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by phlhr
1478 days ago
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That's completely false. I've worked in both the media buying and inventory side of advertising and the large accounts definitely care about the quality of audience. Nike, Apple, Nestle etc have huge internal agencies that are tasked with finding brand safe platforms to advertise against. The type of attribution based advertising you are talking about certainly also exists whereby the advertiser pays $x per (milli)impression, then a further $x for click-thru and then a final $x for a conversion. However the vast majority of twitter's revenue is in the first bucket (CPM) which is entirely valued based on the size and quality of the audience. |
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There are certainly a minority of major brands that operate as advertisers with awareness campaigns — sponsored hashtags are a good example — but if you read the Twitter filings, it’s very clear that their focus is performance based advertising — and that’s where they see their future, too.
Maybe a decade ago you could have said that advertisers were just trusting platforms to deliver value, and that ad-fraud could make or break a platform if they got caught, but that’s not true anymore, it’s a much more sophisticated market. Advertisers aren’t (as) dumb (as they once were).
Brand safety is a whole other kettle of fish — that’s a concern across all types of advertising, and not relevant to the audience, rather the content of the platform.