraft Heinz, the owner of the Philadelphia cream
cheese and Planters peanuts brands, was on track to spend four times more on
e-commerce marketing in 2018 than it did last year, including advertising on
social media, search engines and retailer’s websites.
Consumer companies bid against one another for thousands of
keywords such as “ketchup” or “chocolate,” often even snatching up keywords
that are important to rival brands to undercut them, said Nii Ahene, co-founder
CPC Strategy, a digital marketing agency that advises several major consumer
packaged goods companies, including Unilever.
Retailers are paid anything from 25 cents to $2 each time a
shopper clicks on a sponsored search item, depending on the product being sold,
he said. Ads for supplements, for instance, cost a premium as people are more
likely to buy the same vitamins repeatedly and that means more sales for the
consumer company, according to Ahene.
“Companies like Kraft Heinz and Nestle have always paid for
a premium placement, whether it’s at the front of the store, in an end-cap or
premium placement on a shelf. This is simply the evolution of existing
processes to a digital storefront,” he said.
SALES IMPACT
The push by retailers comes as some major brands question
the value of some online ads.
Procter & Gamble, the world’s biggest advertiser,
pressured Facebook and Alphabet’s YouTube and other media companies to reveal
how many people see their ads and how ad agencies spend advertising dollars.
The average view time for an ad on a mobile news feed is
just 1.7 seconds, Marc Pritchard, P&G’s chief brand officer, told the
Association of National Advertisers’ media conference in March.
“Even Facebook and Google can’t tell P&G properly
whether their ads have worked, whereas if you’re buying retail media we can
measure whether there has been a statistically significant uplift from running
that media campaign,” said Guillaume Bacuvier, a former Google advertising
executive who is now chief executive of customer data company Dunnhumby, which
is owned by British supermarket Tesco.
The average time that an ad is viewable on retailer sites is
about 16 seconds, according to Dunnhumby, which defines “viewable” as when at
least half of the ad is on the screen.
In one case, Tesco ran banner adverts on its website for a
leading brand of dishwasher tablets. Dunnhumby said almost 100,000 pounds
($132,000) of sales came from customers exposed to the ad, with 6 percent of
the sales happening in a store.
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That translated into a return on advertising spending of
$11.34 for every $1 invested, according to Dunnhumby, noting that more than
2,200 new customers had added the brand to their online favorites list as a
result of the campaign. That is far more than an average return on ad spend of
$2.62 for every $1 invested across all media types, according to a 2016 Nielsen
report.
It is those kinds of numbers that are helping win over
marketing experts including Andrew Clarke at Mars, another major advertiser and
the maker of M&M’s candy and Wrigley’s gum.
“The advantage potentially of these players is they can help
really demonstrate the impact of our marketing dollars on a transaction, both
online and potentially offline as well,” Clarke told Reuters. ($1 = 0.7577
pounds)
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