‘Programmatic stands for targeted’: Q&A with BuzzFeed’s research and insights vp

After years of eschewing banner ads, BuzzFeed reversed course this summer when it rolled out programmatic advertising across its owned and operated sites. We asked Edwin Wong, vp of research and insights at BuzzFeed, ahead of his panel at Advertising Week New York, about the pursuit of scale, state of branded content and more. Our conversation has been edited and condensed.

BuzzFeed just embraced banner ads. Why, given you have tons of research that shows they’re ineffective?
In the past year or two, we’ve seen that kind of advertising get a lot better. When we think about programmatic, it’s not a standalone product. It’s targeted. It helps an advertiser reach a consumer better. We’re learning along this journey to see how those two can work together.

You’ve done research that focused in part on trying to define branded content. Why did you start there?
When we were talking to advertisers about the concept of branded content, we weren’t sure there was a standard definition. There’s so much more to the concept of what good branded content is.

Branded content has gotten more sophisticated among publishers. What is BuzzFeed doing to stay ahead? 
The heart of what we’re building for advertisers is the heart of what we’re building for consumers on the editorial side. We’ve moved from the impression to the expression to action. The action is what’s translating for marketers. Being able to mine the data around this content is what’s going to keep us ahead.

You’ve also done research implying that marketers are using the wrong data and that stories should be targeted. What does that say about the pursuit of scale?
A lot of the foresight of our founders came from Jonah [Peretti] and Ze [Frank] saying, “We’re going to build a piece of content that scales across a bunch of different distribution channels.” Seventy-five percent of what happens for BuzzFeed actually happens on other channels. That sort of scale builds itself. We’re already telling marketers, you’ve got to stop defining people that way. The data we do use to target isn’t the most resonant. It’s the content.

https://digiday.com/?p=255763

More in Media

Publisher strategies: Condé Nast, Forbes, The Atlantic, The Guardian and The Independent on key revenue trends

Digiday recently spoke with executives at Condé Nast, Forbes, The Atlantic, The Guardian and The Independent about their current revenue strategies for our two-part series on how publishers are optimizing revenue streams. In this second installment, we highlight their thoughts on affiliate commerce, diversification of revenue streams and global business expansion.

How sending fewer emails and content previews improved The New Yorker’s newsletter engagement

The New Yorker is sending newsletters less frequently and giving paid subscribers early access to content in their inboxes in an effort to retain its cohort of 1.2 million paid subscribers and grow its audience beyond that.

The Rundown: How Amazon is wooing publishers to bolster its $50 billion ad business

Enhancements to Amazon Publisher Cloud and debut of Signal IQ represent the triopolist’s latest adland overture.