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WHAT IS ECONOMETRICS?
Econometric Modelling takes its name from its original purposeto understand economies. It has other applications too, one of which is the impact of marketing on sales.
With its mathematical models, statistics and complex measurements, Econometrics is often seen as the dry end of marketing, the remit of statistical numbercrunchers; yet its capability for proving the impact of marketing activity on sales is invaluable. Econometrics is about data: vast amounts of good quality data, collected over long periods of time. Out of this mass of data, econometrics identifies and quantifies a brands different drivers. Some of these are controllable, such as pricing structures or marketing activities. Some are not controllable; the weather, or competitor activity, for instance. Econometrics shows how these different drivers affect performancein this case, short-medium term sales. One key advantage is that Econometrics can separate out the brand drivers, quantify their individual effects and arbitrate between them. Critically, it can refine itself over time to make more accurate predictions. Imagine a row of dials, each one representing a brands driving forces. Econometric Modelling enables you to turn the dials in any combination and predict with a high degree of accuracy how these changes would affect performance.
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Online
7%
3% 3%
6%
56%
TV
23%
60%
TV
The media split in our sample is broadly representative of actual spend across the FMCG sector as a whole, as reported in Nielsen data.
*Sample Set: European FMCG Results Vault : 455 studies as at 18th May 2012 **Sample Set: FMCG advertisers who spend 1m+ on advertising. Online is display only April 2012
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Sales variation
Sales
Model
Time
In aggregate, 88% of sales variation was explained on average by each model. Heres what that looks like for one of the models included.
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ONLINE DELIVERS
Revenue gained through marketing activity
RROI
The ROI of individual media for shortmedium term FMCG sales The overall conclusion of our study is that online is the second most efficient medium for driving short medium term sales in the FMCG sector, as recorded in actual sales data, behind cinema1. Online returns 1.43 in actual recorded sales value for every 1 invested. We have taken into account the average production costs by media2. Despite this, overall, only 3% of FMCG ad budgets are spent online.
How do we calculate the revenue return on investment (RROI)? The Econometric Model enables us to split out revenue gained directly through marketing activity (as opposed to overall revenue); we can divide that by the amount spent on the marketing activity to provide a clear picture of the revenue gained through marketing activity or the RROI.
Average ROI
Cinema
2.64
Online
1.43
Outdoor
1.40
1.39
Radio
1.32
1.26
TV
% media mix
8%
6%
9%
11%
8%
59%
Based on meta-analysis of econometric studies by BrandScience 54 cases who are FMCG and use online, 18th May 2012
1 2
European FMCG Results Vault: 54 Studies as of 18th May 2012 WARC average media spend figures
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ONLINE MAKES
OTHER MEDIA WORK HARDER
When we compare the difference in RROI performance between studies that have an online element and those that do not, the results are clearadding online to the media mix has a positive impact on the campaign RROI, regardless of what media is usedso it is acting as a good support media. Online not only delivers excellent RROI efficiency itself, but it makes other media spend work harder.
+70%
+16%
+51%
+4%
1.54
1.26
1.40
1.34
1.39
RROI (Euros)
0.74
TV
Outdoor
Radio
Cinema
Based on meta-analysis of FMCG econometric studies by BrandScience; 365 cases no online, 54 cases with online; conducted 18th May, 2012.
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WANT AN IMPRESSION
Continuing to explore onlines role within the media mix, we assessed whether varying the proportion of online spend within a campaign had a direct influence on the online ad retention rate, and therefore the overall campaign performance. Retention is a measure of the effect of advertising over time. When a person is exposed to an advert, there is a delayed response.
But people will also forget, so the response decays at a constant rate into the future. A high carryover rate implies people will continue to act on the advert a long time after seeing it, while a low carryover rate implies a less successful campaign, which people forget more quickly and subsequently act upon less.
Campaign Activity
The illustration above shows how we measure the life of a campaign. The black area represents campaign activity, e.g. TVRs. The two grayed areas then represent how ad retention is affected following the campaign. The peak of the chart represents one week after the campaign, the point of maximum impact. The slope of the curve then shows the rate at which that impact reduces.
A more successful campaign will have a higher peak and a less steep curve, represented by the red area in the chart. A less successful campaign will have a lower peak and a steeper curve, represented by the grey area. A standard measure of medium-term effectiveness is by looking at the ad retention rate in week two as shown above.
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WANT AN IMPRESSION
As you can see from the chart below, increasing investment in online increases the longevity of the online impact. Using the econometric meta analysis, we can see exactly how ad retention leads to uplifts in campaign RROI.
44%
43%
27% 20% 1st Quintile Under 10k 2nd Quintile 10-40k 3rd Quintile 40-120k 4th Quintile 120-190k 5th Quintile 190-750k
Based on meta-analysis of FMCG econometrics studies by BrandScience: 54 cases; 18th May 2012
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ONLINE RROI
Impulse
1.73
1.51
Household
1.37
1.09
% media mix
6%
7%
6%
7%
Based on meta-analysis of econometrics studies by BrandScience: 54 cases who are FMCG and use online as of 18th May 2012
Continuing to view the data at a sub-category level, this analysis enables us to explore the online RROI compared to the other mediaOnlines RROI of 1.73 achieved for the Impulse category out-performs all other media. It is 42% higher than its closest rival, radio, which delivers an RROI of 1.22 for every spent.
Average ROI
Online
1.73
1.22
Radio
1.16
TV
Cinema
1.12
1.12
Outdoor
0.60
7%
% media mix
6%
7%
66%
11%
4%
Based on meta-analysis of econometrics studies by BrandScience: 8 impulse cases that use online; 18th May 2012
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ONLINE RROI
Average ROI
Total Display
1.86
Online video/pre-roll
Mobile
1.40
1.93
1.26
Social
Based on meta-analysis of econometric studies by BrandScience: 8 impulse cases that use online; 18th May 2012
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INITIAL FINDINGS
The econometric model meta analysis has provided three key findings, which hold true across all of the FMCG sub-categories we were able to analyse:
1) Online performs well for FMCG brands, delivering strong and scalable RROI 2) Leveraging onlines synergistic effects and exploiting the onlines rich media assets are the simplest way to optimise overall campaign ROI 3) Adjusting the media mix to increase onlines allocation will deliver scalable increases in ROI whilst increasing the duration of campaign impact
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Anita Caras
London, England
While many tech and media companies conduct market research that describes what consumers are doing, the Microsoft Advertising Global Insights team believes innovation stems from getting at the why. As a result, we go beyond behavior to focus on why consumers do what they dowhether thats choosing one brand over another, or exhibiting a preference for a specific platform. Our goal is to create more robust, insights-driven narratives that put a human face on our audience, making it easier for customers to tell creative, relevant and connected stories across platforms.
2012 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. This document is provided as-is. Information and views expressed in this document, including URL and other Internet Web site references, may change without notice. You bear the risk of using it. Some examples are for illustration only and are fictitious. No real association is intended or inferred. This document does not provide you with any legal rights to any intellectual property in any Microsoft product. You may copy and use this document for your internal, reference purposes.
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