McKinsey Busted 5 Myths About Retail Media
McKinsey Busted 5 Myths About Retail Media
McKinsey Busted 5 Myths About Retail Media
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June 2022
Marketing budgets are flowing toward retail media networks (RMNs) as retailers, from Amazon to big-box
stores to grocery chains, capitalize on the shift to e-commerce while offering advertisers unique audiences
and valuable data insights to build new high-margin businesses. Manufacturers and brands are increasing
their ad spend on RMNs because they offer unique, valuable audiences and provide data that measure ad
effectiveness, thus helping to close the loop between ad view and product purchase.
Despite this success, retailers and advertisers alike question the trajectory of retail media. How sustainable
is the growth of RMNs as an advertising channel? How much space remains for RMNs other than Amazon?
Is the marketing spend on retail media really new or merely a shift from marketing budgets that already
benefit retailers, such as shopper and co-op marketing?
Our latest Retail Media Networks Advertiser Survey helps answer these questions and exposes five widely
held beliefs about RMNs as myths. The accompanying charts further illustrate the retail-media reality and
the opportunities it provides for brands, manufacturers, marketers, and retailers.
As they scale and build out their value propositions, advertisers are recognizing the benefits of diversifying
into other RMNs that provide access to unique, highly targeted audiences, a range of reasonable costs per
thousand impressions (CPMs), and other advantages that make them attractive advertising options.
Exhibit 1
Most advertisers
Most advertisers spend
spend on
on RMNs other than
RMNs other than Amazon.
Amazon.
Percent of advertisers that are current, future, or nonusers across RMN providers,1 %
21 16
16
17
11
80
51
1
Q: Please indicate your familiarity with the following; Possible answers: “Retail Media Networks”; “Never spent on advertising with them”; “Considered, but
never spent on advertising with them”; “Have spent on advertising previously, but not currently doing so”; “Currently spend on advertising with them”; and
“Have not used, but plan to use within the next 12 months.”
2
Past or current user includes: “Have spent on advertising previously, but not currently doing so” and ”Currently spend on advertising with them”; Future user
includes: “Have not used, but plan to use within the next 12 months”; Nonuser includes: “Never spent on advertising with them” and “Considered, but never
spent on advertising with them.”
Source: Retail Media Network Survey (2022, n = 188)
Exhibit 2
More than 75 percent of non-CPG advertisers anticipate increasing spend
More than 75 percent of non-CPG advertisers anticipate increasing spend.
with RMNs.
Decrease Increase
100 92
87 87
82 82
76 75
5 6 6 2
Total CPG² Jewelry Consumer Beauty Home & Apparel & Other
& luxury electronics garden footwear specialty
retail
1
Q: Do you anticipate spending levels with retail media networks to change over the next year?
2
CPG includes both food-and-beverage and household products.
Source: Retail Media Network Survey (2022, n = 188)
On the advertiser side, this surge in budgetary allocation to RMNs delivers performance that justifies the
investment, a conclusion supported by the fact the median advertiser has already been spending on RMNs
for three to four years.
Exhibit 3
Spendon
Spend onretail
retailmedia
mediaisiscoming
comingfrom
fromallallbudget
budgetsources,
sources, with
with over
over 8080 percent
percent
likely to
likely to be
benet
netnew.
new.
Initial source of budget for RMN spending¹ and subsequent source of substitution,² % (n = 188)
16
8
21
100
84
55
1
Q: Where did the initial spend on retail media come from? Possible answers: “Net-new spend (increase in overall marketing budget)”; “Substitution (taking from
another budget).”
2
Q: From which sources did the substitution for retail media spend come from? Possible answers: “Existing trade budgets”; “Existing shopper marketing bud-
gets”; “Sponsorship budgets”; “Brand TV”; “Other mass media”; “Digital media budgets.”
3
Brand marketing includes mass media (n = 7), sponsorship (n = 7), and brand TV (n = 7).
