The rise of ad-supported video on demand (AVOD) services has been a quiet development amid numerous new consumer behaviors spurred or accelerated by the coronavirus pandemic. Yet the proportion of consumers using an AVOD service is now noteworthy, having increased from 34% in February 2020 to 58% in February 2021, according to Hub research emailed to Marketing Dive.
As pandemic-era behaviors calcify, AVOD looks poised to become an important marketing lane, especially as other trends — like consumer fatigue over paying for multiple subscription video services (SVODs) and a tightening data privacy landscape — affect digital channels.
“If the consumers are migrating towards VOD, whether it’s SVOD, or AVOD, [marketers] are going to have to follow up in that way,” said Jim Spaeth, co-founder of marketing analytics firm Sequent Partners.
The maturation of AVOD means further fragmentation of digital marketing channels, but also potentially new opportunities to engage viewers for marketers who understand how the use case differs from subscription video services.
“We’ve been seeing an escalating trend of creative being used for both traditional TV and all of these new end destinations, but also an explosion of content being created for these sort of bespoke consumer moments, with a substantial increase in ads going to AVOD, streaming, CTV and OTT,” said Melinda McLaughlin, CMO at ad asset management firm Extreme Reach.
Targeting and measurement
As consumers find a convenient entertainment solution in AVODs, marketers are following them to the channel and finding plenty of inventory, as AVODs operated by media companies (ViacomCBS’ Pluto TV, the free version of NBCUniversal’s Peacock) and original equipment manufacturers (LG’s Xumo, Samsung TV Plus) look to build out their ad businesses. Still, at this point, the inventory might exceed demand — one of the reasons for an ad experience where consumers see the same ad repeated. This is likely to change as marketers further embrace the channel and better understand how it works.
“Advertisers haven’t completely jumped in to all of this CTV/OTT yet because of the measurement issue: they haven’t really been able to understand the incremental reach from linear, or from premium video,” said Jane Clarke, CEO at the Coalition for Innovative Media Measurement (CIMM).
Still, AVOD offers the promise of digital targeting and measurement in a TV-like video environment without the use of third-party cookies or Apple’s Identifier for Advertisers (IDFA), which will soon be restricted or deprecated altogether. While marketers determine how these changes will affect their strategies on Google, Facebook and other digital platforms, AVOD could be a place to reallocate spend thanks to its targeting capabilities.