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NIELSEN ANNUAL MARKETING REPORT

THE AGE OF DISSONANCE


MARKETERS’ TRUST IN DIGITAL
DRIVES SPEND DESPITE CHALLENGES

Copyright © 2020 The Nielsen Company (US), LLC. Confidential and proprietary. Do not distribute.
WELCOME TO NIELSEN’S
ANNUAL MARKETING REPORT
SECOND EDITION 2019-2020
Marketing is undergoing a transformation. For the first time, many of you
committed to spending more of your ad dollars in digital media. Digital now
captures more than half of all advertising spending in the U.S.1

But how do marketers perceive the effectiveness of all the new channels at
their disposal? Are those insights driven by measurement data they can trust?
How does perception versus reality ultimately influence budget decisions?

We surveyed over 350 marketers around the globe to get answers and found
that your enthusiasm for digital was tempered by severe data quality issues
and measurement challenges. Digital has made the customer journey more
complex. With new metrics, platforms and tools, measuring that journey is
even more difficult.

While digital channels continue to gain ground, the ambivalence isn’t gone.
Many of you feel you don’t have the right tools to measure and compare the
ROI of your ad campaigns across all the channels you use.

Investments in media are sometimes driven by a sense of effectiveness that


isn’t entirely grounded in reality, leading to wasted spend and huge missed
opportunities. To maintain a seat at the table, you need to prove how your
marketing strategy improves the top and bottom line.

The detailed findings in this report offer a powerful view into the current state
of the industry. We hope they’ll help you understand the dynamics at play and
identify promising areas of development for you and your media partners.

For us at Nielsen, these findings are a stark reminder that the measurement
industry—while evolving in leaps and bounds—still has a lot of work ahead to
help you unlock the full potential of your marketing campaigns.

1
2018 Nielsen CMO Report

Copyright © 2020 The Nielsen Company (US), LLC. Confidential and proprietary. Do not distribute. 2
CONTENTS
Perception, confidence and spending decisions ............... 4

Findings summary .............................................................. 5

1.
1 Digital media budgets
follow perception, not reality ..................................... 6

2.
2 Brands shrug off data quality issues ....................... 11

3.
3 Digital will break down
advertising and promotion silos .............................. 13

4.
4 Obstacles hinder OTT advertising ............................ 15

5.
5 Marketers favor new customers over old ............... 17

Recommendations for marketers................................... 19

Next steps........................................................................... 20

About this report............................................................... 20

Copyright © 2020 The Nielsen Company (US), LLC. Confidential and proprietary. Do not distribute. 3
DIGITAL PERCEPTION,
CONFIDENCE AND SPENDING
Digital has turned the business of marketing on its head. We’re long past the
time when a consumer purchase decision could be traced back to a single
point of contact: a mailed-in coupon, in-store discount, or even TV campaign.

Knowing which channels will reach consumers along an increasingly


fragmented purchase path—and measuring their performance—make it
difficult to create the marketing mix that works best. But these aren’t the only
challenges facing marketers today.

In this year’s edition of the Nielsen Marketing Report2, we studied the


psychology of the modern marketer. We asked how they perceive the
effectiveness of all of those channels, even when ROI measurement isn’t very
clear, and whether this new multi-channel environment is changing how they
see their role as marketers.

Our research shows that marketers today are holding digital channels to a
different standard than traditional channels. The novelty factor is strong, and
a digital channel that’s perceived to be effective invites more spending even
when that effectiveness cannot be readily verified. Traditional channels don’t
have that luxury.

We hope you’ll enjoy this report and put in practice some of its recommendations!

2
Nielsen Annual Marketing Report, second edition 2019-2020 is based on a comprehensive survey conducted between
January-March 2019 and includes responses from marketers at more than 350 brands and agencies.

Copyright © 2020 The Nielsen Company (US), LLC. Confidential and proprietary. Do not distribute. 4
FINDINGS SUMMARY
1 DIGITAL MEDIA BUDGETS FOLLOW PERCEPTION,
NOT REALITY
Novelty plays a role in marketers’ confidence, and a digital channel that’s
perceived to be effective invites more spending even when that effectiveness
cannot be readily verified. Measurement and a channel’s perceived
effectiveness are aligned, but not always. Newer channels tend to get the
benefit of the doubt.

2 BRANDS SHRUG OFF DATA QUALITY ISSUES


Despite the negative outcomes of using poor quality data, data quality is a
top priority for only a quarter of marketers, well behind targeting, ad creative
and reach. Brands are often less concerned than their agency about how
data quality might affect the success of their campaigns.

