NBCUniversal slammed Facebook for its data mishaps, but the company left out one major fact in its big presentation to advertisers
- NBCUniversal took aim at Facebook's recent data controversies during its upfront event in New York on Monday.
- Ironically, the media giant hardly mentioned its own recent attempts to make TV advertising work a lot more like digital media.
- Indeed, the company hardly discussed using data, and instead talked up the emotion-tugging power of TV shows like "This is Us," - which mocking Mark Zuckerberg's appearance before Congress.
NBCUniversal took some swing at Facebook on Monday, including its recent confrontations with Congress over the consumer data nightmare that is Cambridge Analytica.
But there was one thing that was glaringly missing from the media giants' mega 'upfront' presentation to advertisers at Radio City Music Hall in New York: the fact that NBCU has spent the past few years running head first toward the data-driven ad targeting that Facebook excels at.
Amazingly, the word 'data' was hardly uttered during the nearly 2.5 hour show, during which NBCU talked up the power of television while throwing shade at social media.
NBCU CEO Steve Burke was somewhat gentle: "If you look at the digital landscape, it's a time of unbelievable change," he said. "Digital companies are being accused of interfering with people's privacy...there's just a lot of change in the landscape.
Later, NBCUs sales chief Linda Yacarrino hit Facebook where it hurts, as she appeared in a pre-taped skit seemingly appearing before Congress weaved together with snippets of Senators grilling Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg during his recent testimony on Capital Hill (though she never actually mentioned Facebook).
Besides jabbing at Facebook's data mishaps, Yacarrino sold hard the power of TV to win hearts and minds, something that in her mind digital media can't do.
"Nothing brings people together like television,"Yacarrino said on stage following the bit. "I mean come on, no family has ever gathered around a news feed before. The fact is, nothing moves people and product like television."
"That last click never happens if you don't make that first impression," she said. "We're not in the likes business. We're in the results business."
NBC is suddenly singing a very different data song compared to recent years
All of NBCUs indirect criticism of Facebook's privacy problems and data mishaps were ironic, given how much in recent years the company - and nearly all of the big TV players - have looked to paint themselves as capable of delivering more targeted ads using all sorts of data sets, including people's credit card histories and recent in-store shopping habits.
- For instance, NBCU recently joined a TV ad targeting consortium called OpenAP, which includes Fox, Viacom and Turner.
- Last year, NBCU announced it was pushing further into 'programmatic advertising' and would start letting brands such as Target mingle their customer data with NBCU's to reach specific consumers with ad campaigns.
- Two years ago the company also launched its Audience Studio group, which is designed to help advertisers mix and match ad targeting data from a variety of sources.
- Also in 2016, NBCU talked up its ability to offer advertisers ad campaigns using the "richest data sources in the industry."
Of course, most of these moves preceded news that Facebook had inadvertently allowed third parties access to people's data, and their friends data, without their knowledge in some cases. The climate around consumer privacy has changed quickly.
The data NBCU uses for ads is pulled anonymously, the company says. And NBCU's capabilities to target individuals with precise, individualized ads lags far behind that of Facebook or Google.
But as recently as a few months ago the networks were looking to convince ad buyers that they were closing the ad tech gap with the big platforms.
Yet on Monday, the story was about old school power of television advertising.
"It's about reaching people, real people, real customers, delivered responsibly," said Yacarrino. "In an environment where their data is protected, and their experience is protected too....When given the choice of what to do with consumer data, here at NBCUniversal, we chose to do the right thing. That's what leadership is all about."