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Navigating COVID-19

March 17, 2020 — by MediaMath

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We’re experiencing an unprecedented time in our world. Our priority remains the health and safety of our employees and continued support of your business needs. MediaMath is committed to helping you keep your operations running as smoothly as possible.

We’re adhering to the advice and recommendations given by the CDC, WHO, state, city and local governments in which we operate and live. We have officially moved to a work-from-home model globally, and our Facilities, HR and IT teams are ensuring employees have everything they need to confidently, efficiently and effectively work from home. Your MediaMath teams will be in constant communications via Slack and Zoom to ensure we’re providing you with the same level of support as always. We also have single sign-on as well as VPN to keep employees working productively while at home. Please let us know if you have any concerns or see slippage in communications, and we’ll promptly address them.

Our technology, SLAs and communications with you remain unaffected. Your campaigns will continue to run as expected, and your account team will be available to answer all your questions and concerns no differently than before. We’ll continue to monitor the landscape to identify any change that could impact performance, CPMs and more. In fact, we’ve launched a public microsite to be transparent about the data we are seeing in our own platform, in addition to the insights we are gathering from partners and other third parties.

Stay safe and healthy, and we’ll continue to stay in close communication with you as this global situation evolves.

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Bringing Transparency to the Programmatic Supply Chain

March 16, 2020 — by MediaMath

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Join moderator Joanna O’Connel (Forrester) for a lively discussion with Joe Zawadzki (MediaMath), Richard Brandolino (IBM), Gerry Bavaro (Merkle) and David Kohl (TRUSTX) on bringing radical transparency to an industry that desperately needs fixing. Chalk full of plumbing metaphors, this 40-minute panel session hosted at the 2020 ANA Masters of Data & Technology Conference dives into how trust can be built in the supply chain, with consumers, and with eachother–brands, publishers and tech players. The short answer? You have to know what’s going on. Watch the video to learn more about the path forward for the industry and steps that can be taken today.

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The Honest Ads Act Charts A Path For Political Advertising

February 27, 2020 — by MediaMath

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This byline originally appeared on AdExchanger.  

Lawmakers and industry leaders have not yet reached consensus on digital political advertising rules. As a result, no one is satisfied with the platforms’ varying self-governing policies.

Facebook, for example, won’t fact-check political ads or disclose campaign targeting parameters. Twitter won’t run any political ads. And Google will disable many targeting tools for political ads to control abuse, but now the platform is less useful for small campaigns and campaigns with first-party data.

Targeted political digital advertising can have real, positive value for voters and campaigns. Campaigns should be allowed to focus their message on the parts of their issues platforms that need more awareness or are relevant for particular groups. They should be able to engage supporters and potential supporters with calls to action.

Campaigns should also be able to construct custom lists of voters they think might be open to their messages. The challenge is to make those tools foster transparency and encourage healthy discourse and debate.

These are difficult issues, and while there may not be a perfect policy, there’s an alternative for the industry to consider: full transparency in political advertising as proposed in the Honest Ads Act. This should enable scrutiny of ads and ensure that competing ideas and campaigns can find the same voters.

The Honest Ads Act before Congress mandates transparency within advertising technology for political campaigns, but there is much debate on what this means. Its rules for transparency hinge on disclosure of all creatives, targeting parameters and media spend.

In addition to the law, there should also be minimum audience size requirements to ensure that a large enough group of voters see the ad to enable scrutiny. And no advertiser, political campaign or other entity should be able to distribute verifiably false or misleading advertising. Each platform should be able to make the call of when that line is crossed, but to draw no line at all is an abdication of responsibility.

The mandates should either be made law or an industry standard, enabled and managed by one of our trade associations with a centralized, publicly available transparency database.

It is a challenging subject due to the gray areas around what is true. At a minimum – and it appears there is universal agreement on this point – no platform that enables targeted digital advertising should turn a blind eye to content that suppresses voting. This would include advertising the wrong date of an election to confuse voters about when to vote.

Less universally agreed, no platform should allow the amplification and targeting of verifiably false information. For example, the claim that a candidate is soft on crime is not verifiably true or false – it is an opinion. Claiming that an opponent is a criminal is verifiable by checking public records. Platforms should police against those behaviors.

More common are the debatable assertions all campaigns make. For competing campaigns to meaningfully challenge opposing ideas and present their own views, they need to know the audience that the assertion targeted.