3 DIGITAL WILL BREAK DOWN ADVERTISING AND


PROMOTION SILOS
Marketers place a much higher priority on advertising than they do on
promotions, with paid media often favored by agencies and earned media by
brands. But digital will disrupt conventional silos, rewiring promotions and
creating new opportunities.

4 OBSTACLES HINDER OTT ADVERTISING


One of the most promising new channels for advertising is over-the-top (OTT)
TV, but its development is currently hampered by a variety of issues that will
need to be addressed to fulfill its potential.

5 MARKETERS FAVOR NEW CUSTOMERS OVER OLD


Despite the value of existing customers, marketers prioritize acquiring new
customers and increasing brand awareness. Retaining customers is a distant
third, while preventing churn is least important.

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FINDING #1

DIGITAL MEDIA BUDGETS


FOLLOW PERCEPTION,
NOT REALITY
NEWER CHANNELS GET BENEFIT OF THE DOUBT,
DESPITE LACK OF CONFIDENCE IN ROI
Our analysis found that novelty plays a huge role in marketers’ confidence,
and newer channels tend to get the benefit of the doubt—even when
measurement and a channel’s perceived effectiveness aren’t necessarily
aligned. Moreover, a digital channel that’s perceived to be effective invites
more spending even when that effectiveness cannot be readily verified—a
scary proposition when millions of dollars could be at stake.

As Figure 1.1 shows, we asked respondents to rate what they perceive to be


the effectiveness of paid digital media channels for their business.3

FIG 1.1 MOST EFFECTIVE PAID DIGITAL MEDIA CHANNELS


100%

80%

60%

40%

20%

0% Search Video Social Email Display Native OTT / Streaming Podcasts


(online / Media (online / Advertising Connected- Audio
mobile) mobile) TV

3
We combine mobile and online/programmatic for both display and video ads to focus our analysis on the format of the ad rather than
the device (computer, tablet or smartphone).

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As was the case in the 2018 report, paid search and social media are at the
top of the list, and they’re joined this year by the video category. For all
the other channels, less than half of all respondents consider them effective.
This isn’t surprising for digital channels where advertising is a relatively new
development (such as podcasts, streaming audio or native advertising). OTT
falls into that group as well, with virtually no improvement over last year
(from 40% in 2018 to 41% this year).

Figure 1.2 shows that agencies are slightly more confident than their clients
in the effectiveness of digital channels across the board, but for the most
part they rate them in the same order.

FIG 1.2 MOST EFFECTIVE PAID DIGITAL MEDIA CHANNELS


FOR BRANDS AND AGENCIES
100%

Brands Agencies
80%

60%

40%

20%

0% Search Video Social Email Display Native OTT / Streaming Podcasts


(online / Media (online / Advertising Connected- Audio
mobile) mobile) TV

Copyright © 2020 The Nielsen Company (US), LLC. Confidential and proprietary. Do not distribute. 7
Yet the perceived effectiveness of certain channels isn’t necessarily tied to
marketers’ confidence in their ability to measure ROI, as shown in figure 1.3.

Among digital channels, email comes out as the digital channel that
marketers have the most confidence in (with 67% of respondents being very
confident that they know how to measure its ROI), followed by search (63%)
and display (53%). Those results make sense, considering that those are the
digital channels that have been around the longest.

FIG 1.3 CONFIDENCE IN ROI MEASUREMENT


100% FOR DIGITAL CHANNELS
80%

60%

40%

20%

0% Email Search Display Video Social Native OTT / Streaming Podcasts


(online / (online / Media Advertising Connected- Audio
mobile) mobile) TV

Copyright © 2020 The Nielsen Company (US), LLC. Confidential and proprietary. Do not distribute. 8
Yet social media and video aren’t faring as well as they did on the
effectiveness scale: marketers evidently have a lot of faith in these
relatively new digital channels and tend to call them effective without
being absolutely confident in their ability to measure ROI.

In fact, when we analyzed the correlation between a channel’s perceived


effectiveness and a marketer’s decision to invest more money into it over
the next 12 months, we found that they’re willing to continue to invest in
a digital channel even if that channel’s performance is lackluster.

Figure 1.4 shows that analysis for digital media. The size of each bubble is
proportional to the number of respondents in that particular group.

FIG 1.4 FUTURE BUDGETS FOR DIGITAL CHANNELS AS A


FUNCTION OF MEDIA EFFECTIVENESS

50%+
HOW DO YOU EXPECT YOUR BUDGET TO CHANGE
FOR THIS MEDIA OVER THE 12 MONTHS?

