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TechnologyUncategorized

The Evolution of Pharma Marketing As We Know It

March 26, 2015 — by MediaMath1

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Peter Niemi is a partner at MDC Advertising, the programmatic healthcare company.

Despite the myriad of technological advancements (think cameras you can swallow, robotic surgery systems, and next-gen synthetic limbs) made in medicine within the past 25 years, there is one place where the industry has notably lagged: its marketing.

Pharmaceutical businesses of all sizes are integrating digital marketing into their greater marketing strategy, primarily due to the increasing operational costs and the decreasing effectiveness of traditional methods – and the significant effectiveness of digital methods. While this shift has not happened at any great scale in the pharma world, there are telltale signs that it is starting, with digital spending expected to climb to $2.22 billion, according to eMarketer.

While pharma lags behind other verticals in the adoption of modern marketing techniques, the industry’s reliance on traditional channels is being overcome by the realization of just how powerful new programmatic marketing and media tools are. While the pharma market has been slower to adopt new digital marketing tools, it has had the positive result of being able to learn from the advances made in other industries. When pharma marketers see value being achieved by other industries they are increasingly open to piloting programmatic campaigns with clearly defined success measures. Once these measures are achieved they become eager to look for scale, and start diverting budget away from unmeasurable channels and inefficient approaches.

This post is first in a series that addresses how pharma marketers are fundamentally altering the way they engage with consumers in the digital age by incorporating programmatic technology into their marketing mix. The next post in this series will examine some of the common challenges that pharma marketers face, and how they are overcoming those challenges to execute responsible, high performance digital marketing campaigns.

EventsTechnologyUncategorized

This Week’s Webinar: Kickstarting Your Programmatic Data-Driven Marketing

March 23, 2015 — by MediaMath

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MediaMath, together with the Global DMA, and research firm Winterberry Group, are hosting the webinar “Kickstarting Your Programmatic Data-Driven Marketing” tomorrow, Tuesday March 24th at 4:30 PM EST.

With marketing teams increasingly confident in data-driven marketing and advertising (DDMA), and its prospect for future growth, the need for practical strategies to enable programmatic marketing is now greater than ever. In fact, 63% of panelists from the recent Global DMA report “The Global Review: Data-Driven Marketing and Advertising Around the World” reported that their spending on DDMA grew over the past year.

Stuart Bartram, MediaMath’s Australia Country Manager, along with members from the Global DMA, will share trends and insights from the report, and outlines how marketers can enable data-driven marketing within their organizations.

The details for the webinar, and the link to register can be found below:

Cost: Complimentary
Date/TimeTuesday 24 March 4.30pm EST / Wednesday 25 March 8.30am AEST
Presenters:

  • Stuart Bartram, Country Manager ANZ, MediaMath
  • Jonathan Margulies, Managing Director, Winterberry Group
  • Jodie Sangster, CEO, ADMA, CEO, IAPA & Chair, GlobalDMA

REGISTER HERE.

TechnologyUncategorized

Enhancing the Online Customer Experience with eCommerce Technology

March 19, 2015 — by MediaMath

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The Internet and the availability of real-time marketing data have created a fiercely competitive environment for retailers. It’s no longer sufficient to deliver a great product at a great price. To successfully compete online, retailers must strengthen their value propositions by surrounding great products and prices with incredible, engaging customer experiences. Fortunately, technology can assist retailers in building these kind of online experiences.

Here are three innovative ways you can use technology to improve the online experience of your customers:

1. Bridge the Mobile to Desktop Divide
Mobile usage has exploded and continues to grow at an unrelenting pace. As consumers increase online shopping through smartphones and tablets, retailers must ensure they deliver incredible experiences through these mediums that are consistent with (or better than) the desktop experience. The days of a one-size-fits-all website design that looks great on a desktop, but forces customers to pinch, zoom and scroll on their phones doesn’t cut it anymore. Retailers must employ responsive and adaptive design strategies – design techniques that enable sites to leverage the same design across multiple platforms, while maintaining a consistent look and feel. This kinds of design mindset will help you create great experiences that consistently span all form factors, without sacrificing website speed and performance.

But while mobile usage grows, the majority of online purchases are still completed through desktops. Research shows that 90% of online transactions touch two or more devices.  This means that consumers are browsing and researching on mobile and tablets, but moving to desktops to checkout and complete the purchase.  A great customer experience also means making the transition from mobile/tablet to desktop as seamless as possible.  eTailers must use persistent shopping carts – a process where a customer’s cart contents are preserved as they transition from mobile to desktop, or across multiple browser sessions –  or email-to-cart technologies that enable consumers to start on mobile and finish on the desktop.

