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WPP CEO 苏铭天爵士提醒谷歌:“请承担起责任!”

2017/3/13 

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在上周五英国伦敦举办的英国广告节(IPA's Festival of British Advertising)某论坛上, WPP集团首席执行官苏铭天爵士(左二)对谷歌英国董事总经理 Ronan Harris (右二)表示,广告主们认为他们投放在谷歌的广告得不到安全保障,希望谷歌作为平台能够“为内容负责。”

同时苏铭天爵士也引用了 WPP 第三大客户宝洁首席营销官 Marc Pritchard 在数周前的演讲内容,认为谷歌和 Facebook 在广告监测、品牌安全以及广告可见度方面都没有符合广告主的要求。而就在此前,泰晤士报调查发现有一部分品牌广告片与 YouTube 站点中恐怖主义视频以及网络仇恨同时出现。

Ronan Harris 回应承认谷歌确实没有“满足全方位的要求”,并表示:“我们将会史无前例地共同携手应对这种局面,共同探讨如何去改善它……我们致力于为每一位用户、媒体和广告主营造一个完整生态系统。假如我们降低质量门槛,或者降低对生态有利的标准,那么它将会分崩离析,我们也将对它失去信任。”

Sir Martin Sorrell, CEO of the world's largest advertising agency holding company, WPP, has called on Google to "step up and take responsibility" for the content posted to its platforms.

Speaking on a panel — joined by Google's UK managing director Ronan Harris and Channel 4 CEO David Abraham — at the IPA's Festival of British Advertising in London on Friday, Sorrell said the search giant had not done enough to assuage advertiser concerns about the safety of their brands on its platforms.

His comments followed a high-profile investigation by The Times newspaper, which found a number of big brand ads appearing next to terror-related videos on YouTube and hate sites funded by advertising, which was facilitated by Google's technology.

When the article was brought up, Harris responded by saying Google had been able to "allay [advertiser] concerns by and large" and explain the work it does to prevent these types of incidents from happening.

But Sorrell interjected.

"You haven't allayed their concerns. You can spin this, Ronan, or we can speak the truth," Sorrell said. "I have three major clients here in the UK who have contacted me recently, personally, and said brand safety is a massive issue and they don't agree with what you just said."

Sorrell then referenced a speech given by WPP's third biggest client — and the biggest ad spender in the world — P&G's marketing boss Marc Pritchard, who said Google and Facebook were not doing enough to meet advertiser demands around measurement, brand safety, and viewability (the measure of whether an online ad had the ability to be seen by a human).

Sorrell said brand safety is a "fundamental issue."

He added: "You have to take responsibility for this as a media company because you are not a passive, sitting there, digital engineer, tightening the digital pipes, with your digital spanner, and not responsible for the flow-through content … you are responsible and you have to step up and take responsibility. You have the resources, your margins are enormous, you have control of the algorithms, and you don't explain to people how those algorithms work."

Harris admitted that Google doesn't "get it right in every instance" and that "we are the first people to hold up our hands and say if we get it wrong, how we are going to make it better."

He added: "We are very focused on making sure we build an ecosystem that works for everyone — the user, the publisher, and the advertiser — and if we don't, if we somehow lower threshold of quality, or what we think is good for that ecosystem, it falls apart. We all lose trust in it."

Sorrell also used his position on the panel to have a poke at Facebook's efforts in this area. The social network has admitted on four occasions in recent months that it made measurement errors, affecting the metrics that marketers, publishers, and advertisers use to assess their efforts on the platform.

He said: "Facebook didn't get dinged from an advertising [spend] point of view. If you did this [Channel 4 CEO] David [Abraham], or if in our audience measurement we came up with three mistakes of that magnitude in six months, we would be out of business."

Whichever figures you look at, Google and Facebook account for the overwhelming majority of spend and growth of spend in the ad market. Sorrell said that imposes "a responsibility to change" — not just in the area of brand safety but also in opening up their data to third-parties. The platforms, on the other hand, argue the risk of personal data leakage is too great if they let third-parties have access to everything.

Sorrell said: "Privacy is used as a fig leaf not to do things. That doesn't mean we are saying, as an agency, that privacy is not important. We want to protect consumers against breaches of privacy [but] we want access to data to enable us to do things in a more targeted, more refined, more acceptable way. If walled gardens are not prepared to show their data, it's getting increasingly difficult."

In his defense, Harris said Google is committed to working with a number of external organizations — like comScore, Nielsen, and industry bodies like TAG and JICWEBS — to "make sure we set those standards and they can mark our homework."

原文来源:Business Insider



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