Byravee Iyer
Nov 20, 2015

More brands keen to take programmatic in-house: MIS

SINGAPORE - Brands in Asia are starting to take certain aspects of programmatic buying in-house, according to a panel discussion at the Marketing Innovation Summit that examined the practical challenges of programmatic buying.

L-R: Jonathan Yang, Hari Shankar and  Yiorgos Hadjiandrea
L-R: Jonathan Yang, Hari Shankar and Yiorgos Hadjiandrea

Jonathan Yang, director of global media and digital marketing with HP, said that while media agencies can take care of measurement, brands need to focus on content. “At HP Enterprises we decided to take some aspects like data in-house so that we can own and segment it.”

Hari Shankar, head of APAC paid media for Paypal, agreed that direct relationships with platforms and vendors are beneficial.

“I’d like to own the car but get the agency guys to drive it,” he said. “The lesser number of players the better. We’re not trying disintermediation but we’d like agencies to function as an extended marketing arm.”

FMCG company Kimberly-Clark uses a hybrid approach where it owns the trading desk that is run by its media agency Mindshare.

According to Rahul Asthana, the firm’s regional marketing director, Kimberly-Clark’s digital spend has increase three times compared to two years ago.

“We’re getting more effectiveness and more digital media is purchased through programmatic," Asthana said. "It is important we experiment and be familiar with it and have resources in-house to buy this media effectively.”


More from yesterday's Marketing Innovation Summit:


Asthana doesn’t rule out taking the whole programmatic function in-house. “Right now we’re looking at partnerships to do this better, but as we start spending more of our dollars in this the question will come up again," he said. "Is it really worth paying a big management fee to someone external? We’ll keep evaluating this every 18 months.”

Most companies still find measurement a challenge and as such view programmatic and display as a failure.

“We’ve been buying digital inventory across ad exchanges for the past 1.5 years,” said Shankar. “Initially we thought it didn’t work, but started seeing efficiency after six months.”

Making a pitch for Google’s DoubleClick, Yiorgos Hadjiandrea, head of DBM for Southeast Asia, said 90 percent of people are switching between screens, and companies need a consolidated platform that gives them a single view, which programmatic can help achieve. “In this market we need to invest in measurement and ad serving, but we’re falling behind," Hadjiandrea said. "There are innovations in measurement which exist but we need to get the basics right.”

 

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

1 day ago

Tech on Me: Political tension meets platform drama

As big tech's entanglement with politics draws fresh scrutiny post-US election, Western platforms face a deepening trust crisis—from X's advertiser exodus to Meta's legal battles—while Asian tech firms vie to emerge as credible alternatives.

2 days ago

Creative Minds: Heidi Kasselman on how pretending ...

From winging an internship in Johannesburg to leading creative at Clemenger Melbourne, Heidi Kasselman's unconventional path proves sometimes chaos is the best career plan.

2 days ago

Spikes Asia 2025: In conversation with Torsak ...

Spikes Asia catches up with Chuenprapar to explore the power of humour in marketing communications and his advice for Thai agencies aiming to make a mark at this year’s awards.

2 days ago

Yuu dominates Kantar's BrandZ Hong Kong ranking

DFI Retail's Yuu has conquered Hong Kong's brand landscape, outpacing even Cathay Pacific. Challengers are rising in both airlines and banking.