• Amid an explosion of investment in the channel, execs at Advertising Week discussed the complexities of tactics like serving ads in private hotel rooms.   

Excerpt from Marketing Dive

Amid an explosion of investment in the channel, execs at Advertising Week discussed the complexities of tactics like serving ads in private hotel rooms.

As other channels see spending dip with the economy in a rough patch, retail media continues to soar. A steady influx of investment has led pretty much every major player in the game to stand up some sort of ad network leveraging first-party shopper data, with the concept this year spreading to new industry verticals. GroupM estimates that retail media today accounts for 11% of total ad spend and 18% of digital advertising globally.

“Virtually every client we have, in retail and beyond, [is] looking at this,” said Jeremy Woodlee, a managing director at Accenture Song, the management consultancy’s marketing services arm, on an Advertising Week panel Wednesday.  

Peering past the positive numbers at the macro level, questions arise about how many companies can truly grab a piece of the retail media pie and sustain a business. Budget-strapped marketers only have so many dollars to spend and heavy weights, like Kroger, Amazon and Walmart, have operated their offerings for years, granting them mature technology and scale. Others have only recently jumped into the space and hope specialization and partnerships can help them stand out from the pack.

“The problem that we see touching a lot of companies is, you have to have an immediate interest in this,” said Woodlee of retail media. “It's not like you can sell the vision and have three years. You've got to generate immediate value as a company.” 

Woodlee was joined during the discussion by executives from Lowe’s and Marriott, which introduced their media networks last October and in May, respectively. In both cases, executives indicated that the strength and reputation of their brands — as well as the loyalty of their customer bases — could translate to advertiser interest in their budding media operations.  

“We've kind of played catch up in the sense of our toolkit and in our talent,” said John Storms, head of sales at Lowe’s One Roof Media Network, at the show. “We really feel like our differentiation here is: We're taking a page out of Lowe's. This is a 100-year-old company that is built on customer service.”

A representative from Marriott similarly aligned the hospitality chain’s fledgling media bets with its “luxury-focused” consumer-facing position. The idea is not to plaster ads everywhere but work with select brands to create a well-rounded experience for travelers who might be on the hunt for things to do or shop for on their trips. Marriott has the benefit of being the first in its sector to latch on to the media network craze, along with wielding data derived from the Bonvoy loyalty program that spans its portfolio. 

“We wanted to make sure that anything that we do is highly curated,” said Nicolette Harper, vice president of global marketing and media at Marriott International, on the panel. “A lot more curated than some of the traditional media networks, so we can kind of keep our brand and what we stand for intact, but also deliver on this bigger experience.”

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