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ESPN The Magazine and MillerCoors: Sponsored Content Controlled by the Publisher

Friday, May 24, 2013 by The SRDS Team

ESPN Magazine Sponsored Content

Sponsored content (or native advertising) is becoming a smoother and less intrusive way for digital publishers to make revenue without relying on display ads. Major sites like BuzzFeed, Forbes, The Huffington Post and Gawker all offer native advertising. And ethics aside, this model seems to be working. According to AdWeek:

“In the wake of a Pew report that sponsorship advertising was up 40 percent in 2012, Forbes Media is touting the growth of its own revenues—thanks, in part, to its success with native ads.”

But when you consider a medium like print, advertorials are typically frowned upon by readers and the writing staff. Especially in newspapers, advertising and editorial are viewed almost like church and state. Even if you clearly label something as advertising, many print readers get angry.

Is that about to change?

ESPN: The Magazine announced that in its upcoming 15th anniversary issue, it will run an editorial sidebar with the words "Cold Hard Facts presented by Coors Light" on the page, according to AdWeek. Unlike the online native advertising model where the advertiser manages the content, ESPN will have complete control over the sidebars. MillerCoors won’t even get to see the content before publication.

That may sound a tad dicey for an advertiser, but when you consider the fact that ESPN and MillerCoors have a long-standing relationship in broadcast-sponsored content, it’s really not a big risk. If you watch SportsCenter, you’ll often see segments called “Coors Cold Hard Facts." During these segments, the anchor asks a sports analyst six questions, alluding to a six pack of Coors. Again, MillerCoors doesn’t control the content. They’re simply paying to be tied to ESPN and content that they believe will be interesting to their target audience.

So is this case really an advertorial? I don’t think so. It’s an interesting take on sponsored content but because Miller isn’t producing the content I have a hard time labeling it an advertorial. This isn’t purely pay-to-play. It’s pay to be mentioned as a sponsor and be associated with our high-quality content. And that’s OK with me.

Do you place different values on digital, broadcast and print sponsored content?

(image source)

SQAD First Quarter Data Now Available in SRDS.com

Wednesday, May 22, 2013 by The SRDS Team

Attention! Updated Spot Radio and TV Cost-Per-Point estimates are now available in SRDS.com.

Most broadcast media buyers understand that an indispensable method for measuring cost-efficiencies is by cost-per-point. CPP is the cost, per 1% of an indicated audience, of buying ad space in a given media vehicle. This data provides buyers with what a CPP should be in the upcoming quarter, by market, by daypart.

As a reminder, Radio and TV/Cable database subscribers can find the SQAD information as follows:

SQAD Spot Radio Cost-Per-Point Estimates

This data can be found under the Radio Search.

Radio SQAD Data

TV Household Cost-per-Point Levels

This data can be found under the TV & Cable Search.

SQAD Tv Data

Log in now to view the data or if you don’t currently have access to these databases, let us know.

SQAD Fourth Quarter Radio and TV Data Now Available in SRDS.com

Thursday, February 21, 2013 by The SRDS Team

Broadcast media buyers and planners use SQAD data for media cost forecasting, specifically to find out what a CPP should be in the upcoming quarter, by market, by daypart.

Cost per Rating Point (CPP) is a metric used to determine the cost of buying ad space to reach 1% of their target audience. It allows media buyers and planners to compare the costs of advertising on different media outlets to determine the most efficient and cost-effective placements.

Here’s where broadcast planners can find this updated information in Kantar Media SRDS:

SQAD Spot Radio Cost-Per-Point Estimates by MSA

SQAD Radio

Go to the Radio Media database and on the welcome page, click on the SQAD Spot Radio Cost-per-Point Estimates link.  It will pull up a list of PDFs with SQAD data by metro market. The radio CPP data is only available to subscribers of the Radio database.

SQAD Radio

TV Households Cost-Per-Point Levels by DMA

SQAD TV 1

Go to the TV & Cable Media database and on the welcome page, click on the DMA Maps and Profiles link. It will pull up a list of PDFs with SQAD data by DMA. This data is only available to subscribers of the TV & Cable database.

SQAD TV

If you’re interested in accessing the Radio or TV/Cable databases, let us know.

SQAD Second Quarter Radio and TV Data Now Available in SRDS

Wednesday, September 5, 2012 by Chris Pokorny

The latest Spot Radio and TV Cost-Per-Point estimates are now available in SRDS.

As broadcast buyers well know, one of the key ways to measure cost-efficiencies is by CPP or cost-per-point (e.g., per Gross Rating Point). Cost per point is the cost, per 1 percent of a specified audience, of buying ad space in a given media vehicle. Buyers rely on SQAD to tell them what a CPP should be in an upcoming quarter, by market, by daypart.

As a reminder radio and tv/cable subscribers can find the SQAD information in SRDS as follows:

SQAD Spot Radio CPP Estimates by MSA

Go to the Radio Media database and you will see a link to the MSA PDFs on the Radio welcome page:

SQAD Radio CPP

 

TV Cost-Per-Point Levels by DMA

Go to the TV & Cable Media database and you will see a link to the DMA profile PDFs on the TV & Cable welcome page:

 

SQAD TV CPP

 

Need help calculating CPPs now? Use our simple calculator.