2. Bring In-Store Benefits Online
Shopping online is often faster, cheaper and more convenient for consumers. So why do most retail transactions still happen offline? One key reason is that in-store shopping delivers benefits to consumers that they cannot find online and outweigh the cost savings and convenience provided by shopping online.

In the apparel industry, for example, one of the greatest struggles for consumers is with sizing and fit. Historically, online retailers have solved for this challenge through free shipping and returns, encouraging customers to order the same item in multiple sizes and colors in order to facilitate an in-home try-on and  product decision, with the customer then returning the unwanted merchandise at a later point in time. However, this brute-force approach isn’t cost effective for the retailer, nor is it particularly streamlined for the customer. Even with liberal shipping and return policies, returning merchandise is a hassle for customers, thereby eliminating the convenience benefit of online shopping. And it’s a disaster for retailers, adding significant cost to thin operating margins. Now, an emerging category of technology is mitigating this problem. Companies such as Fits.me, VirtuSize, and ClothesHorse enable retailers to help customers understand how their clothes will fit and look on them. Fashion Eyewear retailer Warby Parker enables customers to upload photos of themselves to the website so they can see how various frames will look on their faces prior to ordering. This is a fantastic use of technology to bring the in-store try-on experience online to create an engaging customer experience that benefits both consumers and retailers.

3. Tell Your Story Through Video
Online shopping can be fast, cheap, and convenient, but it can also be impersonal and dry. In physical stores a knowledgeable and engaging sales staff can bring your brand to life, give it personality and help you connect  your customers with the products and the experience. Achieving the same kind of positive and fun shopping experience can be challenging for the online retailer. Retailers can combat the bland online shopping experience through the use of digital video. Online videos are also proven to increase on-site conversions. Product videos that describe a product and its features can help customers choose the best product for their needs. For example, Zappos.com features a product video on the product detail page of almost every pair of shoe it offers online. Educational videos that show customers how to use a product successfully can demonstrate your expertise and build trust among new customers. Customer testimonial videos are tremendously powerful and effective in driving customer conversion and loyalty. Don’t forget that shortened versions of each of these videos can be leveraged online for video advertising and retargeting.

How are you using technology to create fantastic customer experiences? Share your story with me in the comments below, and learn more about MediaMath Retail here.

EventsTechnologyUncategorized

RampUp Recap: The Evolution of Programmatic Marketing

March 17, 2015 — by MediaMath

Joe Zawadzki, CEO of MediaMath, recently sat on a panel at data partner LiveRamp’s RampUp, moderated by Martin Kihn, Research Director at Gartner, that included Amit Ahuja, Head of Audience and Planning at Adobe, Aaron Bell, Founder and CEO of Adroll, Russell Glass, Head of Products, LinkedIn Marketing Solutions at LinkedIn.

Martin Kihn, summed up the importance of data-driven marketing, programmatic technology, and the success of the event nicely: “It’s plumbing for the digital marketing metropolis. But it’s important and — for one day in early March 2015 — it attracted the glitterati of the digiterati.”

Watch the video and hear about the trends and innovations that the panelists discussed at the event.

TechnologyUncategorized

Retailing Programmatic: What You Need to Know

March 13, 2015 — by MediaMath

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Edwin Lee, VP Global Retail, MediaMath was first interviewed on dotrising.  His interview is republished below.

Will programmatic revive retail in the face of online migration?

It may be just one piece of a retailers’ business puzzle today, but programmatic is crucial to target consumers effectively and drive profitable business results. It becomes even more important considering today’s omni-channel consumer who, operating across a variety of channels and devices, expects immediate access to products and services at their fingertips.

As the lines between offline and online shopping become blurred, smart retailers are approaching the consumer experience holistically. Programmatic allows retail marketers to target consumers with relevant advertising, helping them to find the products they require at exactly the right time. And it’s not just taking place online. As MediaMath just proved through their groundbreaking programmatic print pilot with publisher Time Inc. and US retailer Target, programmatic buying will eventually encompass all media forms.

How do you think consumers will respond to a programmatic future? 

