One of the last standing barriers that distinguishes traditional broadcast and cable from streaming television is access to live major league sports. But times are changing and sports are beginning to make their presence more known on various digital platforms, from the NFL games on Twitter and Amazon, to the MLB games on Facebook, this barrier is being broken down. Additionally, with the COVID-19 pandemic pushing more people towards streaming TV, this trend has only accelerated. In fact, when it comes to advertising budgets, traditional broadcast TV upfront spending is expected to fall by $5.5 billion (27%) for the 2020-2021 season as a result of this trend.
As the 2020-2021 Major League Baseball (MLB) season resumes (although the season is shorter overall), many marketers are questioning how to approach advertising for the year. Our team believes that the clear solution to the unique circumstances is advertising via CTV (Connected TV).
When compared to advertising on traditional TV, MLB advertising on CTV is going to be much more accessible to smaller budgets, targetable, trackable, and have better viewability. Additionally, with advertising on CTV, there is no need to worry about viewers skipping ads the way they would when leveraging recording devices on traditional TV.
With CTV advertising, one of the major advantages is the capacity to hyper-target, which is very handy for advertising to only your specific type of baseball fan. Think about it, is your target audience sitting in the nose bleed section or in the boxes? Are they drinking wine or beer? Eating dogs or filet? Baseball draws people from all walks of life, unlike traditional TV, where targeting is limited to household and top-level demographics, CTV offers the capacity to hyper-target the ideal audience to guarantee the message is reaching the right audience.
With the level of uncertainty around the economy and the COVID-19 pandemic, advertisers are backing out of upfront commitments in droves–and really, who could blame them? Additionally, with live sports being postponed left and right, sports-focused networks like ESPN are really hurting. Even when marketers bounce back, it is likely that ad spend will be allocated towards digital streaming over traditional TV.
With CTV advertising, another amazing benefit is the level of flexibility (when working with the right partners). This means that marketers have the ability to avoid any upfront commitments with ads. For example, the Strategus team has developed a custom curation of inventory, called Deal Ids, to get priority placement and access for MLB advertising through CTV. All this is possible while still maintaining zero upfront or long-term commitment for the marketers we work with.
When it comes to traditional TV, cable boxes and DVRs render ads skippable. This is yet another area where MLB advertising on CTV holds a strong advantage. In the realm of CTV, a big perk is that ads are not skippable, which means there is a near 100% ad completion rate. Even with that advantage, like traditional broadcast TV the ads are not directly actionable (think clicks). Many click/conversion-focused marketers question, “Well, how can I prove ROI?” After all, if CTV isn’t actionable and attributable, what is the point of this huge spend on the baseball game?
In the early days of CTV, this was a tough problem to crack. This is when our team set out to create the Encore Omnichannel and Attribution Suite to address these issues. To make the CTV ad actionable, with Encore Omnichannel we are able to deliver ads deterministically to individuals who watched a CTV ad to completion with retargeting to their other digital devices. This allows us to create action out of what is typically an unactionable medium. Beyond just that, we’re proud to have the first full-function attribution product suite with 6 customizable components for online and offline attribution to track post-view conversions:
Over the last couple of years, viewing habits on streaming platforms have begun to resemble linear/traditional TV with longer view times (an hour or more). This means that there will also be a higher consumption of ads on MLB programs via CTV, that combined with the targeting capabilities we mentioned earlier makes for a slam dunk channel.
On traditional broadcast and cable TV, election years (especially presidential election years) mean much higher rates of competition ($$) for ad spots due to political campaign spending, pushing many marketers out of the picture for crucial portions of the year. When you advertise on MLB programs through CTV, this is something that can be mitigated and even be considered a safe haven for marketers.
Because of the capacity to whittle down to a hyper-targeted audience, CTV levels the playing field and prevents political ads from hijacking the spotlight. A viewer can watch the same game on streaming, as they would on traditional broadcast, and instead of being served political campaign after political campaign, marketers can reach that same person on that same TV screen (whether it is a smart TV, or a TV with a streaming device attached).
While MLB advertising has long been an exclusive to traditional TV, there has been a steady shift towards watching live sports via digital platforms. This offers a great opportunity for marketers to capitalize on advertising during a Major League Baseball game through CTV. Not only does CTV give brands an actual chance of being shown during a highly competitive election year (as opposed to the political ads dominating traditional TV), marketers can take advantage of CTV exclusive benefits such as hyper-targeting and avoiding upfront commitments.
If there are any questions or concerns on how to approach advertising on CTV, contact our team. As leaders in the space, we’d be thrilled to chat strategy, best practices, and the right approach for your MLB ad campaigns.