Aggressive News Demonetization Is Harming the News Industry When We Need It Most

  • News
  • April 30, 2020

Aggressive News Demonetization is Harming the News Industry When We Need Them Most

Throughout modern history, in times of immense uncertainty, pain and fear, news media has always served as a source of comfort, triumph and resiliency. We’ve been able to depend on them to deliver information that somehow made the unimaginable digestible and the complex simple; to be a source of truth when we weren’t sure which way was up or down.

Over the last decade, algorithmically driven social platforms have led to a mass exodus of advertising revenue from the pages of many online and print publications. And, as people continue to use social platforms as virtual newsrooms, and advertising investment follows them, it’s severely impacting access to quality journalism. The migration of consumers to digital has caused many news outlets, especially local ones, to fold up shop, merge with other publications, or severely reduce their reporting staff.

Now, for fear of appearing adjacent to grim news related to COVID-19, advertisers are using avoidance technology to ensure that their brands do not show up next to any news related to the virus. But, since most news today is about the pandemic, this only compounds the problem for news.

The Problem with Avoidance Technology

Aggressive use of avoidance technology has taken much of the blame for news demonetization. This technology ensures that, when ads are bought programmatically, there are parameters in place to safeguard brand safety because adjacency to controversial news is an emotionally charged issue and marketers, understandably, want to protect their brands. But, since the majority of stories for credible publications are now focusing on the pandemic, this has led to decreased revenue for publishers at a time we need them most.

Semantic avoidance technology is not the enemy, though. These technologies can actually make it easier for advertisers to support news by enabling each marketer to identify their own sense of brand suitability. The issue is how this technology is being used.

There are simple ways to advertise in news without compromising brand safety, but to avoid hard news, or even bad news, flies in the face of the facts.

What Readers Want

The reality is that, in these unfamiliar times, news consumption goes up. The Guardian claims their digital traffic has increased over 50% compared to this time last year. They have also had nine of their busiest 12 days of all time in the past two months and video views are up 60%. ComScore data reinforces this by showing consumption grows as governments introduce new measures to fight the coronavirus.

Recent IAS research suggests that most people do not think negatively of brands for advertising in a “hard” news space provided the creative messaging is appropriate. Additionally, Newsworks’ research shows the average time a person spends looking at an ad, called dwell time, is 1.4 times higher in a hard news environment. And that same research shows there is 50% higher engagement rate on premium editorial sites than during free browsing.

Beyond the increased audience rationale, credible media outlets are inherently safer for brands. News publishers with journalists plugged into their local communities, who fact check and use technology to manage quality and safety, offer a brand safe, high viewability, low ad fraud advertising environment.

Reconsider News Blocking

Outside of articles focused solely on death, death tolls, miracle cures and virus-related disinformation, there may only be minimal risk associated with advertising in today’s news environments. Most marketers agree, but sensitivities will always exist.

Marketers should reconsider blocking news. Your agency can help determine your appetite for news scale. If hard news is a worry, there are viable alternatives; however, news may be fine, just with a light level of support for “hard” news. Also, evaluate the large and loyal audiences drawn by sections like entertainment, food and sport.

If you are using an avoidance strategy, consider how it is being used; take into account the keywords or categories you are excluding and how this may influence the campaign and disadvantage high quality, legitimate publishers.

Reversing the Flow of Revenue

In the longer term, marketers will only re-invest in news if they have complete confidence in the safety and effectiveness of news. This could be the opportunity that publishers need to put their competitive differences aside and conduct large scale, across the board, empirical research that proves advertising impressions served in a news environment are more effective and give the marketers and their agencies more sophisticated planning tools.

Ultimately, though, in the same way companies consider sustainability and social responsibility in their development of goods and services, so too must they consider the impact of their investments in the advertising supply chain. The movement of their dollars from print to digital has had enormous consequences for journalism.

We all agree that a strong news ecosystem benefits us all and serves as the very bedrock of democracy. This crisis has shown us that the marketing and media community are concerned about news. The industry should use that awareness and build on it. Now is the time for us to rethink the avoidance of advertising in the news.

There is a lot riding on this.

John Montgomery is the Executive Vice President of Global Brand Safety for GroupM.

As written for Adweek.