Home Ad Exchange News Criteo Locks In ASOS Ads, But With A Catch; TikTok Heating Plays With Fire

Criteo Locks In ASOS Ads, But With A Catch; TikTok Heating Plays With Fire

SHARE:
Comic: Back To School

Here’s today’s AdExchanger.com news round-up… Want it by email? Sign up here.

After A Fashion

Criteo inked an exclusive deal with British online clothing retailer ASOS to be the ad tech pipes for its advertising business.

“The ASOS vision is to become the go-to global destination for fashion-loving 20-somethings and we want to take brands on the journey with us,” writes Elton Ollerhead, director of the ASOS Media Group in a release about the deal.

A couple of things to note.

Firstly, Criteo’s role is to manage on-site display ads, off-site programmatic and search product listings. The ASOS Media Group keeps creative services, social media, email marketing and app push notifications.

Secondly, Criteo specifies that it’s the exclusive partner for “endemic brands’ advertising” – and that’s an important detail.

A Criteo fashion advertiser may want to target ASOS customers, sure. But there are also many interesting hypothetical crossovers for ASOS with, say, TripAdvisor or Marriott – both of which, it should be noted, have their own retail media units as part of a joint push to reach young professionals who travel regularly.

It’s also not hard to imagine that Uber or Lyft could propose a marketing partnership for fashion week.

Non-endemic revenue may only be theoretical, but it’s definitely promising.

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

Get our editors’ roundup delivered to your inbox every weekday.

​​Tall Tok

TikTok toes a fine line between legit content promotion and “heating,” the practice of boosting certain posts when the algorithm isn’t cutting it.

TikTok execs admitted to heating content for tentpole events during SXSW in Austin over the weekend, Insider reports. But Jeff Louisma, TikTok’s US head of cyber and data defense, insists that what TikTok does is “much like how Netflix promotes a featured video or movie on its homepage.”

Not quite.

Streamers either promote their own titles or pay app distributors like Roku or Vizio to sponsor content for them. Neither strategy is an example of heating, whereby platforms boost content they don’t own without telling anyone. (Heated content is not labeled as sponsored, nor as an ad.)

You wouldn’t be wrong for thinking, “Well, who cares if TikTok wants to promote the World Cup?” But TikTok’s covert heating practice begs the question of what else might be hiding inside that magic TikTok engine.

TikTok’s algorithms are already drawing scrutiny from suspicious lawmakers. The notion of heating could spur suspicions that TikTok’s Chinese parent company has a method for promoting certain ideas very quickly to young Americans.

Eyes Right Here

Podcast publishers are mulling a pivot-to-video, so to speak, as preferences shift toward watchable podcasts and video-focused platforms.

YouTube ranks first among podcast listeners’ preferred platforms, and almost half of active podcast consumers say they prefer video to audio-only episodes, Digiday reports.

YouTube also helps with podcast discovery since it has a built-in recommendation algorithm,  and video views translate to more valuable ad impressions.

Not to mention that YouTube has the only reliable ad rev share going for content creators.

Still, high-quality production costs a pretty penny, and podcast publishers must consider whether going all-in on video will change the nature of their show and relationship with listeners (*ahem* viewers).

Podcasts are “very intimate, and they’re very unself-conscious because you don’t have a camera in your face most of the time,” one podcast exec tells Digiday. “You don’t want the fundamental creative of the thing to suffer just because you’re trying to exploit it on other platforms.”

But Wait, There’s More!

Bob Iger: The streaming video business is “very, very tricky right now.” [Next TV]

News publishers lament how ad verification tech categorizes them in programmatic bids. [Digiday]

Twitter rolls out a video marketing course for advertisers (whoever’s left, that is). [Social Media Today]

The Google-Microsoft AI rivalry continues. [The Verge]

Speaking of Microsoft, the company just laid off an entire team dedicated to ethical AI while doubling down on its partnership with OpenAI. [TechCrunch]

And speaking of Google, it introduced new enhancements to its AdMob platform. [blog post]

Must Read

Amazon Juices Profits, With A Big Assist From The Ads Biz

Wall Street wanted profits. Big Tech delivered. That was the case for Google, Meta, Microsoft, Apple and – more than any other US tech giant – Amazon.

Comic: Welcome Aboard

Google’s Ad Revenue Rockets Upward Again, But The Open Web Is Getting Less

Google has always been the internet waystation. People arrive to be shuttled someplace else. Increasingly, though, Google is the destination.

How Bayer Is Using Creative Analytics To Cure Its Data Divide

Bayer partnered with its data agency, fifty-five, to develop a custom in-house creative analytics dashboard built on Google Cloud to more effectively measure and evaluate creative performance.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

First-Party Data On Ice? How Conagra’s Birds Eye Brand Navigates The New Video Ecosystem

Conagra-owned brand Birds Eye brings a new approach to online video, social shopping and first-party data.

As The Open Web Wobbles, Index Exchange Is Betting On Curated Deals

Index Marketplaces activates the curation capabilities of DSPs, DMPs and RMNs – and the demand for their PMP deals – across Index Exchange’s network of publishers.

an almost handshake

LUMA: 2024 Will Be Better For M&A (No, Seriously This Time)

Overall deal activity in the ad tech market was down 10% year over year in 2023, according to LUMA Partners. But 2024 may be looking up.