Dominic Mills has ruffled some feathers on the trading desks after questioning their transparency. Here, a ‘flabbergasted’ Marco Bertozzi, executive managing director of VivaKi, argues his work has challenged the status quo and calls for a more open dialogue with trade bodies…
Am I allowed to rant? What a funny world we live in when representatives from the trade press and trade bodies are happily chirping away at the dastardly trading desks. We are not transparent; we are sitting on hoards of gold, laughing into our hands at the lack of interest that advertisers are showing us. It is a money making extravaganza. Have you read the press lately?
What leaves me cold is that those very same people were quite happy when their advertisers were throwing good money after bad at media companies with not the slightest inkling about where the money was going or how. No results, no insights, no controls on frequency, absolutely zero brand safety right up to advertising on illegal sites.
Oh that’s fine because those companies delivering the ads are not in an agency group. Even today there is a major RTB ad Network that revealed in its financials that it makes over 60% margin. Is that OK, advertisers? Same people, same budgets – totally blind by the way and totally unaccountable to the auditing or pitch process.
Let me explain what we have done (and by we I mean AOD because it’s worth noting not every trading desk is the same), us terrible, evil operators – we have brought transparency to our clients. AOD was built on trust and transparency. It was built to be the safest, most secure and trusted solution in the industry. It was built for clients first, not shareholders, and for that reason our advertisers know exactly what is media and what is not.
We have been stringent in brand safety terms with our VivaKi Verified process (our proprietary methodology that rigorously reviews all media, data and technology partners to ensure the highest level of brand safety, consumer privacy & client data protection across all channels) so advertisers can make sure they are not being exposed to bad content.
I am flabbergasted at the suggestion that we are not being scrutinised by auditors.”
We have frequency controls ensuring advertisers are not showing their ad 50 times and thus wasting money. Our commercials mean that we are dedicated to finding the right user not managing an arbitrage or variable margin, everything we do is in RTB, not upfront buying, not something many of the media companies can truly claim.
We do not charge advertisers set CPM or set CPC – are you still accepting that? Well ask yourself why you would in an auction world; because it is a nice safety net? Well that is your worst media procurement decision yet. No, it is because those deals make their providers lots of cash and the advertiser has no idea how much.
I am flabbergasted at the suggestion that we are not being scrutinised by auditors. Anyone who commits that to paper has clearly not spoken to anyone who works inside the relevant organisations.
It is one of the most common conversations I have between ad hoc meetings and pitches. Have you seen a pitch document recently? We are scrutinised, perhaps some are not, but we certainly are and I think it mocks the advertisers to say they are not focused on the subject. I know many who are, many.
The trading desk has challenged the status quo with many companies having to raise their game because they were being faced with a tide of transparency from us, yes us. We have demonstrated that it is unacceptable to do flat CPC, CPM deals, that you should know where your advertising appears and not deliver blind clicks. We have been unearthing how they were doing business and continue to do so. I am happy with that. I am happy we have changed things.
I think it is a shame that there is not more open dialogue on the subject, especially from our trade bodies. We are working in the most exciting revolution in digital since search. The business is changing at pace and we are working as hard and fast as we can to educate and explain, but that is not as easy as one might think and I think it’s important all trade representatives take responsibility for this.
I would love to come to an ISBA conference and do a working session or Q&A on the subject of trade desks. I suspect, however, that Thinkbox or the PPA will probably be filling the agenda.
Twitter: @m_bertozzi