Source: Retail Media Network Survey (2022, n = 188)
Exhibit 4
Brand building
Brand building is
is as
as important
importantto
toadvertisers
advertisersasasother
otheroutcomes.
outcomes.
35 33 34
36 39 36
34 31
35 35
32 36
36
31 31
29 29 26
1 2
Total CPG² Apparel/ Beauty Consumer Other³
footwear electronics
n = 188 n = 52 n = 42 n = 31 n = 12 n = 51
1
Q: Looking ahead to the next 12-24 months, what percentage of spend on Retail Media do you anticipate targeting at achieving the following
advertising objectives?
2
CPG includes consumer packaged goods (n = 30) and household products (n = 22).
3
Other industries here include online travel agencies (n = 1), jewelry/luxury goods/accessories (n = 7), flowers/gifts/greetings (n = 3), home furnishings (n = 11),
sports/outdoors (n = 6), other specialty retails (n = 8), marketing agencies (n = 15).
Source: Retail Media Network Survey (2022, n = 188)
That doesn’t mean self-serve should be neglected, however. In the 12 months preceding our survey, 50
percent of RMN investments were made through a self-serve platform or solution. Self-serve can be a
lucrative table-stakes offering that helps win additional advertiser spend, but it’s clearly not a source of
competitive advantage.
Exhibit 5
Performance, brand building, and ease ofuse are key factors in RMN choice;
Performance, brand building, and ease of use are key factors in RMN choice;
self-serve isisleast
self-serve leastimportant.
important.
Relative importance of key factors when selecting retail media networks¹, ² vs pain points
customers face now
1
Q: Please think about your experience selecting retail media networks to spend advertising dollars with. Of these four factors, which is MOST important and
which is LEAST important to you?
2
Importance compared to average is calculated as the absolute factor utility score divided by the average of 7.7. Importance utility is calculated as a weighted
score of importance for all 13 factors, and the sum of factor utility factors equals 100, hence an average of 7.7.
3
Pain points grouping by rank: high = rank of 1-4, medium = rank of 5-9, low = rank of 10-13.
Source: Retail Media Network Survey (2022, n = 188)
1. Dive in. The best way to start is to just get on with it. Retailers should take an agile approach with a cross-
functional team (for example, marketing, tech, data, and merchandising), treat early failures as the price
of new knowledge, and share positive results and learnings with their organization and its advertisers.
2. Capitalize on uniqueness. What separates your RMN from the pack? Is it your audience and associated
customer insights? Is it your brand or e-commerce experience that makes advertisers want to join? Your
chosen minimum viable product (MVP) feature set has implications for your team’s skill set and for which
tech, operations, and agency partners are most appropriate. Plan properly to add value for all players in
a distinctive way.
3. Rally the organization. Buy-in to the RMN vision from key parties—marketing, merchandising,
e-commerce, product, and analytics—is critical. Tell a compelling story that shows how the proposed
RMN will drive the core retail business and e-commerce. Develop a plan to leverage internal and external
resources to implement it.
4. Choose the right partners. Leaders must determine who will be responsible and accountable for key
RMN activities, across sales, managing supply and demand, planning campaigns and making buys, and
delivering on reporting and measurement? How will these differ across key ad-inventory types, such
as sponsored listings, onsite display and video, or offsite audience targeting? Partners with the right
underlying capabilities and mindsets to help build the RMN business are crucial.
5. Build a media business. The retailer’s plan must recognize a simple truth: there is a business to build
beyond simply enabling ad products. It entails financial planning, billing and reconciliation processes,
legal and accounting ramifications, and new processes around campaign planning and execution. Media
customers expect many of these behind-the-scenes capabilities, and brands, too, demand credible
media expertise and sound campaign operations.
Marc Brodherson is a senior partner in McKinsey’s New York office, Jon Flugstad is an associate partner in the Atlanta office,
Quentin George is a partner in the San Francisco office, and Jack Trotter is an associate partner in the Denver office.
The authors would like to thank Sabrina Hand, Calvin Weng, and Nicole Zuber for their contributions to this article.