0%-49%

No Change

0%-49%

Bubble size:
50%+ number of respondents
in that group. The data
covers all digital
media channels.
0
Not at all Not so Somewhat Very Extremely
Effective Effective Effective Effective Effective

IS THIS MEDIA EFFECTIVE FOR YOUR BUSINESS?

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The story is very different for traditional media. Figure 1.5 shows the exact
same analysis, but this time for traditional media such as linear TV, radio
or print. Those channels have been around for much longer, and their
effectiveness is not a guarantee that budgets will increase. Consciously
or not, marketers seem to hold traditional channels to a higher standard.

FIG 1.5 FUTURE BUDGETS FOR TRADITIONAL CHANNELS AS


A FUNCTION OF MEDIA EFFECTIVENESS

50%+
HOW DO YOU EXPECT YOUR BUDGET TO CHANGE
FOR THIS MEDIA OVER THE 12 MONTHS?

0%-49%

No Change

0%-49%

Bubble size:
50%+ number of respondents
in that group. The data
covers all traditional
media channels.
0
Not at all Not so Somewhat Very Extremely
Effective Effective Effective Effective Effective

IS THIS MEDIA EFFECTIVE FOR YOUR BUSINESS?

MARKETER’S TAKEAWAY
• Gut feel isn’t good enough anymore. Acknowledge that your media
decisions today are to some extent driven by perceptions rather than
hard data, and seek out measurement solutions to confirm that your
decisions are well-founded.

• While it can be hard to detect which of your marketing activities are


changing consumer behavior, relying on assumptions isn’t the answer.
Partner with industry experts to climb the learning curve and feel
confident that your investments are paying off.

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FINDING #2

BRANDS SHRUG OFF


DATA QUALITY ISSUES
DATA QUALITY IS ALARMINGLY LOW PRIORITY
Running an effective advertising campaign starts with setting the right
objectives and having a good idea of how to use all the media channels
at one’s disposal. But once the strategy is in place, what are modern
marketers focusing on?

The top priorities are targeting and reaching an audience with the best
creatives possible. Figure 2.1 shows that audience targeting is ranked
at the top by the most number of respondents (53%), followed by ad
creative (37%), audience reach (31%) and data quality (28%).

Brands value data quality even less so than agencies do. This could
become a problem in the long term. Companies typically have access to
much more data about their brands than their agencies do (first-party
customer data, partner data, multi-campaign performance data,
historical trends, etc.).

FIG 2 MARKETING CAMPAIGN PRIORITIES


100%
90%
80%
70%
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0% Audience Ad Audience Data Personalization AI/Machine Path-to- Publisher
Targeting Creative Reach Quality Learning Purchase Placement

Copyright © 2020 The Nielsen Company (US), LLC. Confidential and proprietary. Do not distribute. 11
The quality of that data is paramount. The fact that brands rank the
importance of data quality last is alarming. Without accurate data, marketers
must question the validity of any insight. This is a sign that the industry must
invest more heavily in educating front line marketers on the value of their
data assets.

MARKETER’S TAKEAWAY
• Don’t be misled about the importance of data quality. Focus on
improving data quality as much as you focus on reaching and targeting
your audience. None of that targeting will hit the mark if the data that
sustains it isn’t accurate.

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FINDING #3

DIGITAL WILL BREAK


DOWN ADVERTISING
AND PROMOTION SILOS
TRADE PROMOTIONS ARE RIPE FOR DISRUPTION
Marketers view all forms of media (paid, owned and earned) as much more
critical to their success than trade promotions. Figure 3 shows that
owned media, for instance, is very important to nearly 85% of respondents,
but promotion barely hits the 30% mark for brands.

That’s a surprising result, considering the fact that brands generally spend
more on trade promotions than they do on advertising4, but that’s also
a reminder that trade spending is often seen as a cost of doing business
outside of the purview of the marketing department.

FIG 3 RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF MEDIA CATEGORIES


FOR BRANDS AND AGENCIES
100%

80%
Brands
60%

Agencies
40%

20%

0%
Paid Owned Earned Trade
Media Media Media Promotion

4
Nielsen: Overcoming the barriers to superior trade promotion effectiveness

Copyright © 2020 The Nielsen Company (US), LLC. Confidential and proprietary. Do not distribute. 13
This might have been the case back when trade promotions were limited to
one-for-all coupon booklets in Sunday newspapers and marketers had no
way to pinpoint their audiences. In today’s world, treating promotions as a
cost of goods sold is a missed opportunity.