Programmatic media buying ensures that advertising is relevant and targeted to consumers. It is a mutually beneficial relationship; the brand is able to reach consumers more inclined to purchase their goods and the consumer is targeted with goods that are actually of interest. Considering the vast amount of consumer choices that are available today – both online and offline – timely advertising and targeting can source the best deals, helping the consumer to make informed decisions about what to buy and where. With useful, meaningful adverts, consumers are much more likely to embrace a programmatic future.

Programmatic versus paid search: Which is more effective and why? 

These are two very different marketing vehicles. Technically, paid search will ‘win’ a direct head-to-head measurement because it serves an advert in response to a consumer making a physical search. But what happens to searches that mention words relating to a brand when programmatic advertising is utilised? Programmatic media buying benefits from allowing advertisers to target each visitor on an individual basis, serving them relevant ads based on their personal details such as age, location, and site visits. Rather than just showing an advert to anyone who types in a keyword, programmatic combines valuable audience data with searches and advertisers’ bids, resulting in greater potential for higher conversions.

How can retailers effectively capture consumers across multiple channels for measureable results?

As well as operating in the real world, consumers are also flitting from websites to apps to messaging devices. This fragmentation of media consumption presents unique challenges to brands and marketers when measuring the effectiveness of advertising against sales. For retail marketers, the ideal solution is to be empowered with the ability to focus on the channels that work, in real-time. Many large brands have social listening centres that monitor the social network activity of their consumers. So why don’t brands have digital marketing centres that are able to monitor and measure sales results of advertising campaigns?

Top five programmatic trends for 2015 

1. First-party data from website analytics platforms, CRM systems, and business analysis tools will be increasingly utilised to target returning consumers.

2. More cross-device and mobile marketers will adopt programmatic buying to reach audiences on the devices they use the most.

3. Attribution technologies will come to the fore as more marketers realise that last-click models do not effectively measure the contributing factors leading to a sale.

4. Programmatic will continue to migrate to non-traditional channels such as television and print.

5. The advertising and marketing technology sectors – both enjoying rapid growth – will converge to take control of the marketing tool set.

Click here to learn more about MediaMath Retail.

TechnologyUncategorized

So Fresh, So Clean: Using DCO to Keep Your Creative Exciting

March 11, 2015 — by MediaMath

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Last week I published a post on the MediaMath blog about the importance of personalization for advertisers, and explained the benefits of using a DCO solution that our DCO partners like Flashtalking and Spongecell make available through the MediaMath platform. As a follow up to that post I’ve outlined four “tips and tricks” that advertisers should think about as they take their personalization strategies to the next level. So, without further ado, the tips are:

Keep Creative Fresh!
Use dynamic creative technology to update creative elements on the fly without having to manually build, modify and traffic new assets. Dynamic creative is ideal for always-on campaigns that have the potential to suffer from creative fatigue and could benefit from increased relevancy without the operational burden of updating creative weekly. Dynamic creative technology provides self-service user interfaces that allow anyone in the creative department of an agency or brand updates ad elements on the fly, without having to work with ad-operations. This means that, at the end of the day, creative remains fresh and those responsible for updating it don’t have to manually traffic assets back and forth. So fresh, and so clean.

Think Beyond “Last Product Seen”
What’s the first kind of campaign that comes to mind when you think of dynamic creative? If you answered “last product seen” campaigns, then you’re likely not alone. We know that showing users the last product they’ve browsed for is an effective way to drive consumers to take action and make a purchase, but effective personalization isn’t just about getting a single conversion. Many advertisers are using dynamic creative solutions beyond “last product seen” to provide consumers with engaging, personalized messaging in novel ways. For example, consider targeting based on local weather, or even memes, as they gain traction in real-time.

Sequence Your Messaging For the Customer Journey
Advertisers can employ dynamic creative technology, from awareness level prospecting of new customers, to conversion focused remarketing, for a truly end-to-end campaign. Messaging can be updated in real-time based on where the consumer is on their path to purchase. For example, a prospecting tactic for a travel brand could be to use dynamic weather targeting. For those of you in the northeast, think about seeing an ad for a tropical location with “Need a little sunshine in your life?” on your screen. Marketers could retarget those audiences that engaged with the ad, or browsed the site with an ad showing a flight deal to Florida. Finally, if the user has looked at specific flights, they could be retargeted with their previously browsed itinerary filled out and a “buy now” button in the creative. In short, consider tailoring messages based on your customer’s engagement with your ad or site. Lastly, assess how this engagement can translate into future cross-sell and up-sell opportunities.

