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Disney may dump Comcast and hand Google a big win in video advertising

Mike Shields   

Disney may dump Comcast and hand Google a big win in video advertising
Advertising3 min read

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"Grey's Anatomy" star Ellen Pompeo.

  • Disney may dump Comcast's video ad tech for Google's.
  • Such a move could help Google further get its hooks into the TV ad business as it increasingly becomes digital in nature.
  • Disney also asked Hulu to pitch its own video ad products, but the streamer declined.

Disney is putting its video ad tech up for grabs, and may ditch Comcast for Google.

Disney is asking for pitches from Google and other ad tech companies to potentially take over its video advertising infrastructure and replace FreeWheel, the incumbent tech firm owned by Comcast, said people familiar with the matter.

Google has been looking to make inroads into the TV ad industry for roughly a decade. And it seems to have found an opening with providing software designed to make sure that as more people stream TV content via the internet, that the right ad gets to the right person at the right time.

The search giant has been quietly racking up some noteworthy partnerships on this front, including CBS for its direct-to-consumer All Access service, as Business Insider reported.

Still, Comcast's FreeWheel, which has long worked with the likes of Disney and Turner, has been seen as tough to unseat. First off, switching out such vital software is a cumbersome process.

Plus, many have long doubted that TV networks want to get in bed with Google, which is also viewed as a threat to their overall ad business.

But as the Wall Street Journal reported in 2014, TV networks have never been wild about Comcast - which owns NBCUniversal - having so much access to their viewership data.

And things are changing quickly in the media industry, with new once unthinkable alliances now on the table.

Disney is in the midst of trying to acquire a pile of Fox assets, and potentially the British satellite company Sky. Meanwhile, it's also preparing to launch multiple direct to consumer streaming services such as ESPN+ and a Netflix competitor.

Interestingly, even though Disney spent $1.58 billion to acquire the streaming technology company BAMTech last summer, that company doesn't appear to be in the mix to handle Disney's video ads. BAMTech's strength is in helping deliver video content over the web.

Comcast is still in the mix, as Disney is also seeking a pitch from FreeWheel to hold onto its contract. Among the other companies Disney has reached out to is Hulu, a joint venture between Disney, 21st Century Fox, Time Warner and Comcast - which Disney may soon control a majority stake in.

Hulu, which has built its own advertising technology to support it consumer streaming, is yet to outsource this tech to other market participants. It has declined to participate in the Disney tech pitch, said a person familiar with the matter.

It's also possible that Disney could elect to work with a smaller video ad tech startup, and avoid working with Google or Comcast.

Still, landing Disney, and theoretically powering the delivery of ads for networks like ABC and ESPN, would represent a solid win for Google.

Becoming a TV company's ad tech vendor wouldn't mean that Google would get its hands on that company's ad sales operations. At least not yet. Yet the more a company like Google could prove that it service, its ad algorithms and its data are both reliable and beneficial to a TV company as it navigates an increasingly digital world, the stronger its partnerships theoretically become.

That could open up the tech giant to other kinds of deals in the TV industry down the road.

Get the latest Google stock price here.

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