Home Ad Exchange News Adobe Takes Aim At Google And Other Marketing Clouds And TV Is Its Main Weapon

Adobe Takes Aim At Google And Other Marketing Clouds And TV Is Its Main Weapon

SHARE:

Adobe has rolled out an Advertising Cloud, a merger between its Adobe Media Optimizer products and the acquisition of video DSP TubeMogul, the company revealed Tuesday at the Adobe Summit in Las Vegas.

Adobe Media Optimizer previously was housed under the Adobe Marketing Cloud and consisted mostly of search, dynamic creative and somewhat limited display capabilities.

It will operate now as a standalone cloud adjacent to the larger Marketing Cloud stack, which includes campaign execution, social and A/B testing, and Adobe’s Analytics Cloud, which consists of Adobe Audience Manager and Adobe Analytics.

All three clouds now operate under the Adobe Experience Cloud in a restructuring Adobe claims more accurately reflects its go-to-market strategy with clients across verticals: marketing, advertising and data and analytics.

Data spans Adobe’s ad, marketing and analytics products, so a client using Advertising Cloud can apply audience segments created in Analytics Cloud.

“We’ve integrated with Marketing Cloud [and Analytics Cloud] such that advertisers who use those platforms can very easily retarget any of their audience segments with a couple of clicks and with very high match rates,” Brett Wilson, former CEO of TubeMogul and new VP and GM of Adobe’s advertising business, told AdExchanger.

“The most important thing we can do is enable advertisers to find a much higher percentage of their audience than we could if our DSP and DMP weren’t integrated,” he added. 

That said, Adobe won’t be everything to all marketer clients, such as L’Oreal, which uses Salesforce’s Krux as its DMP, so Wilson said the Adobe Advertising Cloud will remain interoperable with other cloud stacks.

One possible motivation for Adobe segregating its media execution tools is to underscore one of its main differences from rival marketing clouds: DSP ownership.

“Before, they really weren’t that strong in display,” said Karsten Weide, the VP of the media and entertainment practice at research firm IDC. “They had search marketing, but display wasn’t their specialty. They [now] want [to be known as] a vendor of programmatic marketing solutions.”

Adobe also wants to plant its stake in the ground as Google continues to double down on products that straddle the lines between advertising and mar tech, including, for instance, its email and CRM-based Google Customer Match, Weide hypothesized.

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

Get our editors’ roundup delivered to your inbox every weekday.

“The two main companies we compete with now are Google and The Trade Desk,” Wilson acknowledged.

Although Wilson called Google a big partner to Adobe’s search and display side, TubeMogul had a long-standing beef with Google when it was an independent video DSP.

“With respect to data, think of Google as the Bermuda Triangle where your data goes in and just doesn’t come out,” Wilson said.

He believes eventually, large walled gardens will be forced to open as marketers like P&G (and the UK) lobby for greater accountability and better ad quality from platform partners. In the meantime, Adobe sees itself as a major independent ad tech alternative to platforms like Google and Facebook.

Adobe already has one leg up on competitors: sell-in with big broadcasters via its TV yield optimization tool, Primetime, and TubeMogul’s legacy in programmatic video and more recent foray into programmatic TV, a business which Wilson claims was on a $100 million run rate at the close of last quarter.

“We’ve believed for a long time that because most advertisers still spend 50% of their budgets or more on television, if you want to be the one ad platform that rules them all, you have to anchor around television,” Wilson said.

With TubeMogul, Adobe has a better chance of attracting much larger brand advertising clients, predicts Scott Denne, an analyst at 451 Research.

“Media Optimizer used to be an upsell to existing Adobe Analytics customers,” he noted. “The profile of a marketer that would turn to its website analytics vendor for a DSP or paid search platform is very different from the media buyer that puts TV at the center of its media plan.”

On one hand, it will be challenging for Adobe to serve both sets of customers with the same Advertising Cloud.

But TubeMogul had a characteristically better bidder than Media Optimizer, Denne said, and TubeMogul’s inroad to brand advertisers will provide opportunities to sell Audience Manager, the DMP, more broadly into brands.

Adobe “has traded a market with minimal growth prospects – paid search and display – for TV, a much larger addressable market that is in the earliest stages of shifting to software,” he added.

Must Read

Comic: Off-Platform Media

How RMNs Use MFA And Cheap Inventory To Game Attribution Rules

Retail media is built on its attribution quality, but real purchases can be gamed by programmatic metrics and create perverse incentives for RMNs to serve ads across low-quality inventory.

There’s A Lot Wrong With Google’s And Meta’s Non-Transparent ‘Refund’ Practices

Google and Meta are playing with fire. Their opaque refund practices have already exposed them to customer blowback – and could lead to class-action lawsuits by disgruntled advertisers.

Comic: The Great Online Privacy Battle

How US Intelligence Agencies Buy And Use Programmatic Data For Surveillance

Mike Yeagley, an independent contractor who has scouted and acquired commercial data and technology on behalf of intelligence agencies, is one of the earliest evangelists of using ad tech tracking information to identify and surveil government targets.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

Comic: The MFA Cafe

Adalytics Report Torches Ad Tech For Touting MFA Prevention While Scarfing MFA Supply

Practically every ad tech vendor has put out a press release in recent months full of bluster about cutting out made for advertising sites – and yet supply sources remain oversaturated with garbage inventory.

Cloud-Based Collaboration Is Ad Tech’s Post-Cookie Lifeline – But Will It Last?

Cross-cloud data collaboration technology is the best bet for a post-cookie solution. But it’s vulnerable to similar privacy concerns.

Topsort Raises $20 Million To Seize The Post-Cookie Market Opportunity This Year

Topsort raised $20 million, with plans to seize the 2024 opportunity for post-cookie ad tech.