Get in the Algo-Rythm of Identifying Best Performing Creative
Eliminate the guesswork on what creative elements perform best with which audiences. In order to do this effectively, when testing, don’t start with too many combinations, and start with core decisioning points like location, gender, and weather. If you’ve created a campaign for testing purposes, be sure not to segment your audiences into too small of groups; this will ultimately result in difficulty in drawing statistically significant conclusions on performance.

Check back for a third post showcasing the distinct ways in which our clients have used dynamic creative, and the results they produced.

 

TechnologyUncategorized

The Transformation of Digital Marketing as a Whole

March 9, 2015 — by MediaMath

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Omnichannel is everything, and those who understand that, win. For the past few years, the winners of the holiday shopping season have been retail giants Best Buy and Macy’s. That’s because these retailers have understood for years a truth that many are just waking up to: customers now expect the brands they know and respect to be on, always. But, what exactly does that mean? They expect to find the products they see online to be available in the store, and vice versa. They expect to be able to buy that 52” Smart TV from their smartphone at 2:00PM and have it delivered by dinnertime.

Let this be a lesson to the wise: Without omnichannel, there can be no retail digital marketing success.

The cold truth is that consumers don’t actually need to set foot in store anymore. With options like Amazon delivering low-priced, brand-name items to their doorstep, why would they bother to pull on their snow boots, warm up the car, and drive to crowded store?

Architect and retail maven Peter Marino wonders if the era of retail browsing is over altogether. “It used to be very much part of my weekend: the social experience of going to a store like Barneys, seeing what was new, maybe eating at the restaurant. It was part of the recreation. And then maybe you bought something, maybe you didn’t, depending, but I feel that’s changed now,” according to Style.  He goes to add that, “part of that, I think, is that everything’s online, so I don’t need to go to the store just to see what’s new.”

That shift to online may mean that fewer purchases are made in-store, according to Marino, but it doesn’t diminish the importance of a consistent experience from store to site. “…The attitude of luxury brands, which I think is so clever, is for all four out of the four people who go into the store, you have to make it an aspirational experience…And you leave with a positive attitude toward the brand. Now, you don’t really get that online. You don’t go like, ‘Wow.’”

However, that doesn’t mean that achieving the same in-store experience online is impossible or unachievable; retailers like Sephora and J. Crew have done a commendable job creating memorable experiences online as well as in-store. Sephora puts data to work to create personalized experiences customers love, from their loyalty program emails to their just-for-you dynamic homepage messaging and collections. J. Crew makes the experience of shopping online nearly identical to the in-store appearance with the use of great photography and curated outfits. As these retailers demonstrate, the amazing experience customers have in the store should be replicated across channels, from the online store to the mobile site, to every interaction consumers have with your retail brand.

Programmatic technology can facilitate those rich brand experiences. Retailers can reach their customers and prospective customers in a targeted way with messaging that’s updated in real-time, across a myriad of channels. Videos, in-app banners, Facebook Newsfeed ads can, and should, all be used to drive brand awareness and ultimately conversion. By activating customer data, retailers can ensure messages are persuasive and relevant to the recipient; by leveraging rich media, retailers can deliver digital brand experiences that mirror the in-store experience.

Of course, as the digital marketing technology advances, so must the marketing strategies that employ the technologies in question. A successful omnichannel strategy cannot be executed with a disparate set of point solutions. To create a 360-degree view of the customer and a smooth experience across channels, marketers must have the right tools to activate data against media at relevant points along the path to purchase. Gartner cites the need for a Digital Marketing Hub, which “seeks to answer marketer’s call for a coordination of complex, fragmented and expanding marketing activities around a common view of the customer.” Does your retail business have a hub, or marketing operating system, in place to engage customers across channels?

Click here to learn more about MediaMath Retail.

TechnologyUncategorized

The New Premium: How Programmatic Changes the Way Advertisers Value Inventory

March 6, 2015 — by MediaMath

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This article was first published in February 2015 on AdExchanger and has been republished below.

Five years ago, if I told anyone in our industry that I wanted to buy or sell “premium” inventory, we’d all picture the same thing: inventory that was bought or sold directly between a media buyer and publisher’s salesperson. Maybe it would be home page inventory or a section front, a page takeover or rich unit. Or perhaps it would just involve a specific publisher that we agreed equated to “premium.”

