Archive for the ‘OOH Media’ Category

MRC OOH Standards – Potential to Affect the Effectiveness of the Medium

Posted on: June 25th, 2024 by Ryan Kinskey

A guest blog from Euan Mackay, Chief Strategy Officer at Route Research, the research organization responsible for providing audience estimates to the out-of-home industry in Britain.

Note from Kym Frank: As noted in the prior Motionworks Blog (MRC OOH Measurement Standards: Behind the Numbers – Static Impressions), the systematic (but inconsistent) increase in impressions generated as a result of the transition from likelihood-to-see impressions (LTS) to opportunity-to-see impressions (OTS) as recommended in the new MRC Standards for OOH, will inevitably have the result of decreasing the effectiveness of OOH in market mix models, conversions studies, and other ROI analysis. I am grateful to Euan Mackay for sharing his thoughtful exploration of the math behind this inevitable outcome of the inflation of the medium’s impressions.

Euan has been a pivotal member of the team at Route for the last 8 years. Route is an organization that is similar to Geopath in Britain, where they enjoyed a 16.4% increase in ad spend for Q1 in OOH. He has more than 2 decades of experience in marketing and media research with prior leadership positions at Kantar Media and Crowd DNA.  

New Standards for Out of Home (OOH) measurement published by the Media Ratings Council (MRC) have fairly wide-ranging implications for those trading within the industry. While cross-media comparability is nice in theory, it does bring about several potential challenges for those already operating and trading in the medium.

Kym Frank’s excellent walk-through on the implications on cost per thousands (CPMs) arising with a “softening” of the audience definitions for OOH and moving from the existing likelihood to see ads to a looser (and bigger) number who have an opportunity to see the ads is absolutely fundamental and needs to be closely considered by anyone active in this space, particularly those with the “best” (biggest, most premium) inventory.

Should the industry be on board with this, and decree that bigger numbers are always better and that the likelihood to see (LTS) can be used as a “quality score” to help justify premium pricing strategies, then the next consideration is how this change affects the effectiveness of the medium.

The desire for accountability in media planning has never been higher. Focus has shifted to outcome based marketing and unprecedented demand to demonstrate return on investment (ROI) on media spend.

Barely a day goes by without an Econometric / Mixed Media Modelling (MMM) study demonstrating the relative effect that each component part of the media mix has on generating returns.

It’s also no secret that for a long time, OOH has performed badly in these sort of studies. This is largely as a result of the lack of granularity of OOH data which feeds into these models. In many instances OOH is represented by national spend, rather than any audience data.

Recent work in the UK by JCDecaux and Talon has demonstrated that the use of granular audience data from Route (the Geopath equivalent Joint Industry Currency for OOH audience measurement in Great Britain) can help to improve the effectiveness of OOH in MMM models by 42%.
In a nutshell, if you can feed in high quality, granular audience data which is based on people who are most likely to have seen the ads which cost money, the more likely you are to be able to associate / correlate movements in audience and movements in sales.

So the question is therefore, if the definition of “audience” for OOH changes and becomes looser (as the MRC is advocating) then how would this affect the models which determine effectiveness?

Taking the complex data science mechanics out of how the various models actually work and instead taking a simple conceptual view on this we could have a situation as follows:

The outcome of opening up the definition is that a larger “audience” number feeds into the effectiveness evaluation calculations… however the amount of sales generated is not affected and neither is the number of people who actually see the ad.

Therefore, in the current LTS situation, 5m impacts lead to $5m revenue ($1 per impact ROI). Yet, in the proposed Opportunity To See (OTS) situation, 10m impressions still lead to $5m revenue which means $0.50 per impression ROI).

So, the potential outcome of the proposed MRC change in definition is a negative impact on the effectiveness of the medium as a whole.  By introducing a larger “audience” number into the inputs, you reduce the efficiency of the medium in the outputs of the evaluations.

In this instance we reduce it by half, meaning you need to buy twice as many OTS to do the same thing that you did previously, which then forces the CPMs down as advertisers want outcomes not potential audiences.

While the carrot of cross-media comparability is strong and absolutely requires some consideration (noting that whether these standards bring the medium closer to comparability at all is questionable), the stick of reduced efficiency and effectiveness of the OOH medium in terms of delivering outcomes for advertisers is something which the industry needs to understand fully before adopting ‘impressions’ as a metric wholesale.

If you would like to get involved in this conversation, if you have questions for Euan, or would like to discuss how the standards may impact your business, we would love to hear from you. Please contact [email protected]

MRC OOH Measurement Standards: Behind the Numbers – Static Impressions

Posted on: June 3rd, 2024 by Ryan Kinskey

The first in a series of forthcoming analysis on the impact of the MRC OOH Measurement Standards — outlining the transformative changes and potential outcomes all OOH media stakeholders – advertisers, media owners, and agencies – should be considering as the industry of the real world evolves and competes in a digital media measurement environment.