Spoiler alert: SRDS will soon be releasing an iOS app for easily determining CPP and other calculations on the fly!

New Opportunities for Measuring TV Advertising

Friday, August 24, 2012 by The SRDS Team

Broadcast media has changed forever. No longer a passive feed for couch potatoes, TV has become an interactive, on-demand experience.

As Kantar Media's Jeff Boehme and Jon Swallen point out: "The internet may grab all the headlines, but advertising spend on national TV in the United States is still growing faster than  the rest of the market."

TV Ad Spend

This emergent landscape offers plenty of new opportunities, and new metrics are evolving alongside them.

In an article for Kantar Media's Momentum Review, "TV Breaks Out of the Box," Boehme (Chief Research Officer, Kantar Media Audiences North America) and Swallen (Chief Research Officer for Kantar Media Intelligence North America) examine the opportunities for measuring television advertising and creating powerful new experiences for clients.

They write:

Measurement has a growing role in the evolving TV ecosystem. Advertisers are demanding greater accountability for their investments and return path data (RPD) provides second-by-second usage information to help value a campaign based on actual audience to the commercials. Unlike traditional ratings, RPD enables marketers to understand how viewers consume their ads and what factors can ensure the best environment for their success.

Beyond Look-Ups: Using SRDS Reports for Media Buyers

Tuesday, August 14, 2012 by Tina Stevens

Every so often I hear from print or broadcast buyers who are still only using SRDS to look-up contacts. Particularly since the re-launch of reports in June, the majority of buyers using SRDS are using us for much more than look-ups. For instance, do you ever need to collect contact information for Radio or TV Stations in a market or series of markets? How about getting traffic information for TV stations? How about print rates? Or print contacts? Column sizes in Newspaper? 

Before reports, putting this together would have taken hours (at best!), having to manually copy-and-paste the information into a spreadsheet or document. For qualified agency clients with reports enabled, it can take mere minutes. 

Let's try an example. Say you want all the TV stations in the Chicago DMA.

  1. Click TV & Cable Media, then select TV Stations
  2. Select the Chicago DMA
  3. Click "Select All" on each page of your results
  4. Click Reports. Choose Contact Report to export topline contact information for these stations to Excel, or Detailed Report to export more station contacts and include traffic detail.

Boom: minutes versus hours! 

You want all Radio stations, TV stations, and newspapers for a market or series of markets?

  1. Click Local Media by DMA
  2. Select your market (or series of markets)
  3. Click Newspapers, Radio, and TV as your media types
  4. Click Reports. The only options for all media is Contact Report—for Detailed Report, go to the left side of screen and select each media type and run the Detailed Reports one at a time.

Again, boom! Reports make this possible in minutes instead of hours, whether you're a media planner or a media buyer.

The Overlooked Power of Media

Monday, July 30, 2012 by Mike Morrow

If you've ever tried to convince a creative-focused client just how important a strategic and well-thought-out media plan can be, or for that matter tried to explain to your parents what you do for a living, you might want to grab a copy of Millward Brown's latest POV piece: "The Overlooked Power of Media: Enhancing the Memorability of Communications" (that's a PDF link).

A bit basic for an experienced media pro, it is nonetheless a good introduction to the idea that different media strategies can be effective for different groups. I particularly liked author James Galpin's assertion that the right media choices deliver "not only messages, but memorability."

That's one to hang on the computer monitor.

Galpin makes a case for options beyond broadcast media, reminding us that "TV can be less cost-efficient than more targeted media like cinema, magazines, and online." Good ammunition if a small local client comes to you wanting to buy space during the Super Bowl.

Quoting the paper at length:

Therefore, advertisers need to go beyond the question of just how much to spend. All GRPs are not created equal; smart media decisions can significantly enhance memorability and enable marketers to get the most out of their communications investments.

How about you: what's your go-to explanation for the importance of media planning?

(via @Millward_Brown)

8 Quick Tips for Using the New SRDS Media Planning Platform

Wednesday, July 18, 2012 by Tina Stevens

The new multimedia planning platform at next.srds.com was designed to make finding, considering and understanding your media options faster and easier. So, how much of its capabilities are you using? 

Here are 8 quick tips that will help you get the most from the new system.

  1. Search across all media or any combination of media you license with the open search
  2. Use open search to search for a specific media property by name...just remember to click "Title Only" from the dropdown menu (Did you know that Title Only search also works with broadcast station call letters?)
  3. Search over 23,000 websites that accept adveritsing in the Digital Media database
  4. Check out all of the advertising opportunities under the Marketing/Advertising Opportunities tab on a Digital Media listing
  5. The Action Icons in a media brand's listing link to Video Media Kits, Tablet App Media Kits, Regular Media Kits, Audit statements, social media presence and more
  6. The Brand Portfolio tab in a detailed listing shows you the entire landscape of media options related to a specific media brand
  7. The display of listings that "SRDS Users Also Viewed" are a great way to discover new media options
  8. The Grid View lets you look at single media-type results in a quick view format?

I'd love to show you these and many more tips for using SRDS online. If you or your team would like to set-up a WebEx review of our platform, email me or call 800.851.7737.

Export Media Planning Data from SRDS

Tuesday, June 12, 2012 by Chris Pokorny

Don’t even think about rekeying that data. Now you can view multimedia options and take them with you, with SRDS’ new reports-building functionality. The new SRDS Reports feature lets you select titles, view them side-by-side, organize, sort, print and output key planning data.

Select

Whether you’re doing a quick title search or broader research, you can add titles to your consideration set from the detailed listing or right from the results page, saving precious time. An at-a-glance view of all your tagged titles is always available (think shopping cart). 

Sort

Once you’re tagged up, go to your Reports area to evaluate all the media selections you’ve made. Compare your titles in a Grid view—you won’t be disappointed!

Print

Just want a handy print out of your consideration set? No problem.

Download Contact Information

Download a Contact Report for any and all titles you’ve selected across the SRDS database. Just one keystroke generates a file you can sort, filter, append and customize to your liking in spreadsheet programs such as Excel.

Contact information includes (where available):

  • Media title and type
  • Owner name
  • Classification or market area
  • Address, phone, fax and email
  • Media kit URL and corporate URL

Download Detailed Data

More data, you say? In addition to contact information, Detailed Reports provide you with, well, more details. Detailed Reports are available when viewing a single media type, allowing you to take a deep dive into the planning data for that specific media type.

Fields included in a Detailed Report depend on the media type selected:

  • Print: rates, circulation, frequency, rate base and bleed information
  • Broadcast: network affiliations and key personnel and traffic information
  • Digital: Unique Visitors from Compete.com
  • Direct Marketing: list universes and base rates

Reports Tip: Don't forget  the icing on the cake. You can always copy and paste media images and logos in your reports to provide extra insight and interest.

We'll show you how easy it all is in less than 5 minutes with this video, or you can download a sample Contact Report or Detailed Report.

 

 

Better yet, sign in to SRDS now and start tagging media for yourself!

2012 State of Media Report from KSM

Thursday, May 3, 2012 by The SRDS Team

Last week, our friends at Kelly Scott Madison released their latest annual analysis on the current media and advertising landscape and upcoming industry trends, titled the "2012 State of Media Report."

According to KSM:

the industry is currently in the midst of a revolution due to unprecedented rates of consumer technology adoption, platform convergence and increased access to analytics. Not only has the introduction and true embracement of cutting-edge gear, such as tablets and continuously-evolving mobile devices changed the very way consumers absorb media, but now more than ever trends are showing that users increasingly expect to interact with all content providers through multiple online and offline formats.

Elizabeth Kalmbach, KSM’s vice president of strategy, notes that the mass adoption of digital media has forced all media to produce and deliver content across all formats, or risk losing audience share:

What’s incredible is we’re seeing media that used to be highly segmented now depending upon one another for survival. Cable, radio, broadcast, print and digital formats all find themselves in the same position; they need each other’s content to function and hopefully remain profitable. It’s a fragile ecosystem, and if one source dies all will be affected.

The full 55-page report is available for download from the KSM website, and includes the following key findings:

  • Faster Technology Adoption: It took tablets less than two years to reach the 40 million unit mark; that same level of adoption took seven years for smartphones.
  • Market Clutter: Less than 4 percent of videos on YouTube exceed the 100,000 viewer mark. Now more than ever, advertisers have to find the most appropriate delivery method and make strong marketing decisions in order to avoid having their messages lost in the clutter.
  • Privacy Issues: As the industry continues to battle consumer misconceptions and fears over privacy issues, education and self-regulatory practices will be key to maintaining order. Regulators will continue to face outcry from advertisers that are unsure of how costly proposed standards will benefit all those involved.
  • Data Overload: The digital media industry is "drowning in data" and will only overcome this issue by successfully understanding how their key target groups are currently consuming media, thus allowing them to separate insignificant performance metrics from those that matter most.
  • Wireless Spectrum shortage: Better known as wireless signals, spectrum is a finite resource and licensed to companies by the government. Its availability over the coming years will become a large issue as smartphones and tablets are essentially rendered useless without it. Cable, broadcast and mobile providers will fight to maintain a hold on spectrum, and whoever wins will literally own the market.

Download the Broadcast from Last Week's Media Mixology Event

Wednesday, April 25, 2012 by The SRDS Team

Did you miss the SRDS event at SD26 last week in New York on "Local Media Planning Amid Political Chaos"?

Do you wish your colleagues or boss could have heard Ken Goldstein or Mike Lewis' presentations?

Full audio and slides from this terrific evening for media planners and buyers are now available for you to download and share.

Check 'em out, and let us know in the comments if you have any suggestions for future SRDS Media Mixology events!

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