Potential TikTok ban sends advertisers scrambling
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[March 23, 2023] By
Sheila Dang
(Reuters) - Advertisers are seeking any assurances from TikTok, the
viral app that helped usher in a wave of short-form video across social
media, as the Chinese-owned company again faces a potential ban in the
U.S. over national security concerns.
When TikTok's Chief Executive Officer Shou Zi Chew testifies before
Congress for the first time on Thursday, advertisers will be closely
watching his appearance for news as well as the reaction of lawmakers,
several ad agencies told Reuters.
TikTok's U.S. ad revenue is expected to reach $6.83 billion this year,
from $780 million in 2020, according to research firm Insider
Intelligence. The app, which is owned by China's ByteDance and is wildly
popular among younger users, now has 150 million monthly users in the
U.S., it said on Tuesday.
The company faces growing calls from lawmakers who are pressuring the
Biden administration to ban the app over concerns that Americans' user
data could fall into the hands of the Chinese government.
In recent discussions with ad buyers, TikTok representatives have stuck
to the company's current talking points. TikTok employees have played up
ongoing plans to separate the user data of Americans and store it in the
country. The data will be housed in a new division called U.S. Data
Security (USDS), which will be monitored by U.S. tech company Oracle, an
effort dubbed Project Texas.
At least one major ad firm held a call this week with TikTok sales
representatives in an attempt to learn more detail about its data
security practices. Though TikTok provided an overview of Project Texas,
it was unable to answer more detailed questions about how it would block
U.S. user data from the Chinese government, said an executive at the ad
firm, who declined to be named to discuss a private call.
Darren D'Altorio, vice president of social media at marketing agency
Wpromote, said TikTok sent an email on Tuesday to note that it had
launched a new website for USDS and included answers to frequently asked
questions about the initiative.
In a section of the email titled "Can the Chinese government request
TikTok U.S. user data?" the company wrote that Project Texas "prevents
inappropriate access to that data, including no approval mechanism by
which U.S. data would be shared with the Chinese government."
A TikTok spokesperson said the company is engaging with advertisers "in
open, fact-based, and ongoing dialogue that includes providing regular
updates and addressing questions about the ways we're working to build a
trusted entertainment platform for users and brands."
Even with talk of a ban, most advertisers have not changed their
spending plans on TikTok, media buyers said, because discussions of a
ban have lingered since 2020 without any result.
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TikTok app logo is seen in this
illustration taken, August 22, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File
Photo
TikTok CEO Chew plans to tell lawmakers on Thursday that the company
has never, and would never, share U.S. user data with the Chinese
government, according to written testimony posted by the House of
Representatives Energy and Commerce Committee.
But it is a critical moment for TikTok, which has grown
exponentially in importance to advertisers as the app's user numbers
have surged in the two years since then-President Donald Trump first
explored a ban of the app.
The renewed concerns over TikTok seem to have escalated quickly in
the past few weeks, catching some brands off guard, D'Altorio said.
Some clients that are publicly-traded companies had been reluctant
to buy ads on TikTok since 2020, and their wariness has only
continued. "They say 'we don't want to touch this,'" he said.
Vinny Rinaldi, Hershey Co's head of media and analytics, said on
Wednesday that the Reese’s Cup maker built a contingency plan if
TikTok is shut off in the U.S.
Hershey spends the least on TikTok compared to other social
platforms, Rinaldi said, but it’s an “area of growth (that is)
working well.” His bet is that TikTok users switch to YouTube if the
platform shuts down.
The current situation also makes some smaller brands with a niche
audience hesitant to experiment with ads on TikTok, said Adam Telian,
vice president of media services at marketing agency New Engen,
which has worked with The Home Depot and Google Fiber.
"People are hesitant to make that commitment and investment at a
time when they're not sure TikTok will still be around," he said.
While tension brews in Washington, TikTok has continued to roll out
new tools for Madison Avenue. Last month it introduced a feature to
let brands easily turn their organic TikTok videos into ads.
Advertisers that are using TikTok and seeing strong performance from
their ads are recommended to stay the course, said Erik Huberman,
CEO of Hawke Media, a marketing consultancy that has worked with Red
Bull and Alibaba.
Brands that have customers on TikTok will find it difficult to step
away until real action happens in Washington, D'Altorio said.
"A ban isn't a ban until it's a ban," he said.
(Reporting by Sheila Dang in Dallas; additional reporting by Jessica
DiNapoli; editing by Kenneth Li and Anna Driver)
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