The industry should look to Congress to step in, pass the Honest Ads Act, which is currently stuck in committee, and provide additional guidance. This includes partnering with advertising trade associations to collectively establish norms that we can all adhere to.

Digital advertising is not a tool available only on Google and Facebook. Advertising spend will migrate to where it works. As a result we must work toward generally applicable rules and norms and continue iterating on them until we are sure our democracy is free from algorithmic manipulation.

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Media Innovation Day 2020: The Value of the Advertiser Dollar

February 19, 2020 — by MediaMath

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Joe Zawadzki recently spoke at The Ad Club’s Media Innovation Day 2020 | Opposites Attract: The Alliance of Art and Science alongside Danilo Tauro, PhD, of Procter & Gamble, Max Kalehoff of Realeyes – Emotional Intelligence and Amy Williams of Good-Loop. Joe had this to say about the top challenges on which advertisers should focus:

“Everyday marketers are investing their dollars and making a choice…I think this idea of marketers being really really choiceful and very thoughtful about where your dollars are going–do my investments reflect what I want to do from an ecosystem perspective, do they reflect my brand, and does it pay for quality content and journalism–and then make sure those beliefs are reflected in what is happening on a day-to-day basis on the ground. It is super hard, but I think it is super urgent.”

Watch the full panel below.

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The SOURCE Pursuit of Trust in Advertising Through Transparency and Accountability

February 14, 2020 — by MediaMath

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Accessing consumer information and using that access to deliver advertising is rightfully dependent on increasingly stronger standards of transparency and consumer control. Over the last two years, we have taken steps within our platform and with our partners, through our trade associations, and in public advocacy to drive change in that direction. We have engaged commercial and non-commercial stakeholders in good faith to understand, evolve, and rise to the demands of consumers, browsers, and policymakers for greater accountability.

As a significant part of that effort, we have imposed increasingly strict guardrails on what data is allowed in our systems and how we, our partners, and our clients can use it. We believe we can do as much or more for advertisers with less personal data than previously thought necessary. For example, we have higher restrictions on the use of location data than many of our competitors. Additionally, more than a year ago, we stopped “fingerprinting” because we felt it was no longer consistent with evolving privacy norms and our consumer-first vision.

We have also worked to set increasingly higher standards for our industry by helping our trade associations strengthen their self-regulatory codes and develop policies and tools to support compliance with them. We played a leadership role in developing and currently chair the Transparency and Consent Framework (TCF), which gives European consumers users visibility into and control over the companies that may process their data and the purposes for which they may do so. As a Board member of the Network Advertising Initiative (NAI), we have supported and encouraged the evolution of the NAI Code to expand its scope and heighten its requirements. The 2020 NAI Code, for example, now covers the use of offline data for tailored advertising, requires opt-in consent for the use of precise location data for ad delivery and reporting, and raises the bar on what it means to obtain high-quality opt-in consent. We also worked closely with the NAI to develop their recently released guidance on health-related ad targeting.

We embrace the principle that consumers must be able to know and control whether or not they are engaging in the value exchange of content and services for information. As the digital advertising industry works to rearchitect its consumer engagement tactics and tools, we will work with our colleagues to ensure that accountability mechanisms and governance are embedded in any replacement for the cookie.

This is no easy task because the advertising supply chain is more complex than most people realize. When a person sits in front of a computer to access ad-supported services, they interact with far more companies than are visible to them. The internet service provider connecting their device to the internet, their device’s operating system, the browser they use to move around the internet, the search engine they use to find a website, the website they visit, the supply-side platforms that aggregate that website’s advertising space and inventory with that of other websites, the demand-side platform that aggregates buyers to bid on that inventory, and, finally, the advertiser that wins that bid all get some kind of access to the consumer’s data. Providing for accountability and transparency across that supply chain is difficult but absolutely necessary.

We have worked hard to restructure the way our people, organization, and partnerships interact to evolve our products and services for a new age. The result of that two-year reengineering effort is SOURCE by MediaMath, a marketing platform of aligned firms and services bound by values, respect for people’s data, and a commitment to delivering transparent, accountable, and addressable advertising to reach real people on real media. We are proud of it, believe it is setting a new standard for the ecosystem, and look forward to continually and iteratively working to improve on it. We look forward to working with friends and skeptics alike to exchange ideas in good faith in an effort to ensure that the digital economy works in a way that all stakeholders can embrace.

