Author

Ashwini Karandikar

EVP, Media, Tech & Data • 4As

Topic

  • Digital Advertising
  • Media
  • Media Measurement
  • Reporting & Analytics

As the TV and video landscape evolves, advertisers have access to more measurement tools, datasets and analytics capabilities than ever before. Yet many marketers still struggle to answer a fundamental question: what is actually working?

A new study from the 4As and CIMM examines how U.S. advertisers prioritize and evaluate measurement metrics in today’s complex media environment and where confidence in measurement is rising, falling or simply unclear.

 

The Background

Over the past decade, marketing measurement has undergone a massive transformation.

Advertisers have built sophisticated data environments that combine multiple sources and tools, including:

  1. First-, second- and third-party data integrations
  2. Identity graphs and advanced analytics
  3. Measurement solutions spanning performance, attribution, brand impact, attention and verification
  4. Expanding datasets across linear TV, streaming and digital video

By almost any standard, the industry has never had more data at its disposal. Yet with this growth has come a new challenge: navigating an increasingly complex measurement landscape.

 

What the Study Shows

Based on a survey of 197 marketing executives and 16 in-depth interviews, the report explores how advertisers are approaching measurement today and how their priorities may shift over the next several years. The research examines:

  1. How marketers currently evaluate media and marketing performance
  2. Where confidence in measurement is strongest and where it becomes more uncertain
  3. How organizational models and advertiser categories influence measurement perspectives
  4. What beliefs and assumptions shape how metrics are prioritized
  5. How advertisers expect the importance of key measurement signals to evolve over the next three to five years

The findings reveal a clear industry tension: even as measurement capabilities expand, many marketers are finding it harder to reconcile competing data signals and derive clear conclusions about advertising impact.

 

What This Means for Agencies

For agencies operating in an increasingly data-rich environment, the study highlights several important questions:

  1. How should agencies help clients prioritize measurement signals when the number of available metrics continues to grow?
  2. What role can agencies play in helping reconcile different measurement frameworks and definitions?
  3. How can agencies translate complex measurement environments into clearer strategic guidance for brands?

As measurement capabilities continue to evolve, agencies are uniquely positioned to help marketers navigate the growing complexity and bring coherence to the expanding data landscape.

 

Get the Full Report

The full study explores these dynamics in depth and outlines the key priorities advertisers believe will shape the next phase of media measurement.

Download the report to explore the findings and implications for the industry.

Download Report