RTL Sells SpotX Programmatic Advertising Platform To Magnite

The programmatic advertising field is heating up as Luxembourg based broadcaster RTL Group sells its platform SpotX to US online ad group Magnite for $1.17 billion.

This creates the largest independent group specializing in programmatic advertising for the fast growing internet connected TV arena.

Magnite and SpotX between them serve various global programmers, broadcasters, platforms and device makers, including Discovery, Disney/Hulu, Electronic Arts, Fox Corporation, fuboTV, Microsoft, Pluto TV, Roku, Samsung and WarnerMedia.

Programmatic advertising, where algorithms replace humans in the processes of negotiating and purchasing advertising inventory, has long been widely employed by major online platforms such as Google for display and more recently video, with roots going back to the early noughties. The advent of internet connected TV, or smart TV, coupled with maturation of targeting on the basis of individual preferences or behavior, has made programmatic ad buying more appealing to broadcasters, brands and pay TV operators. It helps scale targeting efficiently by automating the buying process for advertisers, with greater scope for incorporating performance and audience data to tune campaigns during their course.

Connected TV makes programmatic advertising much easier to deliver because of the direct internet connectivity and ability to incorporate streaming content, as well as reach households that have cut the cord of traditional pay TV. It brings in all those connected platforms such as Roku and SlingTV, which is particularly significant for the North American market, partly explaining the movement of SpotX in that direction.

In this context we are talking about TVs that are connected to the internet, whether directly as smart TVs, or indirectly via say a Roku or Apple TV box. Global sales of such TV devices set a new record in the last quarter of 2020, according to Strategy Analytics, with sales of 111 million units, up 32% on the previous quarter and 6% on Q4 2019. Smart TVs themselves were up 6% but with the strongest growth in media streamers at 42%. Total sales of all such devices for 2020 was 315.6 million units, the highest yet and 6% up on 2019.

SpotX meanwhile has been building groundswell around programmatic advertising for online video. Among earlier developments, the company teamed up with Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) to create an OTT package to reach viewers of premium sporting events, starting with the 2018 FIFA World Cup.

Some traditional TV technology companies have also been raising their profile in programmatic advertising. MediaKind, the business formed from Ericsson’s video services operations, realized some years ago that there were opportunities for more unified and automated advertising as the lines became increasingly blurred between live linear, catch-up, VOD, OTT and DVR/cDVR, driven both by technological change and customer demand.

As Erik Ramberg, MediaKind’s Vice President, Head of Global Business Development, has observed on various occasions, well targeted addressable adverts elevate engagement with customers and ultimately increase the value of each ad impression. The challenge facing broadcasters and operators now is to manage convergence between traditional and programmable advertising, Ramberg believes.

There is also the question of whether programmatic ad buying is still a largely North American phenomenon with the rest of the world lagging behind. It is worth noting that it was a European operator, Sky, which led the field in targeted advertising for linear TV with its AdSmart platform launched in 2014. Sky is now owned by US cable company Comcast, which has been integrating AdSmart with its NBCUniversal One Platform.

Then RTL itself, although divesting itself of SpotX, was already converted to the cause with the launch of its AdConnect in April 2020. This was billed as the first automated platform to streamline programmatic pan-European advertising campaigns directly across its broadcast video-on-demand (VOD) properties. This was designed to simplify and automate the process of buying unified linear and VOD campaigns across multiple markets, from booking to set up.

You might also like...

KVM & Multiviewer Systems At NAB 2024

We take a look at what to expect in the world of KVM & Multiviewer systems at the 2024 NAB Show. Expect plenty of innovation in KVM over IP and systems that facilitate remote production, distributed teams and cloud integration.

Wi-Fi Gets Wider With Wi-Fi 7

The last 56k dialup modem I bought in 1998 cost more than double the price of a 28k modem, and the double bandwidth was worth the extra money. New Wi-Fi 7 devices are similarly premium-priced because early adaptation of leading-edge new technology…

NAB Show 2024 BEIT Sessions Part 2: New Broadcast Technologies

The most tightly focused and fresh technical information for TV engineers at the NAB Show will be analyzed, discussed, and explained during the four days of BEIT sessions. It’s the best opportunity on Earth to learn from and question i…

Standards: Part 6 - About The ISO 14496 – MPEG-4 Standard

This article describes the various parts of the MPEG-4 standard and discusses how it is much more than a video codec. MPEG-4 describes a sophisticated interactive multimedia platform for deployment on digital TV and the Internet.

The Big Guide To OTT: Part 9 - Quality Of Experience (QoE)

Part 9 of The Big Guide To OTT features a pair of in-depth articles which discuss how a data driven understanding of the consumer experience is vital and how poor quality streaming loses viewers.