New programmatic technologies are radically changing how we think of inventory overall, especially the term “premium.” Inventory is no longer one- or two-dimensional – the definition has become much more complex. It is a multidimensionally defined set of attributes that includes traditionally “publisher-controlled” inputs, such as page location, dimensions of the creative, category and content adjacencies. But today there are additional overlaid attributes that flesh out the definition.

Advertisers can bring their own data to the dance, which we’ll hesitantly call “first party,” and overlay additional data sources, which we’ll hesitantly call “third party.” And beneath the surface level attributes are underlying components that can be much more dynamic. These components can help predict how effectively an impression can drive a campaign’s goals or outcomes.

Programmatic buying platforms historically were tied to open exchange inventory, but increasingly, they are used as primary buying platforms across open RTB, private marketplaces, direct publisher integrations and even to support direct buys. This more holistic approach ultimately leads to a “programmatic first” point of view, as the new inventory definitions being rightly demanded by advertisers become their starting point on media buys. While RTB “only” represents 20% to 40% of budgets today, it’s clear that the rapid growth of programmatic will drive these broader inventory definitions across the buyer-seller boundary.

Achieving Symmetry
Publishers are embracing the newly empowered media buyers, allowing them to bring their own data for direct buys. They are also allowing buyers to connect directly to their ad servers for programmatically enabled direct buys and buy-side inventory decisioning in real time. For the past few years, the asymmetry of information in programmatic – publishers had no idea why advertisers bought their inventory on the exchange – has been a sore point.

Publishers point out that if buyers work with them, they can open paths to the inventory, inclusive of audiences, that buyers are looking for on the exchange. As we see more collaboration between buyers and sellers on these points, pockets of highly valuable inventory that were lying dormant inside the publisher’s ad server (dare we say “premium”) will suddenly open up.
To use a mining analogy, publishers previously sold unrefined chunks of ore to media buyers, who found a variety of metals inside, but only some of it was valuable to them. So buyers started buying inventory through other marketplaces that allowed them to use their own tools and data to locate the chunks of ore that contained the metals they cared about. Now publishers are saying, “If you’re willing to pay us what you think that metal is worth, we can find more of it than you’re getting on those secondary marketplaces. But you have to work with us to get access to it.”

This new approach is both exciting and refreshing. The industry is getting over old suspicions and reluctance to share information. The asymmetry is becoming more symmetrical, and everyone involved gets more value. Days are still early, and only the most advanced players are figuring out how to make this work, but it won’t be long before this new way of defining “premium” is the standard.

Evolving Definition
How do we define “premium” in this new programmatically enabled world? Premium inventory matches the advertiser’s holistic goals, inclusive of where the ad will run – publisher, category, page location or format – and the multidimensional profiles of anonymous users behind the impressions, including first- and third-party audience data definitions, as well as geographic, demographic and other data elements provided by publishers and other parties. The advertiser believes the premium inventory will help fulfill their goals and drive outcomes that they desire.

That’s a mouthful, eh? How about this: Premium inventory matches the goals of the advertiser well enough that they’re willing to pay a premium for access.

TechnologyUncategorized

Shopping Cart Retargeting That Works

March 4, 2015 — by MediaMath

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This post is the second in a three-part series on ecommerce marketing.  Read the first post to learn five different reasons why customers walk away from their abandoned shopping carts.

In my previous post I explored various reasons why customers abandon their shopping carts online. This post will address the next logical question for eCommerce marketers: “How can we use this knowledge to execute more effective retargeting campaigns?”

Marketers can use on-site consumer activity to infer the underlying reason behind their abandoned cart, and subsequently implement a more focused retargeting strategy to drive that customer to purchase. Using dynamic creative in retargeting campaigns is just one example of an incredibly effective tool in helping to create more focused, personalized experiences. Here are some other recommendations for marketers looking to make their retargeting campaigns more relevant and effective:

1) Differentiate Between the Shopping Cart and Checkout
The shopping cart and checkout flow may feel like one in the same, but they are really separate parts of your site with distinct functions. The shopping cart is a customer tool, helping them with product research, comparison, selection and pricing. The checkout flow is a merchant tool, helping the merchant acquire the necessary information required to process and fulfill the order. Cart abandoners and checkout abandoners walk away for different reasons, so treat these two groups separately with different retargeting campaigns.

