Spring is upon us and many of us are coming from and going to conferences this week. With so many interesting events to chose from it is exciting to see all the innovations and industry continuing to grow; analyst Jack Myers put digital advertising at $47.6 Billion last year (8% share of total marketing spend). This is no doubt evidenced by the plethora of technology companies captured in Terrence Kawaja’s ubiquitous Display Advertising Landscape diagram. Yet, the colorful framework belies the complex and fierce co-evolution that is happening behind-the-scenes of the so-called Ad Technology Stack.
Focused on hitting their milestones and/or quotas, investor-fueled and publicly-traded ventures alike will be putting on the hard-sell this trade show season. Panel and exhibit hall attendees certainly know the drill. Prospects will be dazzled, plans hatched and hopes dashed with the latest BSO (bright shiny object) hanging in the balance. On tap across booth chit-chat, panel pontification, martinis and outdoor activities will be information (not to mention outright disinformation). Perpetual conversion machines are the latest rage!
After years of consolidation and financial speed bumps the current industry, while seeing more revenue has definitely shrunk in terms of choices. It should not be a surprise that many battle-scarred survivors have benefitted from this and effective technology lock-in strategies. The result for some technology buyers has been worse service levels and slowed innovation. Nonetheless, gaps in the incumbent’s vision or their inability to consistently innovate have spawned mini-me’s up and down the stack; some trying to create their own lock-in. Unfortunately, all this has all been accepted as a cost of doing business.
To buyers of stack technologies: caveat emptor.
We Know What You’re Up To
Once the technology deal is done – it is going to be too late. Control immediately begins to shift from the technology buyer to the seller. Why does leverage shift? In economic terms, the buyer may have just unwittingly entered into a deal with a micro-monopolist. While this could be arguably true for many industries, for stack buyers this has more severe consequences. The kind that are often obfuscated yet pervasive and only become fully understood in time. It goes way beyond simple buyer’s remorse.
Ad Technology Stack business models that rely on technology lock-in do so because their investors and management have found that such switching inflexibility works for them. One need only look around to find many mainfestations across the stack, mainly in two areas:
- Performance analytics – ownership, access and control of reporting data
- Behavioral data – for both advertisers and publishers
Due to information asyncronicity, technology buyers often don’t realize fast enough that they are really signing up to purchase a series of products and services -all when they are at the greatest informational disadvantage. As a result, stack buyers can easily become captives of their own making. A little diligence and research upfront can mitigate the common self-inflicted damage caused by lock-in.
Switching Cost and Lock-in
In game theory, a product or service has a switching cost when the buyer purchases it over multiple periods of time and experiences time, cash or opportunity costs to switch from one seller to another. Switching costs can also occur when a buyer purchases additional complementary products or services making substitutes relatively more expensive; increased complexity is positively correlated with higher switching costs.
Altogether this effectively shifts the supply curve and creates the “lock-in” effect thus raising costs for the buyer. Clearly, switching items in the stack can have unintended negative consequences. More specifically, when a businesses contracts with a stack company there are usually multiple economic components to what is effectively the total cost of ownership (TCO):
- Implementation
- Cash
- Resource time
- Learning Curve:
- Application usage
- Report data warehousing
- Framework
- Contractual
- Network considerations
- Opportunity
All of the above combine to create an effective transaction or cost of switching. Although implementation is an obvious one-time cost (sometimes the largest component), other costs are more subtle and may actually increase over time. Practical scenarios might include:
- changing the ad server or site analytics technology
- managing research or targeting page tags (and data sharing)
Staying Balanced in the Melee
While the lock-in strategy has worked well for technology sellers in the past, many Ad Technology Stack ventures are about to get their legs kicked from under them. Enter tag (data) management companies like BrightTag, Tagman, Ensighten and Tealium.These companies are exclusively, if not mostly focused on managing proliferating page tags which are a major culprit behind stack lock-in. Having one technology locked-in that you’ve planned for is probably better than fifteen that just happened over time.
In addition to to making the business of digital marketing actually manageable from a logistical tag and data-sharing standpoint, the larger possibilities are tantalizing for stack buyers wrestling with IT/development queues. Simply put, tag management changes the balance of leverage away from the sellers towards their customers. Analytics expert, Eric Peterson called this out in a recent white paper saying:
“…as implementations become more involved and sophisticated the businesses willingness to switch vendors declines, even in situations where the relationship has been badly damaged by miss-set expectations, miscommunication, or outright lies”
Fear and Loathing
Yes, positive change is in the air for the industry. Widespread use of tag management systems make this an inevitability. However, reactions span the contninuum:
- Guarantee us business and we’ll integrate
- These companies are risky start-ups
- We have developed our own solution
- Interesting, but never heard of it
- No problem, we can work with anyone
- Great idea, we want to get to market first
No wonder that the reactions from the ad technology stack about universal tag management have been mixed – these tag management companies are upsetting the status quo and threatening lock-in!
Laggards are doing what they do: delaying and holding out. They are not happy about this. Some are attempting to make tying deals to lock-in even more. For this desperate and unimaginative bunch, it will be a slow and steady burn as the balance of power swings back; some may even get crushed. Others will respond by acquiring companies or being acquired. Still others will hit the wall or just become irrelevant.
More proactive technology sellers see this as an opportunity for competitive advantage and customer relationship-building. This breed of stack company is already knows how to adapt to the new reality of constantly being tested. They are fast failers and built to optimize, now using the opportunity to proactively to gain compeititve advantage.