 

Author’s Note:
Over the last few years, the majority of my time at Motionworks has been spent developing innovations in television and radio measurement. My career has always centered around media research across various channels, but having spent 6 years at the helm of Geopath, Out-of-Home holds a special place in my heart. I was one of the many participants in the development of Phase 1 of the MRC OOH Measurement Standards – which will serve as the benchmark for the industry until Phase 2 is introduced. Therefore, I believe it is crucial for the OOH industry—both buyers and sellers—to understand the impact of these standards on the currency and their businesses. This knowledge will position them for success in this evolving landscape.

*The percent increases for both formats were updated on 6/5/24 as there was a miscalculation present from a prior version of this publication.

The MRC Measurement Standard Timeline

In April 2024, after five years of development, the Media Rating Council (MRC) released a set of standards for Out-of-Home (OOH) measurement. Much like the Out-of-Home Advertising Association’s (OAAA) Measurement Guidelines that were released in May of 2021, the MRC standards suggest a move away from the current global gold standard of measurement, Likelihood-to-See (LTS), and towards a less stringent Opportunity-to-See (OTS) metric that does not include the steps required to measure the audience consuming the advertising message.

MRC President George Ivie has announced that a second phase of the OOH standards is expected within the next year, aiming to refine these measures beyond, as he put it in a recent MediaPost article, “The Lowest Common Denominator.” However, there has been limited public discussion on the way in which Phase 1 of these standards might affect the OOH impression metrics used in transactions today and how businesses can prepare for these changes.

Critically, Euan Mackay, Chief Strategy Officer at Route Research, pointed out that important factors to OOH measurement are contradictory or ambiguous within the standards, particularly regarding directionality and the precise development of viewsheds. For our analysis, we will overlook these complexities and concentrate on the implications of applying these standards.

The New MRC OOH Measurement Standards Implications

A hypothetical (but realistic) example:

Consider a Static Bulletin and a Static Transit Shelter both appearing along the right-hand side of the same stretch of roadway…

The bulletin is the standard 14 ft X 48 ft and the shelter is 6 ft X 4 ft. Please consider the following image for the difference in scale of these two inventory types:

On this hypothetical stretch of road, there are 100,000 vehicles in an average week traveling in the correct direction to see the advertising. Assuming each vehicle carries 1.5 people, this results in a weekly circulation of 150,000 people passing by the two media locations.

The larger bulletin is visible from 1,000 feet away, while the transit shelter is only visible from 100 feet. At a speed of 30 miles per hour, individuals are within viewing distance of the bulletin for 22.7 seconds and the transit shelter for 2.3 seconds.

Despite the longer dwell time and larger size of the bulletin, both the bulletin and the transit shelter have identical Opportunity-to-See (OTS) metrics. This uniform metric does not accurately reflect the different abilities of these media to convey the advertising message to the audience.

To address this discrepancy, the OOH industry globally and in the US has applied a probability of noting to each location. In the US, this probability metric is called the Visibility Adjustment Index (VAI). This metric, known globally as Visibility Adjusted Contact (VAC) and referred to by Geopath in the US as an “audience impression” or “Likelihood-to-See (LTS) impression,” accounts for various factors. These include size, distance, dwell time, relative orientation, and location within the field of view, all based on eye-tracking studies. The probability of noting represents the percentage of people likely to look at the advertisement given the opportunity.

For this exercise, let’s assume the probability of noting for the bulletin is 78% and the transit shelter is 42%. The resulting LTS impressions for these formats for an average week are:

An OTS metric removes these adjustments. As a result, the ‘impressions’ on these two formats both end up being greater, but they also end up being identical:

The increase in impressions is not uniform across different formats. In this example, the static billboard sees an increase of 28%, while the transit shelter receives a 138% increase.*

To reiterate, using OTS metrics, a static transit shelter, which covers 24 square feet, registers the same number of impressions as a much larger static bulletin that spans 672 square feet—a 28-fold difference in size. This highlights significant disparities in how impressions are calculated and reported under the new standards. Adding in the complexities of digital media, the disparity between OTS and LTS becomes even more extreme.

Potential Outcomes of OOH Industry Adoption of MRC Measurement Standards

The significant shift in measurement standards could profoundly impact the Out-of-Home (OOH) advertising channel, raising several pressing questions:

It’s important to note that these scenarios assume the continued use of established viewsheds and traffic directionality as per Geopath’s current methodology. Any changes to these elements would likely amplify the impact of the new standards even further.

As the OOH industry navigates through these transformative measurement changes, it is essential for all stakeholders—advertisers, agencies, and media owners—to actively engage with the evolving standards and get involved with the writing of Phase 2. The shift from LTS to OTS metrics not only recalibrates how impressions are calculated but also prompts a reevaluation of strategy across the spectrum of OOH advertising.

Together, through collaborative efforts and a commitment to understanding these new metrics, the OOH industry can continue to thrive in a landscape with increasing data fragmentation, technological advancements, new formats, and greater competition.

If you would like to get involved in this conversation or discuss how the standards may impact your business, we would love to hear from you. Please contact [email protected]