Trade promotions are ripe for disruption. Digital will break down the
silos between trade and above the line spend. Future technology such as
augmented reality/virtual reality will reduce trial and error and give greater
control in-store, enabling better planning and optimization.

MARKETER’S TAKEAWAY
• Don’t discount the value of promotions for your brand: Use them to
learn about your customers and prepare for tech-enable promotions.

• Make sure your agency doesn’t focus disproportionately on paid media


and engage them to contribute more to earned media.

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FINDING #4

OBSTACLES HAMPER
OTT ADOPTION
BRANDS SLOW TO PURSUE PROMISING NEW CHANNEL
OTT has the potential to be the ultimate advertising platform: a bridge
between traditional and digital media, it combines, on paper at least, the
reach and captive audiences of television with the addressability of paid
search and video. But there are many reasons why it hasn’t been more
widely adopted.

Figure 4.1 shows that concerns associated with measurement capabilities


give pause to the largest number of marketers (62%). Internal knowledge
gaps play a big role as well (58%). The most striking finding is that OTT
adoption as an advertising platform is hampered by a wide variety of
challenges—not just one or two.

But savvy marketers who want to be the first to this new channel before
the competition crowds in have opportunity. Marketing success boils down
to your ability to detect the complex web of factors that affect consumer
decisions. Partnering with vendors to fill coverage gaps is one way brands
can overcome these obstacles.

FIG 4.1 OBSTACLES TO OTT ADOPTION AS AN


ADVERTISING PLATFORM

38% 62%
OVERLAP WITH LINEAR TV MEDIA MEASUREMENT CAPABILITIES

40% 58%
ORGANIZATIONAL BUY-IN INTERNAL KNOWLEDGE GAPS

47% 53%
AUDIENCE TARGETING MEDIA PLANNING EFFICIENCY / TRANSPARENCY

47% 50%
ADVERTISING INVENTORY QUALITY ADVERTISING INVENTORY SCALE

Copyright © 2020 The Nielsen Company (US), LLC. Confidential and proprietary. Do not distribute. 15
There are a few key differences between brands and agencies: Brands see
measurement capabilities and targeting as taller obstacles to overcome
than agencies do, while agencies see more obstacles than brands do in
ad inventory scale and quality. Figure 4.2 illustrates those differences as
well as the many similarities between the two groups of respondents.

FIG 4.2 BRANDS AND AGENCIES VIEW OBSTACLES


SLIGHTLY DIFFERENTLY

OVERLAP WITH LINEAR TV MEDIA


39% 65% MEASUREMENT CAPABILITIES
37% 57%

ORGANIZATIONAL BUY-IN
40% 59% INTERNAL KNOWLEDGE GAPS
42% 57%

AUDIENCE TARGETING
50% 54% MEDIA PLANNING EFFICIENCY/
43% 52% TRANSPARENCY

ADVERTISING INVENTORY QUALITY


43% 46% ADVERTISING INVENTORY SCALE
55% 56%
Brands Agencies

MARKETER’S TAKEAWAY
• Get ready: industry partners are ramping up OTT measurement
solutions. Build your in-house skill set to prepare.

• Test small-scale campaigns, work on internal buy-in, and start forming


media and technology partnerships to hit the ground running.

Copyright © 2020 The Nielsen Company (US), LLC. Confidential and proprietary. Do not distribute. 16
FINDING #5

MARKETERS PRIORITIZE
NEW CUSTOMERS OVER OLD
CHURN IS LAST PRIORITY
Most advertisers accept the 80/20 rule as true: In general, approximately 80% of a
company’s revenue and profits come from approximately 20% of its customers.

Despite the value of existing customers, marketers prioritize acquiring new


customers and increasing brand awareness.

When we asked respondents to rank marketing objectives in order of


importance to their business, acquiring new customers comes out on top
for 41% of all respondents (Figure 5.1).

For 28% of respondents, increasing brand awareness is the top priority.


Customer retention came in a distant third at just 13%, while preventing
churn is least important.

This lack of focus on churn is a missed opportunity for marketers. Recent


Nielsen research found that global disloyalty is growing, with just 8% of
consumers considering themselves firm loyalists to products.

FIG 5.1 TOP MARKETING OBJECTIVES


What is your most important marketing objective?

8%
6%
5%
41% Acquire customers
Increase awareness
Retain customers
13% Encourage advocacy
Beat competitor
Reduce churn

28%

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These findings suggest the 80/20 rule may not be as golden as it used to be.
Since brands can no longer rely on the strength of their household names to
keep customers coming back for more, marketers need to adjust their marketing
tactics and investments to boost—or more likely recapture—retention.