Moving Forward
Technology stack buyers must balance the fear of being left-behind with a more reasoned approach. Sellers must be able to provide value today without depending on technology lock-in to be successful in the long-term; management discipline and technology agility are essential.
On the upside, one promising trend is that for the first time since the implosion of the Web 1.0 industry, business development (not strategic sales execs) executives are popping up across Ad Technology Stack start-ups. Having the organizational competency to vet and manage strategic alliances is a step in the right direction. Kudos.
Interoperability matters. Compatibility across the stack is a must-have and stack players that didn’t learn the lessson of Betamax (in hopes of another iPod) may be deluding themsleves. Such a fast-buck approach has the technology seller helping themselves at their customers long-term expense…almost becoming parastic. Investors and entrepreneurs take note: the new stack won’t tolerate old stack micro-monopolies: plan on more Schumpeterian creative destruction.
In the end, it is all about risk-sharing: stack buyers that don’t perform adequate diligence, risk being marginalized by lock-in. At the same time, stack sellers that cannot constantly adapt to the marketplace will become riskier bets.
Just make sure you’re not stuck with them.
[UPDATE: AdExchanger had an intro which didn’t quite capture the point. Whether you buy a la carte or bundled technologies doesn’t matter. What matters is how those technologies integrate (or don’t) with each other and how easily you can test them. Tag management/data sharing technologies (especially pure-plays) can mitigate the inflexibility of tag based lock-in.]
Great post Domenico,
It’s definitely a nice topic of conversation and frankly one that’s welcome by companies.
There’s also another angle to this: many advertisers actually welcome tag management systems. The reason is because just as tag management systems lower the cost of removing a vendor, they also lower the cost of adding new ones. As a result, the emphasis is now placed on ROI delivered, which is what it should be.
Ali Behnam, Tealium
Domenico,
Your analysis of what’s at stake here is eye opening. By some counts, there are more than 1,200 vendors in the online advertising ecosystem vying for access to media spend and needing access to site audiences to fulfill insertion orders. If you believe as we do that innovation and efficiency are critical to the growth of our industry, then the need for data interoperability that you’ve described should be taken as an urgent call.
An interesting follow-up topic for you to explore might be the benefits for buyers, sellers and middlemen when lock-in isn’t the only gambit in play.
Marc Kiven – Founder, BrightTag
Thanks all for the feedback.
Also, thanks to AdExchanger for the link to the post. The lead-in didn’t exactly get the point.
Whether one buys a la carte or a bundled solution is just a means to the end…that is packaging.
More nettlesome, are the unintended consequences of expedient deal terms which determine “the game” that tech buyers will have to live with for years to come.
Dominic
Terrific points Dominick.
One point I’d like to highlight, is that people forget about the TMS element is the benefit to innovation in the “industry” itself.
TMS is a solution that allows new technologies to go live in days on a larger advertiser – and not have to wait the standard months it currently takes. This means that new, innovative businesses survive and can bill for activity immediately the ink is dry – rather than run out of cash and fall by the way-side, whilst waiting for IT and Marketing to implement what may never happen.
Chris Brinkworth
CMO
TagMan Inc
Hi Dom,
I think it’s incredible that someone is finally calling attention to the pervasive nature of solutions that call for “code on the page” to function. As a result of this lock-in, many of the core systems our industry utilizes are labeled “commoditized,” because there is no need for customers to innovate when these technologies are owned and sold by Media entities. These systems have been the catalyst for many point solutions that “bolt on” to the core systems and the unfortunate outcome is that, in a data-centered landscape, these integrations and “bolt ons” typically create more challenges than they solve.
Integrating data streams across multiple technologies is no small feat. Customers should have the ability to exercise more control over their vendors and vendors should be up to the challenge to continually innovate and deliver value.
However, I think there’s one point missing here. When talking about lock-in, you specify performance analytics and behavioral data. Fundamentally, you are locked in because all your data resides in a particular system. Resources are needed to switch tags, but that’s not the main reason for lock-in. For example, if all your historical data and campaign data lives in Google’s DFP, it’s difficult to switch because there is no way to migrate that data. Tag management tools remember some of the request data, but there’s no way to store historical delivery information.
-Chris Hanburger, Vice President – Business Development, aiMatch
Hi Dom,
I think it’s incredible that someone is finally calling attention to the pervasive nature of solutions that call for “code on the page” to function. As a result of this lock-in, many of the core systems our industry utilizes are labeled “commoditized,” because there is no need for customers to innovate when these technologies are owned and sold by Media entities. These systems have been the catalyst for many point solutions that “bolt on” to the core systems and the unfortunate outcome is that, in a data-centered landscape, these integrations and “bolt ons” typically create more challenges than they solve.
Integrating data streams across multiple technologies is no small feat. Customers should have the ability to exercise more control over their vendors and vendors should be up to the challenge to continually innovate and deliver value.
However, I think there’s one point missing here. When talking about lock-in, you specify performance analytics and behavioral data. Fundamentally, you are locked in because all your data resides in a particular system. Resources are needed to switch tags, but that’s not the main reason for lock-in. For example, if all your historical data and campaign data lives in Google’s DFP, it’s difficult to switch because there is no way to migrate that data. Tag management tools remember some of the request data, but there’s no way to store historical delivery information.
-Chris Hanburger, Vice President – Business Development, aiMatch