64% of agencies, publishers, brands are increasing programmatic spend or revenue: OpenX & ExchangeWire Research

Despite a hugely challenging 12 months in terms of both the ongoing coronavirus pandemic and the deprecation of third-party identifiers, programmatic investment and spend is growing at a rapid rate across the Japan and Asia-Pacific (JAPAC) region, with nearly two-thirds of firms increasing their programmatic activity from last year. This is according to a new research report, The State of Programmatic in JAPAC – 2021, unveiled by OpenX and ExchangeWire.

The report highlights that 30% of agencies, publishers and brands recorded higher programmatic revenue or spend compared to pre-Covid figures. 31% of publishers are generating over 40% of their revenue via programmatic. On the buy side, 21% are allocating over 40% of their spend to the channel.

The report follows last year’s assessment of the region – The State of Programmatic in JAPAC – 2020 – and examines once again Australia, India, Indonesia and Japan given their diverse economic climates and differing approaches to programmatic trading. Alongside each market’s response to Covid, various factors affecting programmatic trading are examined, including access to first-party data, the use of header bidding and the status of supply path optimisation (SPO). The report also highlights concerns around the deprecation of Apple’s Identifier for Advertisers (IDFA) and Google’s initial announcement that it would block third-party cookies on its Chrome platform next year. The search giant has recently pushed back its plans until late 2023.

Supplementing the quantitative findings, the report includes analysis from industry thought leaders at Publicis, Microsoft, Unilever, and Xaxis, providing further insight into emerging trends.

Andrew Tu, Managing Director, APAC, OpenX
Andrew Tu

According to Andrew Tu, Managing Director, APAC, OpenX: “The programmatic industry in JAPAC is displaying a remarkably strong recovery. We see newly-forged programmatic expertise across both buy and sell sides driven by rapid digital transformation. Agencies, publishers and brands are demonstrating greater confidence in managing their own programmatic activities. As a result, the ecosystem is directing more revenues and spend through the medium compared to other marketing streams.”

“Despite some fears around the impact of IDFA deprecation and the eventual removal of cookies in Chrome, a majority of brands are maintaining or increasing spend on the independent web and not towards the walled gardens. Instead, they are working together with their tech partners to navigate the nascent privacy-first environment,Andrew added.

Jonathan Mackenzie
Jonathan Mackenzie

“The results of this survey suggest that programmatic in general is reaching a new level of maturity in APAC.  While there is still discrepancy around the region, general knowledge and understanding has certainly advanced in all markets as illustrated by the growth of SPO, concerns around ad fraud and increase in prioritisation of first-party data in most markets,” commented Jonathan Mackenzie, Managing Director, Publicis Media Precision APAC, “The irony is that just as markets get to grips with the programmatic ecosystem of today, changes like IDFA deprecation are re-defining the programmatic ecosystem of tomorrow.  This makes for a very interesting 12 months ahead.”

Highlights from the report include:

This is prevalent in the Indian market, where 32% are now using 1-4 partners, compared to just 7% last year, and 13% are using 15 or more partners, which has more than halved from the 29% recorded in 2020.

India displayed the most concern, with 87% disclosing some level of concern, followed by Indonesia (71%) and Australia (62%). In Japan, only 49% are concerned, while half (50%) are not perturbed about the upcoming changes.

In India, only a handful (2.5%) are funneling spend away from independent ad tech towards the walled gardens.

Concerns around transparency are high in the Indian market, with 100% of respondents showing some concern. This is followed by Australia (93%) and Indonesia (88%). By contrast, only 20% in Japan are very concerned and actively looking for solutions, while 29% are not concerned at all by fraud- and quality-related issues.

 

Related Posts