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Redefining the Industry: A Glossary for the Next-Generation Accountable & Addressable Supply Chain

January 27, 2020 — by MediaMath

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Back in October, we launched SOURCE by MediaMath, and with it, a whole new set of terms intended to guide the discussion around how the ecosystem is looking to redesign itself. We’ve created a handy animated glossary to solidify what we mean when we talk about building an accountable and addressable supply chain by the end of this year. Check out one of the definition videos below, and head to this page to watch them all.

Redefining the Industry: SOURCE from MediaMath on Vimeo.

 

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How MediaMath and LiveRamp are Collaborating to Help Marketers Reach Real People with Real Ads

January 22, 2020 — by MediaMath

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MediaMath attended RampUp London in late 2019 to speak on a panel with our SOURCE partner LiveRamp about how to solve for addressability challenges in the industry using privacy-first solutions that let marketers reach real people with real ads. Greg Williams, our Co-Founder and SVP of Strategic Partnerships, sat down with Travis Clinger, VP of Strategic Partnerships, to talk more about the integration of LiveRamp’s Identity Link with SOURCE by MediaMath, and together we can drive industry-leading addressability.

“MediaMath is taking a stand and is building an industry-level effort to drive the supply chain in a new direction, in a direction that removes discrepancies, in a direction that removes fraud from all parties and in a direction that truly creates a level of transparency from publisher to marketer across the board in a bi-directional way,” Greg said.

Talking specifically about the partnership with LiveRamp, Greg said, “It’s creating a streamlined rail between publisher and marketer such that you have a single identity space to transact on, so you can remove hops in the supply chain, so you have better match rates, so you have far more addressability, and so that you’re marketing to real humans, not just devices, in a streamlined manner. When you combine all of that together, what it really gives the marketer is a world where you see improved addressability through expanded reach in formats and devices and browsers but also in new channels such as connected TV.”

Watch the full discussion at the link below.

SOURCE by MediaMath

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CES 2020: The Industry is Ready to Join Us on Our Journey to 100% Accountability and Addressability

January 14, 2020 — by MediaMath

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I arrived into Las Vegas early last week for a jam-packed week of meetings and events at CES and left with a sense of incredible gratitude for our team’s execution and for the excitement around our efforts to create a 100 percent accountable ecosystem by the end of this year through SOURCE by MediaMath. We had the opportunity to talk to quite a few marketers, agencies, and ecosystem partners who are looking forward to participating, and we’re ready to roll up our sleeves and get to work with them. A couple of key callouts:

  • Our vision is unique and differentiated and is appealing to many potential clients and partners in the market.
  • It was impressive to see the sheer number of potential partners with whom our Global Partnerships team spoke. They are eager to participate and to use our new clean pipes, bringing their own media, data, and identity solutions to bear.
  • Major content owners not only believe in the change we’re leading, but they’re asking how they can join the more than 100 of their ranks currently offering inventory through SOURCE. SSP partners are asking how they can participate, too.
  • Brands we met with are not only looking to clean up their media supply ecosystems, but are also seeking partners with whom they can connect their marketing and data stacks and build new capabilities internally.
  • I was delighted to see CES content sessions on some of the topics that are interwoven with our accountability and addressability efforts and by industry icons such as P&G’s Marc Pritchard, who reiterated his company’s commitment to doing its part in building a new, cleaner supply chain. Our CTO/CPO Wil Schobeiri participated in a panel with SOURCE partners Rubicon and LiveRamp and others moderated by AdExchanger’s Sarah Sluis on “Identity in the Age of Privacy Regulation and the Open Web.” He shares some of his takeaways here and says he’s bullish about the likelihood of a community identity asset actually becoming the standard across the ecosystem in 2020.

It bears repeating: This is the year of the accountable and addressable media supply chain. In 2021, the industry won’t need to make another call for a cleaner ecosystem, because it will be here, finally real, in motion, and ready for all of us to reap the benefit.

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CES 2020 Live Recap

January 13, 2020 — by MediaMath

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We’re back from CES 2020 and feeling super energized for the year ahead based on the exciting conversations we had with marketers, agencies and ecosystem partners. Our CTO/CPO Wil Schobeiri was on the ground to share insights from the meetings, the parties and his panel on identity with SOURCE by MediaMath partners Rubicon and LiveRamp. Watch some of the highlights from his time at CES 2020, and stay tuned for more learnings from the event in the days to come.

CES Live Recap – Wil Schobeiri from MediaMath on Vimeo.