Retail Media Networks, Part 1: What Are They?
Peter Moustakerski
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In this 4-part series, I take a look at the origins and definition of retail media networks (or RMNs), examine the reasons for the rising interest and investment in RMNs, assess where different retailers stand in their evolutionary journey of launching and monetizing their RMN, and offer my point of view on what needs to happen in the retail media space in order for RMNs to live up to and deliver on their widely publicized potential.
Retail media is a hot. Retailers large and small have launched their own retail media networks, looking to build new, sizeable, and highly profitable media revenue streams by taking advantage of their large audiences of loyal shoppers and the vast amounts of purchase data they collect from these shoppers.
Let’s start with an important definition. What is “retail media”? Here’s my version:
Retail Media Definition: Marketing tools, both advertising and promotional, a retailer offers that either:
Over the past 2-3 years, many major retailers have launched retail media offerings, in some cases organizing and marketing them as separate entities from their core retail business. These include the largest players, such as Walmart, Target, Kroger, Best Buy and The Home Depot, but also top drugstore chains Walgreens and CVS, supermarket chains Albertsons and Ahold, and even dollar chains like Dollar General and regional grocers like Wakefern, Hy-Vee and Southeastern Grocers (SEG). And let’s not forget the retailer, who is probably singlehandedly responsible for the current excitement surrounding RMNs: Amazon.
The observations and analysis throughout this 4-part series apply to any retail class of trade, but I will focus my attention on retailers that sell consumer packaged goods (CPG) and represent a significant proportion of annual CPG sales. They are generally referred to as fast-moving consumer goods (or FMCG) retailers and include the following five classes of trade:
Retail holds the promise of becoming the next true “mass medium” and attracting a meaningful share of the massive brand budgets that today mostly go to TV, radio, print and online digital media.
There are several reasons to focus on FMCG retailers when analyzing RMNs:
The first step to understanding RMNs and their potential – and the focus of Part 1 of this 4-part series – is to have a clear understanding of the advertising vehicles and marketing tactics that today comprise the arsenal of retail media. They can be grouped in three categories:
Traditional Analog Media
These retail media tactics have been around for decades, and even centuries. Think of all the physical advertising messages and promotional activities that you encounter inside and around a brick-and-mortar store when you go shopping. This is not an exhaustive list, but here are the most common ones:
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Onsite Digital Media
With the advent of the internet, online advertising, e-commerce, and mobile technology, retailers gradually built a whole new set of owned digital media assets, through which they could now reach their shoppers electronically beyond the four walls of brick-and-mortar stores. With these new media properties, retailers joined other owners and operators of popular websites as “publishers” (i.e., media “real estate” owners) in the fast-growing world of digital and mobile media.
“Retail Media 1.0” – retailers attract millions of shoppers to their (digital) properties and monetize access to these premium audiences via onsite advertising.
Offsite Digital Media
Onsite – think of it as “digital media 1.0” – is publishers attracting valuable audiences to their digital properties and monetizing their proprietary access to these eyeballs. Offsite is “digital media 2.0,” whereby publishers collect proprietary data about the preferences and actions of the audiences who come to their digital (and physical) venues and leverage these data to access and monetize the same (or similar) audiences in venues they do not own. Retailers’ rich and unique first-party data is what allows them to be increasingly powerful players in offsite and programmatic digital media. Retailers either work with established ad-tech players (e.g., data onboarders, DMPs, DSPs, SSPs) or internalize some of these components within their in-house media groups.
“Retail Media 2.0” – retailers collect proprietary first-party data from their loyal shoppers and use it to reach and monetize these same (or similar) audiences via offsite advertising on digital properties owned by other publishers.
In addition to selling the above tactics à la carte, many retailers, such as Kroger, Albertsons and SEG, are offering?Bundled Solutions, combining several tactics that together aim to solve a specific need for brand managers. The most common multi-tactic packaged programs (a.k.a. “integrated solutions”) include New Product Launches, Event Amplifications, Seasonal/Themed Events, and Brand Support/Loyalty Programs.
Finally, the overview of retail media offerings would not be complete without mentioning the efforts most retailers are making to monetize what is arguably their most prized strategic asset – their massive and proprietary shopper data. Most major retailers – Kroger, through its 84.51° unit, is probably the market leader in this space – are leveraging their household-level loyalty and POS transactions datasets to create compelling?Media Targeting and Measurement?tools that enable sophisticated pre-campaign planning and personalization and post-campaign results tracking and ad-spend optimization. These include offerings like custom shopper segments and look-alike audiences, as well as closed-loop measurement of media exposure, sales uplift, and ROAS, which retailers can sell separately from the media offerings with their RMN.
Generally, retailers rely on third-party vendors and partners to activate the majority of these media and marketing solutions, but for some of them, they are increasingly creating in-house media teams who “cut out the middlemen” and sell to brand advertisers directly. I will cover this trend of in-housing certain media capabilities in Part 3 of this series.
Traditionally, the store and its associated retail media have been considered “bottom-of-the-funnel” media (a.k.a. “shopper marketing” or “conversion media” or “promotional media”) – the last push marketers give their target consumers at the point of purchase to get them over the line and inspire or motivate them to make a purchase. Customarily, marketers have earmarked just a small portion of their marketing budgets to shopper marketing.
The broad menu of advertising and promotional tools retailers offer today and the rise of digital media vehicles powered by their rich shopper data allow them to play a much bigger role than before in the media and marketing strategies funded by their CPG suppliers. Thanks to the broad audiences retail media can now reach via both onsite and offsite channels, retailers are increasingly contending for “top-of-the-funnel” media (a.k.a. “national” or “brand”) dollars, which comprise the vast majority of CPG marketing budgets. Marketers spend their national dollars to build brand equity, awareness, interest, and loyalty among their target consumers, and they have traditionally been allocated largely to mass media channels, such as broadcast, print, digital, and outdoor.
I’ll cover the reasons behind retail media’s rising popularity in Part 2, but chief among them is the promise of retail becoming a true “mass medium” and attracting a meaningful share of the large brand budgets that today mostly go to TV, radio, print and online digital media.
But will that promise ever be fulfilled? I’ll offer my thoughts on what needs to happen for retail media to live up to its potential in Part 4 of this series.
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5 个月Peter, thanks for sharing!
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1 年Bring it on??
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3 年Looking forward to Part 2!