By Scott Braniff, Head of Investment, Digital and Print
In a world where artificial connection via technology has become a key component of life, consumers are increasingly seeking a sense of real connection and belonging. The rise of home working and solo living has enforced this need for companionship and has coincided with consumers turning to audio as a companion medium. The way in which listeners are tuning in and engaging with audio content as a broadcast and a precision medium is becoming more nuanced and complex.
As result, there is a growth opportunity for brands that are able to implement seamless and smart audio experiences across both linear and digital channels.
Audio can work for listeners in diverse ways across different platforms. Despite the audio landscape being complex, listeners are embracing it and are using a range of connected audio devices to consume it. The growth in audio touchpoints available enables brands to reach audiences in a range of contexts and environments at scale. Importantly for brands, these audiences are highly engaged, and the audio experience consistently triggers a positive emotional response. Relaxation and “keeping me company” are the top two reasons listeners consume digital audio.
However, streaming services, podcasts, and digital audio, while mainstream for our listener, remain fragmented from a planning and buying perspective, creating siloes that are inefficient for media planning.
As a developing space, digital audio is experiencing various speeds of development across the market, meaning consistent targeting approaches and access to listener data are uneven in their availability and application. As users have moved from listening via web players, where cookies could be deployed, to app-based players and smart speakers, addressability has also dropped.
To counter this fragmentation and complexity, brands need to try and boost addressability. This could be through the creation of additional contextual audiences across supply partners, testing of delivery across supply where non-cookie-based targeting will scale -YouTube and Amazon- or testing of new tech for keyword targeting across podcasting and AI-read articles.
The pace of change in digital audio is exciting for everyone, and it has stepped up in terms of measurement and effectiveness. Currently, measurement exists in the siloes of the major players, with little 3rd party verification, so there is an opportunity for brands to evolve how they measure the impact of digital audio more broadly.
Audio has become an important antidote and companion in a challenging world.
Audio is everywhere. YouTube, Amazon, premium publisher podcasts and diverse audio content are areas of new supply. More quality and diversified supply means more ways for brands to have a meaningful impact in audio. Cancer Research and Tesco are examples of brands that leverage data across this supply and make addressable creative an essential part of their digital audio activity.
Addressability in siloes is not addressability, and it risks an inconsistent brand experience. Navigating this complexity and having a single view of the market means brands can achieve more with their budgets. A holistic view of inventory, audience, context and a single creative delivery mechanism means brands can design once and distribute at scale.
The voice engagement capabilities of smart speakers – which are now in 52% of homes – also have a key part to play in helping brands identify and measure growth. Interactive audio ads, where a listener is prompted to engage with their smart speaker, now give brands a measurable outcome for campaigns.
This can be done by ensuring that message and tone is specific to each environment.
Then you can create campaigns that people can experience with other listeners, but also at a one-to-one level.
Map out the data signals to inform how, when and what type of message you deliver to your audience.
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