Customers who abandon a shopping cart may still be in the research and selection portions of their buyer journeys, and may not be committed to buy. They may need help with product selection or comparison. Consider the following tips to help move shopping cart abandoners down the path to purchase:

  • Use ads that show product categories they’re interested so they can continue their research and selection.
  • Dynamically insert relevant category page information into your creative to help customers decide.
  • Dynamically insert promotions into these campaigns to help convince customers to buy.

Customers who abandon mid-checkout flow have likely made a purchase decision but have walked away because of too much checkout friction. Checkout abandoners may need messages that remind them they qualify for free shipping, explain return policies, or that provide assurances that they can check out as a guest without having to create an account. Tie your message to the specific stage in your checkout process from where your customer walked away. Don’t waste marketing dollars on discounts with this group; They’ve already decided to purchase, and most likely did not walk away due to price. Instead, focus on removing the friction that caused them to walk away.

2) Dynamically Insert User Generated Content
Social proof is a powerful selling and conversion tool. When customers see their peers wearing or using your products or commenting positively on their experiences with them, they are much more likely to purchase. Sites like Rent The Runway have been hugely successful, in part, by providing customers the opportunity to show themselves off wearing the gowns the site rents out. Pull in your user generated photos and product reviews and dynamically insert them into your retargeting ad creative to create the social proof customers need to make a purchase decision.

3) Tailor Your Message to Each Platform
Use a cross-platform retargeting campaign to help customers bridge the cross-platform and cross-channel divide. Remind customers that their shopping cart is available online for desktop checkout. Consider using mobile ads that can dynamically message the nearest retail locations with in-stock inventory. Additionally, make sure that you’re tying in-store sales back to mobile browsers, so you don’t bombard customers with messages after they’ve already completed a purchase.

4) Take a Long-Term Approach to Wishlisters
Many customers who use the shopping cart as a wishlist tool may be planning future purchases. This group requires a longer campaign with lower impression density immediately after they populate their wishlist. Try a recurring campaign where you engage your customer for a few days, then disengage for a week and then engage again. You can dynamically tailor these long-cycle retargeting programs with key events that might trigger purchase, such as Valentine’s Day, Mother’s Day or Christmas.

Check back soon for a post that outlines four ways ecommerce marketers can enhance the on-site customer experience. Learn more about MediaMath Retail here.

TechnologyUncategorized

Empowering Today’s Agencies with Programmatic Technology

March 2, 2015 — by MediaMath

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With the Digiday Agency Summit currently underway, it’s an opportune time to examine the ways in which digital media buying agencies use programmatic technology to drive success on behalf of their clients. Advanced data-driven agencies typically partner with technology partners for cutting edge functionality, unsurpassed media access, and transparent value for their customers; below you will find four key features that MediaMath’s agency partners are using to produce transparent and quantifiable marketing results for their brand clients:

ROI Optimization
ROI optimization allows for true real-time optimization to back-end revenue to improve performance. Agencies using MediaMath’s ROI optimization solution can specify their desired ROI on the average order value and optimize to the actual transaction level based on online and offline-data.

Closed Loop Attribution
With closed loop attribution, advertisers can now fully activate the benefits of advanced attribution models on the programmatic RTB exchange. MediaMath clients can plug their custom attribution models directly into our multivariate bid prediction algorithm. The Brain, our proprietary algorithm, factors in the advanced attribution insights to determine the best bid price, adjusting the bid for each of the individual 150+ billion daily impressions opportunities available in TerminalOne.

Full Audience View
Smarter marketing relies on activating all your data, both on and offline, to enable the greatest amount of engagement and return the right value for your clients. Full Audience View, MediaMath’s exclusive capability, powered by Akamai, is a turnkey site data capture offering that delivers increased scale and performance. FAV enables advertisers to activate their data at a higher level by targeting more of their prospective customers, executing more sophisticated re-marketing, and acquiring more customers at a lower cost.

Private Marketplaces
MediaMath’s Private Marketplace allows clients to take advantage of the full suite of TerminalOne’s capabilities across every type of display inventory source, including inventory purchased directly from publishers outside of the RTB exchanges. Advertisers can gain preferred accesses to quality inventory ahead of the open exchange across multiple supply channels, including display, video, and mobile, through Private Marketplace Exchange (PMP-E) deals. Additionally, many advertisers access, negotiate and book inventory via the T1 Deal Discovery App.

To learn more about how agencies are producing results by partnering with programmatic technology platforms like MediaMath, check out the Agency Series on the MediaMath blog.