Accenture’s move into programmatic media planning and buying

Accenture has announced that it is launching a programmatic services offering – a move that fundamentally threatens its impartiality as a media auditor.

Accenture announces programmatic services offering

Last week Accenture, best known in advertising circles for its media auditing business, announced that its digital arm, Accenture Interactive, was launching a programmatic services practice. Accenture Interactive Programmatic Services will offer services in three areas: programmatic consulting and in-housing; media strategy, planning and activation; and ad tech implementation and support. In doing so, they have placed themselves in direct competition with both media agencies and a wide range of specialist companies that already offer programmatic planning and buying services.

The claim: more transparency

They claim that they have launched this service in response to an increasing trend amongst advertisers of bringing programmatic spend – at least partially – in-house, in order to regain control of their advertising investment in a time where transparency is a concern. The May 2018 ‘Programmatic In-housing’ report by the US Interactive Advertising Bureau found that 18% of marketers have moved their programmatic buying in its entirety in house, while another 47% have begun the process and intend to continue it. This can be a complicated process involving synchronisation of many previously disparate parts of an organisation, so advertisers are interested in somebody who can help them manage the process with 100% transparency, which Accenture claims it will provide.

The reality: less impartiality

Many media and specialist programmatic agencies have expressed profound concerns about a conflict of interest, with some saying that they will no longer accept Accenture audits. We at ECI agree. The key to effective media auditing is impartiality, and no company can legitimately claim to be impartial whilst offering media services to a market where it has highly privileged access to the data and financial information of both advertisers and agencies. You cannot provide independent benchmarking as an auditor if you are also buying inventory. As Paul Bainsfair, the Director General of the IPA (the UK ad industry’s trade body) said, the move is “incompatible with [Accenture’s] role as a media auditor… In an era where transparency is under the spotlight, this self-evident conflict of interest is unacceptable”.

Accenture has defended its impartiality by claiming that will not provide both auditing and media services to the same client, and that, as Accenture Interactive is a separate business unit to the media auditing business, firewalls and confidentiality agreements will be in place. We have doubts that, in practice, this will be effective. As one media agency boss said, what’s to stop them telling prospect clients that their agency is non-transparent and that they have the solution?

ECI-THINKS Image
September 1, 2023
X: Better to save X: Better to save

- Twitter has rebranded to X and new CEO Linda Yaccarino is attempting to woo advertisers back with brand safety initiatives. Is it enough?

Read more
August 23, 2023
The Hollywood strikes: an opportunity for advertisers to experiment The Hollywood strikes: an opportunity for advertisers to experiment

- Four weeks ago, Sag-Aftra commenced industrial action, joining forces with the Writers Guild of America. What does it mean for advertisers?

Read more
July 25, 2023
Navigating stormy seas: prioritizing focus and precision Navigating stormy seas: prioritizing focus and precision

- If the global economy is comparable to stormy waters, marketers are the ship captains guiding their vessels to calmer water. What do they need to do to get there?

Read more
July 12, 2023
Does Threads have Twitter in a tangle? Does Threads have Twitter in a tangle?

- Last week, Meta launched Threads, its text-based conversation app. Will it spell the end for Musk’s troubled Twitter?

Read more
June 16, 2023
Audience measurement: the quest for precision Audience measurement: the quest for precision

- Audience measurement alternatives are gaining momentum in the US, and Nielsen is striving to maintain its prime position. What does it all mean for marketers?

Read more