Figure 5.2 takes into account not just the top priority for each respondent,
but also how they ranked every other answer. It shows the same overall
ranking as Figure 5.1, but also highlights the spread in their answers and
points out differences between brands and agencies.

Agencies seem to operate under more emphatic directives from their clients
(more spread in their answers), which isn’t surprising considering that they’re
more likely to focus on the narrow objectives of a particular campaign (e.g.,
‘develop a campaign specifically to retain customers’) while a brand might be
focused on the bigger picture and assign separate objectives to different agencies.

FIG 5.2. RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF MARKETING OBJECTIVES


Reduce churn Retain customers
Beat competitor Increase awareness
Encourage advocacy Acquire customers

ALL RESPONDENTS

AGENCIES

BRANDS

(least important) (average important) (most important)

MARKETER’S TAKEAWAY
• Segment high-value customers to guide media planning and
messaging strategies.

• Communicate your campaign objectives clearly to your agency.


Don’t assume they know what your priorities are.

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RECOMMENDATIONS
FOR MARKETERS
Follow these tactical recommendations to get the most value from your
investments and improve marketing effectiveness.

• Communicate your campaign objectives clearly to your agency.


Don’t assume they know what your priorities are.

• Make sure your agency doesn’t focus disproportionately on paid


media and engage them to contribute more to earned media.
Don’t discount the value of promotions for your brand: use them to
learn about your customers.

• Focus on improving data quality as much as you do on reaching and


targeting your audience. None of that targeting will hit the mark if the
data that sustains it isn’t accurate.

• Invest in paid search, video and social media but don’t neglect email,
linear TV and other channels that might be well-suited to your
marketing objectives.

• Get ready: industry partners are ramping up OTT measurement


solutions. Build your in-house skill set to prepare. Test small-scale
campaigns, work on internal buy-in, and start forming media and
technology partnerships to hit the ground running.

• Don’t base your marketing on guesswork. Measuring ROI is not easy:


partner with industry experts today to climb the learning curve and
feel more confident that your investments are paying off.

• Acknowledge that your media decisions today are to some extent


driven by perceptions rather than hard data, and seek out
measurement solutions to confirm that your decisions
are well-founded.

Copyright © 2020 The Nielsen Company (US), LLC. Confidential and proprietary. Do not distribute. 19
NEXT STEPS
Our research found that the perception of a channel’s effectiveness rather
than hard data sometimes drives media planning. Marketers (especially
agencies) are bullish on relatively new digital channels such as paid search,
video or social media, and they give these channels the benefit of the doubt
while they hold more established channels to a higher standard.

This is the natural course of progress, but some marketers are justifiably
getting nervous that the payoff might not measure up to the enthusiasm.

The good news is that the industry is hard at work to bring credible
measurement solutions to market, to not just make sense of these new
channels but also compare performance across all channels, old and new.
These solutions will level the playing field. We encourage you to contact your
data partners and get involved.

ABOUT THIS REPORT


We collected the data for this report from marketers contacted via newsletter
and through follow-up emails in 2019. The sample consists of 247 brand
executives and 116 agency executives, for a total of 363 respondents.

74% of survey respondents are based in the U.S., 5% in Canada and 3% in the
U.K. Nearly 12% work in the CPG industry. In terms of job positions, 47% are
responsible for the marketing function at their company and 18% operate
primarily in their company’s analytics / research department. Close to 80%
of participants are at the Director-level and above, 45% at the VP-level and
above, and 16% sit in the executive suite.

We wish to thank all respondents for their time and invaluable input.
This research would not be possible without their attention to detail and
thoughtful contributions. Individual survey data and participant lists are held
in strict confidence.

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ABOUT NIELSEN
Nielsen Holdings plc (NYSE: NLSN) is a global measurement and data
analytics company that provides the most complete and trusted view
available of consumers and markets worldwide. Our approach marries
proprietary Nielsen data with other data sources to help clients around
the world understand what’s happening now, what’s happening next,
and how to best act on this knowledge. For more than 90 years Nielsen
has provided data and analytics based on scientific rigor and innovation,
continually developing new ways to answer the most important questions
facing the media, advertising, retail and fast-moving consumer goods
industries. An S&P 500 company, Nielsen has operations in over 100
countries, covering more than 90% of the world’s population. For more
information, visit www.nielsen.com

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At Nielsen, data drives everything we do—even art. That’s why we used real data to create this image.
Copyright © 2020 The Nielsen Company (US), LLC. Confidential and proprietary. Do not distribute.

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