TV companies flaunt ad tech and AI to persuade advertisers to spend
Send a link to a friend
[May 17, 2024]
By Dawn Chmielewski
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Television "upfront" advertiser presentations this
week in New York City were hardly about TV at all.
The annual week-long affair where media executives have traditionally
pre-sold TV advertising featured many familiar trappings: pop stars
Alicia Keys and Billie Eilish dazzled packed auditoriums with live
performances; celebrities Kevin Hart, Reese Witherspoon and Ryan
Reynolds hawked their latest projects, and Super Bowl star Tom Brady
joined other pro athletes on stage.
But it was ad tech and artificial intelligence that was getting all the
attention.
Warner Bros Discovery talked up shoppable ads on its Max streaming
service. Google's YouTube introduced a new AI-powered format to place
non-skippable ads on videos streamed to internet-connected TVs. Netflix
advertising chief Amy Reinhard said the streamer would develop its own
in-house ad technology that would give advertisers new ways to buy and
gain new insights.
Ad tech even featured in punchlines.
"You're probably wondering why I am so giddy today," joked late-night
host Jimmy Kimmel at Walt Disney's presentation. "It's because Disney is
using proprietary meta-tagging data that leverages video intelligence to
tap into the moods and emotions within the content we create. That's why
I'm so proud of what we've done here."
Streaming players also sought to win over advertisers from traditional
media rivals by emphasizing their increasing reach.
Netflix's Reinhard said the company's ad-supported plan now has 40
million global monthly users, up from 5 million a year ago. In countries
where Netflix offers a version of its service with advertising, it
accounts for 40% of all sign-ups, she said.
Chief Content Officer Bela Bajaria touted the chart-topping popularity
of shows like its period drama "Bridgerton" and the streaming service's
expanded investment in big, live events, including a splashy deal to
stream two NFL professional football games on Christmas Day.
[to top of second column]
|
The Walt Disney Company CEO Bob Iger attends the Nominees Luncheon
for the 95th Oscars in Beverly Hills, California, U.S. February 13,
2023. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni/File Photo
At Amazon.com, the online superstore
and cloud computing giant's biggest news was its appearance at the
event. To make a memorable first impression with ad buyers at its
first upfront since introducing ads on Prime Video earlier this
year, the company treated some 2,500 guests to a bounty of breakfast
foods that reminded some of the big-shrimp buffets of television's
heyday.
Displays arrayed around Pier 36 in Manhattan showcased the breadth
of Prime Video's streaming content, including one that rained dollar
bills from the ceiling to promote a forthcoming reality competition
from YouTube personality Mr. Beast that offers a $5 million prize.
Mike Hopkins, senior vice president of Prime Video and Amazon MGM
Studios, called Amazon a "one-stop destination" for entertainment
and said it delivers ads to more than 200 million global customers,
115 million of whom live in the U.S.
Disney CEO Bob Iger returned to the upfront stage for the first time
since 1994, back when "television used to be something you watched
on television."
While much has changed over the last three decades, he said, "what
hasn't changed is the fact that success in this industry is
predicated on one thing: telling great stories."
A day later Iger, speaking at MoffettNathanson's 2024 Media,
Internet and Communications Conference in New York, told investors
he had cut investment in programming for traditional television
dramatically as part of Disney's strategy to maximize audiences and
profit in streaming.
(Reporting by Dawn Chmielewski in New York, additonal reporting by
Greg Bensinger in San Francisco; editing by Kenneth Li and Rosalba
O'Brien)
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |