Tag: Mediasmart

  • IBS: Building the MarTech stack for digital India

    IBS: Building the MarTech stack for digital India

    Mumbai: The India Brand Summit held on 28 November 2023 at The Lalit Mumbai, convenes leaders, marketers, entrepreneurs, and experts to explore current trends, challenges, and opportunities in the dynamic brands and marketing arena.

    The session focuses on the implementation of marketing technology (MarTech) to drive digital transformation in India. The session delves into how organisations are leveraging Martech tools and strategies to navigate the digital landscape and connect with consumers in a rapidly evolving technological environment.

    The key highlights of this session are: To explore Martech stack components, reaching India’s diverse population, personalised experiences, challenges, competing with larger players, and aiding digital transformation in businesses.

    The panel moderated by Publicis Groupe India CEO, digital technology business Amaresh Godbole had panelists including South Indian Bank CMO Azmat Habibulla, Apollo 24|7 head of digital marketing Himanshu Sirohi, Axis Securities head – product & marketing Ashley Almeida, mediasmart VP – India, SEA and ME Nikhil Kumar and Reliance Retail GM digital marketing Deepak Tolani.

    The session began by Godbole asking a question to all the panellists, “Given the evolution that we’ve seen with the MarTech world over the last decade, how have you seen the investment drive? how has it changed your life? What is the single biggest benefit that you’ve seen from you MarTech stats? How has it changed you as a marketeror the program that you take and what are the challenges there is?”

    Tolani said, “The concept of MarTech itself is so new. A lot of people are actually not familiar within the system of what MarTech is. So I think, we need to have more of making this a non-jargonish kind of a thing and let the entire organisation know. Because when you are actually talking about MarTech and its implementation while you can get the best of the best tools onboarded. The most critical part is how it is getting used and how the data is actually getting collected. Then if the data is getting collected cleanly in a manner in which will help you. That’s when the MarTech could actually be utilised. So I think as marketers our role has become to be more of people who are actually spokesperson for how you go and adopt technology and make it easy for adoption within the organisation. Whether it is a supply chain who has their own systems, or it is the operations at the stores, or it is whether it is your end delivery logistics partner who is actually handling over the product to the customers. I think for us, the role as marketers has become how do you ensure that people are not afraid who this entire MarTech. It’s something that will help business become more efficient, help better conversation and also ensure that it will give insights which may not be available five or ten years back. So I think it’s very important for us to educate the entire environment inside our organisations.”

    Thereafter Kumar said, ”Marketing and technology coming together in a short form word which is cool and we’re having a panel today celery talks how we’ve evolved. I think technology is going to play a role not just today but in the future and how its evolving is where we need to put our focus on. I represent an organisation which started as an SMS organisation. Today we’re one of the world’s leading global Ad-tech companies.”

    He then went on to talk about the evolution from single screen, SMS once being the best way to reach consumers to smart screens and all these giving birth to technologies. He then added saying, “As a marketer myself, I think every marketing insight comes from a consumer or from a need generated by the consumer or just the need of the current hour. I think that’s where MarTech is heading.”

    Slightly changing the question for Azmat Habibulla, Godbole asked, “How is MarTech playing a role in marketing for banks?”

    To which Habibulla replied,  “In the earlier days there was no concept of MarTech and now nothing can be done without technology. We’re all living in a technology advanced world. What MarTech does for all brand in generali: you get all your customer data in one place which becomes a central data repository. It was never the case earlier. We had lot of data silos and every channel was a separate channel, not even talking to each other. This is the biggest advantage that I feel of MarTech today is. The level of personalisation and sub segmentation that you can do. You can talk to very specific cohorts and personas and do highly personalised communication. All this is only because of the MarTech technology that exists today. Banking is a very very regulated industry. Fortunately there is lots of security and processes around data which helps BFSI. Being regulated really helps us and the way we collect data from customers as in consent driven, be transparent, what will be the use of the data, etc, all of these goes into building trust. When it comes to the trust that a customer has with a brand: it’s attached to personalisation; it’s attached to data security. Thanks to MarTech.”

    Thereafter, Sirohi said, “Now if you breakdown MarTech into 3 core elements, one of the biggest element would be a customer 360° view. You have data coming into all kinds of engines. It can be a back-end engine which is upper order, which is created 10 years back. It could be a new engine like an app supplier or Adobe Analytics or a Google Analytics where you’re tracking data and it’s a very new age engine. How do you get data across all of these traditional landing sources and create that customer 360° view? That is one very, very important part of MarTech, which again to a lot of degree has been solved by a lot of new age market getting stacks. The second aspect what I would call is hyper-personalisation. So personalisation 10 years back used to be many to one. I would have a customer cohort of maybe thousands of users and I would probably send an e-mail, SMS or a push to that entire cohort. Now that is big-time award. Now it’s very one-to-one. You can have all those variables coming out of that customer’s 360° view and you can personalize everything the way you want to.

    The third aspect is real-time campaign orchestration, real time campaign orchestration across channels. Now you have the customer 360° view. You know what to probably send to the customer. How do you personalize it. Now the third aspect is how do you kind of send it to the user across multiple channels in a profitable manner so that there is no fatigue via your communication and you orchestrate your campaigns in real time. Now 10 years back, I will tell you a use case, there was no way for doing that that now and at Apollo we do that use case almost day in and day out. We run one of the biggest key pharmacies in the country. Now imagine someone ordering in Delhi in winter and my customer 360° view telling me, ‘OK, this person ordered something is based out of Delhi. Should I send him/her an informative mailer or an offer around sub-interventions? Now imagine this person now moving to Bangalore and that e-mail, if this person opens in out of Bangalore, this e-mail is absolutely not relevant while all the data points suggested that this was the right e-mail to be sent to. Via our marketing stack, what we can do is when this individual opens their e-mail boxes, we capture the IP location. We send it back to our dynamic creative optimizer. Understand, OK which location is it coming from changing the creative on the go. So someone sitting out of maybe Delhi in winters would be seeing a different creative to someone sitting out of Bombay or Bangalore or Hyderabad. So these sort of interesting use cases kind of very, very interesting to us. Imagine sending someone an offer, a Diwali offer code and this individual opening that e-mail five days after Diwali. That offer and that e-mail is kind of waste to this individual now. But what you can do via these marketing stacks these days is, you can change the offer on the go. So if there is a date counter, you check it out and then you send a revised offer as per the latest trends or whatever is happening. So that I believe is a big, big play wherein one you can have all of the data in your system, you can create personalised offers or emails or products for this individual and on real time orchestrate, basis the location, time, segment. So that I think is very interesting for us in terms of marketing stacks.”

    After which, Almeida went on to say, ”Three years back we realised that AI is going to be such a huge part in what we do. Therefore I upskilled myself and spent two years in learning AI, etc. The reason is, the name itself MarTech – marketing in tech. I think the tools are all there but I think the most important thing as marketers is how do I make it useful to the company and also useful to the consumer in the end. So this personalisation etcetera, but personalization also can mean, you know, personalisation at different levels for the industry that I’m in stockbroking, I’ve spent most of my time in stockbroking and I think the most important thing that people are looking for is getting something that is really relevant to them. In the stock market, it’s almost to the degree of one. We need to speak to each person individually because each need is so different. So how can you understand that user using his behavior and then give him something that he can use to make, you know, wise investment decisions? That’s where we really want to take MarTech to.”

  • Score big with festive fusion: Where celebrations and sports unite for brand success: mediasmart’s Nikhil Kumar

    Score big with festive fusion: Where celebrations and sports unite for brand success: mediasmart’s Nikhil Kumar

    Mumbai: mediasmart, an Affle company, is a unified programmatic platform which provides advertisers, trading desks, and agencies ways to integrate consumer journeys across screens. Unique strengths such as omnichannel audience management & incremental measurement together with measurable and high-impact CTV advertising (through its proprietary Household Sync technology), make mediasmart the platform of choice for marketers looking for an intuitive and powerful programmatic solution, whether they choose to use mediasmart’s console or build their own solutions on top of its open APIs.

    Nikhil Kumar is a consumer marketing professional with over a decade of experience working in FMCG, retail, F&B & ad-tech set-ups with global brands like Puma, L’Oreal, Cafe Coffee Day and recently Bytedance & InMobi. With a career spanning over 14 years – Nikhil has worked across multiple functions with his domain expertise primarily being brand marketing (digital & offline), business strategy/ sales & go-to market plan/ execution across consumer goods, retail & startup eco system. He currently leads the business of India & Southeast Asia for mediasmart, an Affle company.

    Today with many tools available for a marketer to explore the various platforms when it comes to brand messaging. The festive season and the ICC World Cup is upon us. Indiantelevision.com spoke to mediasmart – vice president, India & SEA Nikhil Kumar on how brands are allocating their spends, also which are the brands which get a traction during the festive period and how much of the ad spends are spent on digital…

    Edited Excerpts:

    On the challenges and opportunities arising when two major events, such as the ICC World Cup and the festive season, coincide in the advertising landscape

    Cricket is a revered event in India, highly anticipated and watched by a majority of the audience. A marquee cricket event like the World Cup is akin to a festive season in itself as cricket fans globally wait for it. Consumer spending typically picks up for eCommerce/offline retail during the festive months from Oct-Dec and this year with the cricket world cup coinciding, we anticipate this is only going to get bigger! Advertising pundits already anticipate a cracker of cricket and festive season with bigger eyeballs for CTV and mobile. We also anticipate more visibility for DOOH screens that can lead to higher footfalls for in-store purchase or action on mobile. This is an unprecedented opportunity to hit it out of the park with the right advertising campaigns to capture the hearts and wallets of a captive audience ready to spend big.

    On the anticipation of sectors that drive the higher ad expenditure during the festive season, especially this year and the reason behind it

    Festive period is a time for celebrations and usually translates into bigger purchases centered around this period, whether that is traveling, shopping, buying consumer goods and automotives. This translates into large spends in general coming from high-growth industry verticals like automotive, eCommerce, fintech, FMCG, foodtech, gaming, healthtech & hospitality, and more, which are also a focus for us from a growth perspective.

    Post-pandemic, the surge in online commerce has shifted spending habits, boosting digitally native app advertisers’ confidence. With the convenience of online shopping and smartphone prevalence, they are expected to allocate substantial budgets for festive advertising. Additionally, with the festive season coinciding with the cricket World Cup, advertisers on fantasy gaming apps have an opportunity to capitalize on cricket enthusiasm. The convergence of festivities and sport makes for an exciting time for brands to spend big, no matter where they are or who they are!

    On an estimate of the total ad spend expected during the cricket and festive season in 2023, and its comparison to the overall annual ad spending

    Digital advertising in India continues to grow and there’s a positive outlook for this year as well among industry watchers. Historically, this quarter is poised to be the highest spending quarter. Advertising pundits are already betting big for the months of Oct-Dec and expect advertising spends to increase by 30-35% on the back of increased consumer spending on categories like eCommerce, FMCG, Automotive, BFSI, and Retail. Cricket world cup will also attract additional spending power of cricket gaming giants which have been key sponsors/advertisers of marquee Indian cricket events in recent times. The combined influence of heightened consumer spending and the celebratory atmosphere is a recipe for successful ad campaigns

    On cricket contributing to the majority of ad spending in the sports-related advertising sector

    Cricket has always caught the fancy of advertisers in India and even in the era of sports events being only broadcast via linear television, brands would flock to get prime real-estate on television. Now, cricket has only gotten bigger and is consumed over television via linear feed as well as on digital feed on CTVs via OTTs. In addition to this, the multiple other screens like OTT mobile apps also contribute to the increased consumption, making advertisers innovate advertising methods across digital platforms.

    Interestingly, sports-related advertising for cricket season is today no longer limited to bilateral series. With IPL’s foray on digital platforms, first with Hotstar and then on JioCinema, the advertising opportunities have only gotten bigger. Advertisers on both sides on linear and digital platforms enjoyed premium audiences and ad slots as overall viewership increased.

    On digital advertising expectation to receive higher ad spends compared to television during the festive period

    Consumption habits post-pandemic have transformed in favor of digital platforms/channels. While digital continues to grow bigger and get a dominant share of wallets from brands, to say that it will receive higher spends compared to television is a prediction which may or may not come true. However, we are certain that digital consumption continues to accelerate and one of the reasons why you see the growth and rise of CTV, a new-age digital medium, is the overall shift from linear TV to CTV, increased viewership of OTT apps on CTV, increased content consumption on mobile devices, and has led to a significant growth in advertising in digital channels like CTV. Advertisers globally – and in India – are lapping up the CTV opportunity and we have seen great results and ROI for some of our top clients in India who are already using the CTV advertising with us.

    Interestingly, festive season is all about families coming together and that rings true for CTV viewing as well dominated by co-viewing by families, bringing people back to their living rooms. The audience on CTV is spread across genres and apps, giving advertisers a unique opportunity to target individuals across demographics. In addition to this, with consumer journeys getting integrated across screens, digital advertising on CTV allows advertisers to target people in the same household, as well as drive users to take action on mobile or lead them to purchase in-store. These solutions make digital advertising on CTV attractive for advertisers especially during key moments like festive season.

  • Connected TV set to majorly boost digital viewership and advertising spends this IPL

    Connected TV set to majorly boost digital viewership and advertising spends this IPL

    Mumbai: The latest edition of the IPL is just around the corner and Indian audiences are abuzz about what to expect from it with a new digital destination for the league in JioCinema. What spices up expectations this year even more is the advent of Connected TV which is bound to heighten the IPL viewing experience. JioCinema’s offering of free streaming of the IPL has made this year a bonanza both for cricket enthusiasts and advertisers. We will also see the viewership of the games reach record levels.

    The latest Kantar ICUBE report states that the number of CTVs in India stands at a staggering 28 million in the last year alone. In terms of individuals watching content on CTV, the report pegs that number at a whopping 83 million. This could only go up multi-fold once the IPL is available for free streaming on CTVs, with an estimated 100 million+ viewers watching content on their CTVs later this year.

    In recent years connected TV (CTV) has seen growth not only in urban but also Tier II and III markets. And that’s for a good reason. CTV offers viewers an enhanced, and technologically unparalleled viewing experience. Fans opting to catch the IPL on CTV get access to the blockbuster league with the whole family for free on JioCinema, and the 4k streaming offering makes the live sport viewing experience friction-free.

    The penetration and demand of IPL on CTV would likely be accelerated further given the recently introduced ‘Jio Media Cable’ in households that don’t own a smart TV yet or do not wish to pay for cable or DTH. The device enables people to connect their phones to their regular TVs and convert them into smart TVs. This will add to the already existing CTV viewer base that will be watching IPL this year on Connected TV. In effect, this is expected to rake in more brands to consider digital as an advertising medium for the IPL for its larger base and potential for brand messaging.

    Reports earlier stated that JioCinema is offering IPL in 12 regional languages this season, effectively meaning the average viewer will not just have the option to watch coverage in English or Hindi but in many other languages too. The benefits of this are also passed on to the advertiser that will have the flexibility not only to advertise in Hindi and English but also in regional languages.

    IndianTelevision.com spoke to a few experts to understand what the wider reach and use of never-seen-before tech on CTV means from an ad standpoint. mediasmart Mobile vice president India & SEA Nikhil Kumar said, “With India’s largest sporting property around the corner, we are witnessing 2 schools of thought existing in parallel- one evangelizing continued growth within linear TV and the other rooting for the meteoric rise in CTV user base and continued mobile digital penetration for OTT platforms.”

    He further goes on to add, “From a DSP vantage, mediasmart has always advocated for programmatic led, mid/down funnel attribution capabilities of CTV, leading to the development of proprietary products like CTV Household Sync within our portfolio. Tech capabilities like these have enabled us to build success stories across verticals & geographies. We are also moving towards a multi-screen audience approach, where the focus is on reaching the right audience, thereby making it platform/channel agnostic and minimizing ad fatigue/maximizing impact or ROAS.”

    Efficacy Worldwide Pvt Ltd co-founder and chief operating officer Sapna Sharma stated, “With digital adoption overtaking the Linear TV reach, Connected TV and digital are becoming the most preferred media options for the audience to consume any content as the user experience and audience comfort is unparalleled to other mediums.”

    She also added, “Sport Streaming platforms like Viacom are offering one of the best alternatives to the Linear TV sports channels as they provide a variety of sports options to watch and also provide the flexibility to watch any sport at one’s convenience. Viacom and the Jio app made a huge jump in terms of popularity and preference for the advertisers to drive an efficient ROI for their campaigns by providing one of the highest reach of audience and extremely efficient targeting capabilities to minimize the spillage and maximise the ROI.”

    Finecast India (GroupM) national head – client development Rajiv Rajagopal says, “India is set to be the 3rd largest TV market by 2024. The rise in online streaming & consumers’ preference to watch content on the big screen has fuelled the growth of Connected TV. The accuracy at which CTV can serve an ad at the household level plays a crucial role in building an addressable TV ecosystem.

    We have seen brands using CTV to run longer ad formats that are cost-effective and build high brand awareness & audience engagement. CTV advertising is evolving with tech interventions like ACR (Automated Content Recognition) giving more insights on the type of content being consumed at a household level and soon expecting creative innovations used in other advanced markets like shoppable ads, interactive ads to pick pace in India which will drive better ROI for brands. With cord switching and cord cutting, brands need to consider Total TV Planning and acknowledge CTV as an extension of Linear TV.”

    Amplifi India chief investment officer Sujata Dwibedy mentions, “In today’s hyper-linked, data-heavy world, consumers want brands to offer more focused, relevant messaging. As a result, advertisers now realize that if they want to make a meaningful impact, they must shift from simply competing for eyeballs to designing meaningful, engaging experiences. Mobile-first Indian consumers are rapidly shifting towards connected TV (CTV) and over-the-top (OTT). While CTV viewing has increased by more than 80% globally, CTV adoption in India is still at a nascent stage but did grow hugely in 2021 and then in 2022. By 2025, it is estimated that there will be 100 Mn households in India, earlier this estimation was in the range of 45-50 Mn households.”

    She goes on to add, “Many Indian consumers are replacing their traditional TV units with connected TV. One of the primary reasons for this change is the increasing preference towards OTT platforms, as India’s OTT market is one of the fastest growing globally. Another prime factor for the growth of CTV in India is the affordable, low-priced smart TV brands available in the market.”  

    “In addition to smart TVs, other devices for streaming content such as dongles are also widely available throughout the country now. The key catalyst for the next level of growth would be IPL on Jio. They are going to be streaming IPL live for free. The Jio Cinema’s enhanced tech experience and multi-language presence will give the user more control and drive them to view what they want to watch. “

    She says,” Their streaming device which is priced very low (Rs 400 – Rs 500) can mirror the mobile on-screen converting any TV to a CTV! CTV will become a mass access entertainment platform & audience will widen for IPL. Growth should come from tier II and tier III markets. The only thing that could delay this process is the speed of the internet beyond the metros.”

    Dwibedy asks how brands are getting value/ROI for the money spent. “Till now the CTV has not been very efficient as it came at a premium. The pricing was always 2x, or 3x of the normal buys. With IPL and an increase in mass reach, it will change the dynamics. We have started working with OEM partners like Samsung, etc. They will lead in the next few years, as the Smart TV price has been dropping and the ease of connectivity is paramount for entertainment. Advertisers have started testing these platforms very well.”

    According to her, “The key metric on CTV that works well is Incremental reach; it could be used as an extension of linear TV campaign reach. It also enables more interactivity. CTV gives advertisers the ability to earn more stickiness, which increases brand awareness and opportunities for conversions. Hence Clients are willing to park certain budgets on CTV even if it is at a premium today. It is great for co-viewing & multi-screen audience to reach. There is a lot still to be done in this space, especially in terms of data measurement/ attribution and ROI, the journey has only begun.”

    CTV is here to stay and one cannot deny the convenience it offers. It offers the flexibility of watching matches on any device anywhere and at any time. This IPL is going to be very exciting not only for the viewer but also for the advertisers.

  • India’s smart TV market grew 74 per cent YoY in Q2’ 22: Report

    India’s smart TV market grew 74 per cent YoY in Q2’ 22: Report

    Mumbai: mediasmart, an Affle company, has published the second edition of its India CTV Report 2022, titled “India Says Yes to Connected TV!” The report stated that India’s smart TV market grew 74 per cent YoY in Q2’22.

    The report focuses on consumer adoption trends in metro and non-metro areas, as well as a significant shift in CTV ad potential for brands and marketers. According to its report, CTV viewing is a part of the daily routine and a preferred source of entertainment. CTV consumption is driven by adults, including grandparents. 78 per cent had a smart TV, of which 93 per cent used the internet to consume content.

    TV subscriptions stood at merely five million subscribers in 2020, but quickly doubled to 10 million in 2021. By 2025, this figure is expected to become 4x.

    mediasmart vice president (India & SEA) Nikhil Kumar said, “Our report this year goes deeper into the reach and impact of CTV. It is interesting to see how far CTV has grown into the metros and non-metros. It’s a stark revelation to see CTV’s growth into a family viewing phenomenon that is bringing people back to their living rooms. The audience for CTV is fairly well spread across the diversity of content offered by multiple OTTs and is now beginning to explore newer genres like games and live news as other top choices. This consumption shift has also led to significant growth in co-viewing, which is not restricted to a certain demographic or geographic segment either. This holds huge potential for advertisers who can leverage emerging technologies like mediasmart’s CTV Household Sync to connect the worlds of TV & mobile and drive impact.”

    The report highlighted that viewers spend an average of four hours daily watching CTV content, as opposed to three and a half hours in 2021. 69 per cent spend  one to four hours/day watching CTV.

    72 per cent of respondents above 35 years of age consume CTV content after 6 p.m., indicating that CTV is a preferred source of entertainment for people to wind down after work.

    50 per cent of respondents said they prefer Smart TVs for watching content at home, while only 36 per cent prefer mobile devices. 84 per cent of households have more than one person watching CTV, and 64 per cent of respondents claimed to prefer watching CTV together with their families, unlike the solo viewing experience.

    The covid-19 pandemic accelerated the adoption of wired broadband connections in homes. As the country enters the holiday season, more users are discovering CTV as a new way to consume content at home with their families. Adults, including users from older demographics, drive the co-viewing phenomenon on CTV in many Indian households.

    On-demand content on OTT continues to remain the preferred choice for most viewers (41 per cent) with music (17 per cent), games (11 per cent), news (10 per cent) and user-generated content (21 per cent) being other options. 66 per cent have a subscription to more than one OTT app.

    The reports stated that people use multiple OTT apps across global, national, and regional apps and switch between multiple apps based on the content genre of their preference. 82 per cent of CTV devices generate active bid requests from more than four OTT platforms.

    Marketers are using CTV for high-impact storytelling, increased brand engagement, and driving action and conversions on mobile globally and in India. With CTV’s ability to provide measurable advertising on television and to connect users’ journeys both online and offline, CTV presents remarkable opportunities for brand impact during the current holiday season.

    Nine out of ten CTV viewers recall being exposed to advertisements, and 81 per cent of those exposed to advertisements claim that the advertisements influenced them. Nudging the users on their mobile devices within 24 hours helps improve the purchase intent for users who have seen ads on connected TV.

    VTION chief business officer Shailesh Varudkar said, “Our partnership with mediasmart in 2021 was the first-of-its-kind research on CTV viewers in India and their habits, sliced-and-diced by various demographics, and came at a time when there was little industry knowledge about this category. This year, as we go deeper and wider into the country, the newer learnings from our CTV2.0 report will further give an impetus to the growing appetite and enthusiasm for CTV among consumers and advertisers.”

    Elaborating on India’s potential as a robust market for CTV adoption, Interactive Avenues co-founder & CEO Amardeep Singh said, “CTV has the potential to truly democratise TV advertising by allowing even low-budget advertisers to connect with audiences on TV. This edition of mediasmart’s report will help advertisers understand the nuances of the medium better along with changing consumer behaviour and also instil confidence regarding CTV’s role as an impactful advertising medium through measurable technologies like mediasmart’s CTV Household Sync.”

    mindshare head of digital (South Asia) Gopa Menon added, “India is a young market with tremendous potential for CTV adoption and offers great opportunities to advertisers where they can get strong consumer insights on viewing habits and also target specific cohorts to drive the brand message effectively and efficiently.”

    Madison Digital CEO Vishal Chinchakar added, “We have come a long way from last year, when the ecosystem in India was just beginning to explore the CTV opportunity, to now when top clients are insisting on the inclusion or better understanding of CTV in their media plans.”

    Commenting on CTV’s impact for brand lift, Havas Media Group India CEO Mohit Joshi said, “CTV ecosystem creates meaningful exposures to reach the target audience. The platforms and the formats have opened up a vast opportunity for us in terms of innovation, strategy, and creating best practices for CTV advertisers.”

    PivotRoots founder & managing director Shibu Shivanandan said, “The good thing about CTV advertising is that, unlike traditional TV, advertisers get to choose their potential audience. Hence, a complete shift from spot buys to audience buys on a large screen is now possible with digital targeting capabilities and can be bought and served programmatically.”

  • The CTV India market maybe small, but it surely packs a big punch: mediasmart’s Nikhil Kumar

    The CTV India market maybe small, but it surely packs a big punch: mediasmart’s Nikhil Kumar

    With the changing digital landscape, consumers are warming up to connected TVs (CTVs) like never before. As Indian audiences increasingly embrace OTT content while gradually making the shift from traditional linear TV viewing, the change also presents an untapped advertising goldmine for brands and advertisers alike.

    On the sidelines of the Indian Digital Brand Fest organised by Indiantelevision.com, we caught up with mediasmart vice-president of India & SEA Nikhil Kumar, an Affle company, to understand how advertisers can buckle up to face this new beast in advertising. Last year, mediasmart commissioned research that helped understand the CTV behaviour patterns in India to provide greater market understanding. With mediasmart recently releasing its latest industry report on the CTV ecosystem in India that would help fast-track the growth of this industry, we take a deep dive into some of the underlying challenges and come away with some key takeaways.

    Kumar, a consumer marketing professional with over a decade of experience working in FMCG , retail, F&B, and ad-tech set-ups with global brands like TikTok, Puma, L’Oreal, Cafe Coffee Day, and InMobi, is extremely bullish about the current and future role of CTV as a medium for delivering impact for brands. He believes that CTV consumption today goes beyond the inhibitions of individual consumption on mobile screens and probably also brings back the family-viewing phenomenon of linear television, but with very measurable metrics of targeting and delivery.

    In an in-depth interaction with Indiantelevision.com, Kumar also talks about his journey from primarily marketing brands spread across the consumer goods sector, food retail, and sports & wellness, to now navigating the ad-tech space. While managing marketing for multiple brands, there were great learnings towards understanding consumer behaviour and sentiments, advertising objectives, media channel goals and analysis, and so forth. What I have really enjoyed after switching sides and working within ad-tech/mar-tech set-ups is the understanding of how each dollar spent is effectively reaching or not reaching the intended consumer. More importantly, the journey from ad exposure to intended purchase & the continued lifetime journey are built on strong data tech stacks with due diligence on consumer privacy. So for me, the whole journey from the brand side to now the adtech side has been an immense learning curve.”

    My learning, which I often share with my team, is—”Never sell the product, sell the insight—sell the solution to the problem that the marketer is intending to solve—that’ll bring better adoption for your offering,” shares Kumar.

    Edited excerpts:

    On why advertisers are cautious adapting to the CTV medium, despite the rapid adoption of it by consumers

    We live in an era that can be defined as pre-covid and post-covid. Covid played a huge catalyst in the growth of connected TVs as people realised that they could view the same content they see on their mobiles on a bigger screen via connected TV , thereby providing a better experience.

    For advertisers, the caution is actually natural, primarily because of the newness of the medium—connected TV & the scale/reach it brings from a planning lens. I think the hesitancy could also be derived from not understanding whether CTV reach spend should be bucketed under offline or digital spend, because it’s still TV and that’s well covered by most large spenders.

    Most large traditional advertisers feel they are already advertising on TV to a much more mass audience on broadcast, so why do they need to spend extra to advertise on CTV?

    When CTV started getting sold in India as an inventory for monetisation, it was being talked about as a digital medium. But then they are doing enough advertising for OTT already on mobile. And suddenly there’s this new accessibility for users via CTV. So you have to educate them that OTT is not CTV. The subset of CTV can be OTT, but that’s not the totality of it. There’s so much more that you can do on CTV, like play games, watch live news, etc., which led to its phenomenal growth. I think brands and advertisers, rather than being hesitant, are becoming more inquisitive.

    A year back, there was hesitancy, which has turned to inquisitiveness, and today, if you look at it, it’s a Fomo (Fear of missing out) created for every media planner or agency owing to the scale of CTV growth globally. If they don’t have CTV as a top priority, clearly it’s a miss. Even the agencies catering to smaller brands from tier II and tier III categories feel the need to hop onto the CTV bandwagon. More so because of the sheer pressure that the clients are creating on how to get their brand’s ads on the medium. Because that is where their audience is, watching their content.

    On whether the decline of DTH and linear TV viewing is leading to the spurt in CTV or vice versa

    It’s important to understand that sometimes users weren’t even contributing to DTH for them to decline from the database. These are the cord-nevers beyond the cord cutters.

    Suddenly, people are realising that the decline of DTH doesn’t mean the growth of CTV. Yes, it does imply that. But connected TV by itself as a base is growing. There’s a section of consumers who have never had a cable/DTH connection (cord-nevers), who bought a smart TV and immediately connected it to the internet and started watching it.

    Advertisers are also understanding that some of the audiences they want to reach out to are not there on TV. Thus, more than being hesitant, I think they are convincing themselves that this is a medium that’s creating more impact and providing a way to reach audiences they can’t reach otherwise on TV.

    Around 2.5 million DTH and cable subscribers have declined in the past two years or so, while comparatively, nine million wired broadband subscribers have increased. According to these two data points, the home wifi/broadband ecosystem is growing. There’s an accessibility to TV, while at the same time, there’s a decline in DTH, and last but not least, there’s suddenly a growth pattern in the availability of content. The number of OTTs that are available in the market is not just restricted to Hotstar, Netflix, Amazon, Sony, Zee, and Mx Player. There are 40 plus OTT players today—vernacular, regional, multi-lingual, event dialect-specific OTTs—there’s so much happening in the space.

    We have recently released a report titled “India CTV Report 2022,” which is one of the most comprehensive reports on this subject. Last year, when we first released it, it became a bespoke reference point for most avid marketers and media houses. This year, we did a very interesting comparison of the prices that you are paying. A comparison of the cost of these OTTs versus the average price of a DTH plan has not been put into perspective . If you compare the prices, it is actually not that expensive. So you can have all the content from around the world that you want to see at a price that is affordable. These are some of the factors that are really contributing to the growth of the connected television market in the country.

    And it’s not restricted to Gen-Z or millennial users, as we realised from our survey report. In our first-party survey covering a diverse audience segment across metros and non-metros, we realised more than 84 per cent claimed to be watching CTV with someone in the household rather than alone, similar to the TV broadcast era, in which family viewing was the dominant form of consumption. The TV broadcast era was followed by the era of mobile phones, which meant we went from a family viewing/co-viewing to a personalised content consumption experience on our mobile devices. This received a huge boost with the Jio revolution from 2016 onwards. And now, in a post-pandemic era, the connect TV experience has brought everybody back together for co-viewing, implying we have come full circle, but now with a way to answer the question: what happened after the TV ad was served?

    On how can agencies & advertisers overcome the lack of standard industry metrics- one of the key reasons limiting faster advertiser adoption of CTV

    There are always challenges related to a new medium in how measurability is going to happen. In fact, globally, one of the reports released recently claimed that there’s massive ad fraud happening already within the CTV space globally. If you see, most of the OTTs are owned by large broadcast networks. The OTT, or the platform, is evaluating the user reach and where your ads were served, along with who saw them. How does one evaluate ad fraud, which is obviously a difficult area?

    This is where programmatic advertising is becoming more and more important for advertisers, because for them it’s not important where the ad is shown, it’s more important to whom the ad is shown. The idea is to target audiences as opposed to targeting platforms where your ad is running, and hence, targeting the same user across multiple platforms becomes possible.

    Additionally, programmatic advertising provides transparency. You can access the dashboard. You can see the ads getting served, what time they were served, how they were served, which audience segments they were served to, and which audiences are engaging with them. Today we have technology where you can map a TV to a device id on a mobile phone. Hence the intuitive understanding that “this is the guy who has a TV at home; this is the device ID so I can continue the lifetime journey of engaging with that consumer either on his TV or on his mobile.”

    Technologies like ours are building that trust so that while currently there’s no measurement for what can happen on TV, you can link that journey to a user on their mobile where all possible mobile measurement options exist.

    And you can control it because it’s digital. So we know who saw the ad. Because you can track it down to a TV, to a location, to the size of a TV, to a certain household. So many data points can come up. You can target users by the size of the screen, by location, etc.—so many targeting options are available because of the digital nature of the medium. Hence, the trackability of success is also there. And hence, it’s clearly an impactful medium.

    On some of the underlying challenges & emerging trends in advertising on CTV in the domestic market

    So challenges can also be opportunities, and some of them we saw were in education, as India is still a market with high spending on traditional platforms like TV and print. We need to focus on educating advertisers and agencies on how CTV, as a digital medium, is a growing channel and an incremental reach medium at that. For instance, the festive season this time is all going to be about going back to retail, OOH, a massive print spend, and a big burst on television across brands. But, was your brand able to reach the users on CTV where they are most engaged and spend close to 4 hours a day? If not, you have clearly missed an opportunity. So that’s the first challenge in the ecosystem’s education.

    If we talk about trends, the growing trend is that gaming has grown by leaps and bounds on CTV and is going to become a destination. Another major trend is programmatic advertising via CTV to avoid spillovers. We are a country that does almost 60 per cent of media buying directly as opposed to 40 per cent programmatically. But how do you integrate the user’s journey across multiple ecosystems and screens that he operates on into one experience? That’s where programmatic advertising comes into the picture, which can help you build a unified view of the consumer.

    On how can marketers maximise viewer engagement on ads and improve the ad viewing experience for users on CTV?

    That’s an interesting premise because on CTV there are multiple ecosystems that clearly users spend time on—there is the OTT or on-demand content ecosystem, and the other is user-generated content (UGC) platforms. Beyond this, we also have news, gaming, and music, which are growing very fast.

    What does a user tend to do when they see an ad on a UGC platform? They are more likely to skip it since the 20-or 30-second ad in a three-minute video is more of a distraction.

    The user’s behaviour on on-demand OTT is observed to be very different, where on average they spend anywhere between 30 mins and an hour watching their favourite on-demand show or movie. The user is committed to spending a longer time there and hence doesn’t mind watching a 20-second ad here. Another thing to note here is that, as per the Ormax OTT Audience Report: 2022, only 31 per cent of India’s digital video audience is paid users, while the remaining 69 per cent is an advertising-based video-on-demand (AVoD) audience. Clearly, a huge chunk of the audience is reachable via ads on OTT and CTV.

    Also, CTV, with its immersive brand storytelling on the large screen, along with the ability to connect the journey from TV to mobile, can create an ecosystem that enables a user to retain the ad better for all kinds of segments like beauty, cosmetics, auto, FMCG, e-commerce, app-first etc. Ad retention and a CTA (call to action) created via omnichannel audience targeting, CTV household sync, and drive-to-store technologies enable users to act upon the ad that they have seen. Because at the end of the day, what is advertising for if not to act upon it?

    On how does the India market differ from the US and European markets in this aspect

    From a CTV advertising standpoint, I think the US and Europe are more evolved markets. They saw the trend almost three to four years ago. In the US, almost 90 per cent of households have at least one CTV device—clearly, it is a highly evolved CTV market. Besides, non-pay TV households are set to exceed pay TV households by 2023, indicating cord cutting and cord nevers are on the rise in the US.

    The European Union is very similar, though it obviously has GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) laws and other regulations that affect how users are tracked. But in both global markets, the share of CTV impressions is growing really fast. In fact, in the US, the share of CTV impressions has exceeded the share of mobile, which has skewed the global average as well, in favour of CTV. If you look at the US, CTV ad spending will touch almost 10 per cent of the total ad spending by 2024. And within that high share, most ads are being transacted programmatically, not even direct buys. They have moved from a system dealing with multiple publishers. So, that’s the evolution and mindset that we are moving towards.

    If you compare it to India, it’s a very small market in terms of adoption. It’s been just two years since we started CTV advertising. So it’s early days, but last year we grew almost 30-40 per cent. We have seen the CTV reach go from six million to nine million and now to 14 million, and the pace is only increasing Q-o-Q. So, while the size of the market is small today, the adoption rate is very high in the domestic market. CTV penetration is growing really fast, and we predict that it will be 40–50 million by 2025. So, even though the Indian market is small, it is surely packing a big punch. CTVs are here to stay and grow.

  • Advertisers are closing the gap between TV and mobile advertising: mediasmart’s Nikhil Kumar

    Advertisers are closing the gap between TV and mobile advertising: mediasmart’s Nikhil Kumar

    Mumbai: The growth of Connected TV adoption in India fuelled by affordable internet and smart TVs and availability of a range of streaming devices has opened the floodgates for newer technologies of content monetisation, digital/programmatic advertising and viewership measurement.

    In our continued effort to unravel the complexities of this space, this interview with Nikhil Kumar, who is currently heading the business of India and Southeast Asia for mediasmart – an Affle company, throws light on the Household Sync technology pioneered by the organisation and emerging digital advertising trends in the country.

    Kumar is a consumer marketing professional with over a decade of experience working in FMCG, retail, F&B and ad-tech set-ups with global brands like Puma, L’Oreal, Cafe Coffee Day and more recently Bytedance and InMobi. He was recognised as one of India’s Most innovative Mar-Tech leaders in 2019 by World Marketing Congress. With a career spanning over 14 years, he has worked across multiple functions with his domain expertise primarily being brand marketing (digital & offline), business strategy/ sales and go-to market plan/ execution across consumer goods, retail and start-up ecosystem.

    In his recent roles, Kumar has spearheaded business functions across India, SEA, and EU.

    Edited Excerpts

    On the adoption of CTV viewing in India viz-a-viz global CTV landscape

    Connected TV and CTV advertising are both fairly well-known and penetrated categories in the western markets, especially the United States. India has started well on consumer adoption of CTV and cheaper Smart TVs, Dongles and data plans together with compelling content propositions of leading OTT players are only going to accelerate this change going forward. As consumers have started to spend more time on this device or content format, ad dollars should also eventually move in this direction.

    The India market is expected to see growth for both subscriber-funded SVOD content and advertiser-funded AVOD content on CTV. We thus remain bullish on this opportunity and see India as a key market for the CTV business.

    On CTV opportunities for brands in India and the segments that will benefit the most

    The world is moving towards immersive watching experiences and CTV is an exciting space to be in. Industry observers are keenly following how India’s multi-screen viewing habits are shaping up. CTV has already made a significant impact on the digital advertising industry in the western part of the world and India is following suit. It is interesting to watch leading advertisers across verticals within the country adopt CTV advertising as a critical new addition to their media mix. It is here to stay. While CTV advertising is relevant for all categories active on TV and/or Digital, we expect the maximum impact of our interactive Household Sync augmented CTV advertising to be for categories looking for instant engagement like mobile apps led categories, consumer electronics, fashion etc. 

    On Household Sync Technology and how it can help brands with their digital ad campaigns

    Though programmatic CTV ads have been available in the industry, advertisers can drive interactivity with follow-up household synced mobile ads. This is where mediasmart’s advanced industry-first Household Sync technology helps in taking the advantage of CTV even further. It makes ads more engaging by syncing CTV ad campaigns with ads on other connected devices in the same household. CTV ads can thus be made significantly more relevant by personalising them for specific audiences within the household. This brings together the twin strengths of engaging storytelling associated with TV and CTV advertising and brands can launch CTV campaigns to a specific audience in the same household, measure results, and drive them to the nearest store. It uses fresh data for each campaign and is based on IP addresses, which undergo several layers of validation.

    On the reach and user base of CTV in India

    CTV, which was until recently seen as an alternative to linear TV, has emerged from the shadows and into the spotlight on how audiences consume content. The pandemic has further accelerated the shift in viewing habits as more and more people stayed indoors accepting the “new normal” and taking to CTV as a common entertainment source for families to enjoy together. Of course, the increasing internet speeds and better access to internet-enabled devices have also contributed in many ways to the recent growth of CTV.

    As per the India CTV Report 2021, CTV viewing in India is on a significant uptick and increased by 31 per cent. Globally, while CTV viewing increased by 81 per cent, India is still a young market with tremendous potential for CTV adoption by consumers. In April 2020, 21 per cent of CTV viewing households were cord-cutters (households who cut the cord within the past five years), whereas 22 per cent were cord-nevers (households with no cable/satellite subscription in the past five years).

    On emerging digital advertising trends in India

    Connected TV & OTT – CTV & OTT apps across devices, which were until recently seen as an alternative to linear TV, have emerged from the shadows and into the spotlight on how audiences consume content. The pandemic has further accelerated the shift in viewing habits and contributed to its recent growth due to an increase in internet speeds and better access to internet-enabled devices.

    Multi-screen audience targeting and attribution – Advertisers are closing the gap between TV and mobile advertising by targeting ads and taking advantage of multi-screen environments.

    Privacy and personalisation – There is an increasing demand for data privacy and for a more personalised ad experience, so brands have to play a balancing act to offer relevant experiences through data-driven advertising while also respecting privacy choices at the same time.

    Digital Out of Home (DOOH) – DOOH with its programmatic capabilities, which can automate OOH advertising, is expected to grow because COVID-induced confinements have accelerated the adoption of digital and programmatic methods in the OOH space.

    Mobile measurement – It has been defined this year by the changes in privacy settings announced by Apple with the launch of iOS 14. Incremental app marketing has been a buzzword in the industry for some time, but as advertisers lose access to attribution level data in a considerable percentage of their target audience, measuring the incremental impact of advertising actions should become a reality to more and more advertisers.

  • mediasmart elevates Nikhil Kumar to VP, India and SEA

    mediasmart elevates Nikhil Kumar to VP, India and SEA

    Mumbai: mediasmart has elevated Nikhil Kumar to the role of vice president, India and Southeast Asia region. He was previously senior director of brand and strategy, India and SEA.

    Kumar is a marketing professional with 14 years of experience. He joined mediasmart in November 2020. He was previously associated with Bytedance as business head – global business solutions. His prior stints include InMobi as director brand strategy and industry head CPG and AlcoBev, Housejoy as head of marketing, Puma India and SEA as senior marketing manager and L’Oreal.

    He is an alumnus of the Indian Institute of Management, Lucknow.

  • OACT2021: What are the opportunities for OTT & CTV advertising

    OACT2021: What are the opportunities for OTT & CTV advertising

    Mumbai: Is it the right time for monetisation of OTT from a business perspective for advertisers?

    This set the ball rolling for the panel discussion on – ‘The opportunities for OTT and CTV Advertising’ on the first day of the OTT Advertising and Connected TV Summit being organised by Indiantelevision.com. The two-day event is co-powered by mediasmart, an Affle company and summit partner – The Q. 

    The panel was led by Patanjali Ayurved COO-media and communications Anita Nayyar, Airtel VP-media Archana Aggarwal, Pyxis One CEO- APAC Neel Pandya, Samsung Ads India & South East Asia – senior director Prabhvir Sahmey and moderated by EY partner and national leader – advisory markets Monesh Dange. 

    Responding to the question, Nayyar highlighted that the time is perfect for monetisation for OTT platforms, as the content has never been more important than now in the pre-, post-, and during the Covid-19 time. “For advertisers, ROI is very important. The clichéd conversion will always stay as it is. But as of now, the industry is at an evolving stage that is clearly a top of funnel scenario with reach, awareness, engagement -all that’s happening. But whether we can attribute that directly to a bottom-funnel is not very clear at this point of time,” she added.

    On whether the digital boom in content was bound to happen or it happened due to the time available on hand due to the Covid-19 era, Airtel’s Archana Aggarwal noted that the start of the revolution was with the crash in data prices and affordability of smartphones and people using a lot of mobile internet. “Obviously, Covid accelerated it due to the dearth of new content on linear Television and no new movies being released in theatres, etc. But it was a matter of time that people would start consuming a lot of content on OTT,” she said.

    Talking about how majority of the premium content available on OTTs is behind the paywall, Aggarwal said, “What is it that the OTTs want to monetise- Do they want to monetise through advertisements or through subscription? That is something which OTT players need to think through – how to find the right balance between the two.”

    Neel Pandya of Pyxis One added another insight on the OTT boom by commenting that it takes just twenty-one days for a person to build a habit and they were talking about 1.5 years of watching digital content. “So it’s a very strong habit which consumers have built and it’s not going to go easily,” said Pandya. “Obviously it’s not an artificial boom completely, but it has gone 5X from what the acceleration would have been in normal circumstances.” 

    From Samsung Ads’ perspective, Prabhvir Sahmey said, “We are relatively a new business and also a unique proposition where we are bringing the advertising opportunity directly on the device itself, it’s not running on the back of a content.”

    He added, “It’s still at a very nascent stage, in fact we are in a testing category. We will try to plug the gap in measurability, and develop a multi-device solution for advertisers.”

    Taking the discussion further, Pandya said it is high time that OTT as a platform starts attracting ad spends, attracting avenues. “It is growing globally really fast. The only new thing we need to attract new users is measurement. OTT needs to bring more customised solutions for brands and take some bold decisions,” he added.

    Nayyar shared insights on the current dynamics of OTT and how it is similar to what happened a couple of decades back on television from one Doordarshan to multiple TV channels when the satellite boom materialised. “So it is important for OTT players to put some skin in the game collectively as an industry with accountability and measurement if they want to scale up monetisation,” she added.

    Talking about Patanjali and its investment in OTT, Nayyar said that Patanjali is working to upgrade the brand and make it more premium by targeting the youth. “OTT is a very important medium to influence youth. The first deal we went with was Dance Plus on Disney Hotstar,” she added. 

    While Airtel has been advertising on OTT as well as connected TV for a long time now, and have been experimenting with it. “We are looking at on-target reach & duplication of audience. It’s important for us to look at what kind of audience the platforms are giving us. We have evolved from being broad-based to being more targeted, focused on a set of audiences,” shared Aggarwal.

    Transparency, when it comes to the results of the campaign, is a very critical factor, was agreed by everyone.

    Prabhvir Sahmey of Samsung Ads said the elephant in the room for every publisher is revenue ad risk and that has to be addressed. “Everybody knows there is significant overlap at the end-user behavior,” he added.

    With acceleration to OTTs, the question of whether television is going to disappear was met with a unanimous ‘No.’ The panelists agreed that TV as a screen or as a medium is not going anywhere. At the most, it may evolve to connected TVs, rather than remain as a device of one-way linear transmission.

    For more information: https://indiantelevision.com/events/oact-summit-2021/

  • OACT2021: The evolution of Connected TV in India

    OACT2021: The evolution of Connected TV in India

    Mumbai: The addressable connected TV (CTV) advertising universe is estimated at six to eight million, according to mediasmart, an Affle company, India and SEA, senior director- brand and strategy Nikhil Kumar.  The CTV evolution has arrived in India. Today, you can easily join the CTV ecosystem via a smart TV, dongle, gaming console, or connected set-top-box (STB).

    Kumar was addressing the ‘OTT Advertising and Connected TV Summit 2021’ organised by Indiantelevision.com on 7 October. The two-day event is co-powered by mediasmart, an Affle company and summit partner – The Q. Stakeholders across the industry engaged in insightful discussions on the dynamics of OTT and CTV advertising.

    The growth of CTV in India is driven by several factors. Chinese manufacturers have played a pivotal role by introducing low-cost smart TVs for as much as Rs 15,000. Low-cost dongles like Amazon Firestick and Google Chromecast are popular ways to access web content. Jio has led the adoption of connected STBs. These technologies have driven the penetration of the CTV market to a point where you don’t necessarily have to be from a metro or Tier-1 city to be a part of the CTV ecosystem. According to a report by Counterpoint Research, India’s smart TV market saw 65 per cent year-on-year growth in Q2 2021 due to increasing demand.

    Some may conflate over-the-top platforms with CTV but they are completely different ecosystems. While OTT can be seen as a subset of the CTV ecosystem, its journey began almost two decades back with Netflix. Certainly, a majority of the usage on CTV is driven by OTT viewing. A report indicates that 91 per cent of users watch movies on CTV, there is also a small but growing audience that is listening to music, playing games, and catching up on the news.

    “CTV is reaching an incremental base of evolved users who have come into the ecosystem to enjoy everything that the internet has to offer,” said Kumar, adding that the pandemic has played the role of a catalyst for CTV.

    “People confined at homes realised that linear TV was mundane because of repeated content and were looking at new ways to entertain themselves,” he added. It helped that India has the cheapest data costs in the world at $ 0.09 per Gb. A survey showed that 78 per cent of smart TV users were accessing the internet via direct apps instead of search and discovery platforms.

    Even though the base of CTV was nascent compared to other media, mediasmart was excited to tap into the opportunity. “We’ve always been a platform that’s believed in strong digital ownership of the consumer journey,” said Kumar.

    The company did not look at CTV in isolation. When it targeted a CTV household, it assumed that there were three to four members in the household who owned a smartphone. They developed a technology system called ‘Household Sync’ that maps the user journey on CTV and mobile.

    Marketers have always bifurcated between brand and performance, opined Kumar. “Here’s a technology that puts your brand advertising on the largest screen possible but also delivers middle and bottom-funnel conversions, so it takes you across the entire funnel. At mediasmart, we’ve always valued metrics such as cost per conversion and verticalisation approaches.”

    mediasmart’s solutions looked at delivering immediate action-oriented feedback to advertisers on the brand impact. Their platform allowed them to look at completion rates on TV followed by retargeting on mobile devices. It also let them measure click-through rates to analyse if the brand was reaching the last mile. “Ultimately, what every brand is concerned about is the bottom-funnel,” opined Kumar.

    The CTV market is growing in double-digits month-on-month that will lead to an increase in users, advertising penetration, and reach. In markets like the US, the share of video impressions on CTV is as high as the share of video impressions on mobile. While the US was never a major mobile market, unlike India, Kumar explains that the opportunity is still attractive because even though the base is small, the impact is large.

    He added, “There is a lot of headroom for CTV to grow in India. There is still a significant base of box TV users in India who may potentially migrate to low-cost smart TVs. Apart from cord-cutting, there is a whole new generation of ‘affluent cord nevers’ who are opting for CTV systems over DTH and cable connections.”

    (Source: India CTV Report 2021 by mediasmart, an Affle Company, VTION, and Interactive Avenues)

    For more information: https://indiantelevision.com/events/oact-summit-2021/

  • Stage is set for ‘OTT Advertising and Connected TV Summit’

    Stage is set for ‘OTT Advertising and Connected TV Summit’

    New Delhi: The streaming platforms have taken the world by storm, opening up vast avenues for advertisers and brands to connect with viewers through digital means. The business is now no longer limited to traditional media channels but has expanded to the vast universe of OTT platforms.

    However, this evolution has come with its own challenges. Unlike the age-old relationship that advertisers share with traditional media, OTTs face the challenge of forging new publisher-agency-brand partnerships. So, what is the scope of OTT advertising? How is it growing? What strategies need to be adopted so that a greater share of the pie can move towards OTT?

    All these questions will take centre stage at the ‘OTT Advertising and Connected TV Summit 2021’ being organised by Indiantelevision.com on 7 & 8 October, 2.30 pm onwards. The two-day event is co-powered by Mediasmart, an Affle company, and summit partner – The Q, and will witness stakeholders from across the industry engaging in insightful discussions on the dynamics of OTT and CTV advertising.

    The event will explore concerns around data privacy, and the metrics that advertisers can use to select the OTT platforms. It will also look at the reach of connected TV in India and how fast it is growing. The panelists will also deliberate upon the advertisers’ perception of the medium. There will be presentations from advertisers and agencies as well on how successfully they used OTT and CTV solutions effectively.

    One of the biggest virtual events of digital publishers, it will be attended by representatives from Patanjali Ayurved, The Q, Mediasmart, Airtel, Samsung Ads, Pyxis One, The Q, UPSTOX, NXTDigital, ALTBalaji, MX Player, Omnicom Media Group, Madison, Affle, Adobe, Ernst and Young, Essence, Social Beat, Kurate Digital Consulting, Shemaroo Entertainment and many more noted persons from the industry.

    For more information: https://indiantelevision.com/events/oact-summit-2021/

    To watch LIVE: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCHHZMAXmHG0hkUgjzof0qzQ