Home Digital TV and Video Why LG Ads Solutions Shifted To Media And Is Hedging Its Bets On CTV OEMs

Why LG Ads Solutions Shifted To Media And Is Hedging Its Bets On CTV OEMs

SHARE:

LG Ads Solutions used to answer to the name Alphonso.

Until January of last year, when LG took a majority stake in the company, Alphonso was an analytics startup that collected data through the automatic content recognition (ACR) technology it deployed for TV manufacturers, known in the biz as original equipment manufacturers or OEMs.

“That’s how we built our relationship with LG,” said Raghu Kodige, founder and formerly chief product officer of Alphonso and now the CEO of LG Ads Solutions.

Alphonso rebranded to LG Ads Solutions in March 2021.

Previously, Alphonso “focused very heavily on measurement and analytics to give advertisers insights into the effectiveness of their TV ads,” including cross-platform CTV ads, Kodige said.

But once the company was folded into LG, “our focus completely shifted to the media side,” he said. Ad sales and monetizing smart TV inventory became top priorities. Analytics is still a part of the company’s business model, but it’s no longer the main squeeze.

“We still use analytics, but we don’t sell it as an independent product [anymore],” Kodige said.

Instead, LG Ads uses its data and ACR tech to sell media.

The reason for the pivot? LG has its eyes on the CTV OEM gold mine.

The OEM battleground

Smart TVs are a marriage of hardware and software that can support the full lifespan of an efficient TV campaign, from activation to attribution.

LG Ads Solutions, for example, can track audiences and preferences on a household level across linear and streaming. It can then parcel up audiences for advertisers that are “available across all apps,” Kodige said. Audience buying is app agnostic because the content is “all built into the TV itself.”

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

Get our editors’ roundup delivered to your inbox every weekday.

In addition to aggregating media inventory, smart TV home screens are also full of customizable units that can be used to recommend new launches or related content based on a user’s preferences, Kodige said. LG sees smart TV home screens as the next “portal of entertainment” because they’re a prime source of real estate.

Marketers used to allocate ad spend to reach audiences on particular networks. “Now, they’re going to three or four large OEMs,” Kodige said, referring to Samsung, VIZIO and Roku. (Roku is technically an OEM because it produces remotes, but it doesn’t manufacture TVs. At least not yet.)

But although CTV OEMs are great for scale, manufacturers draw hard lines when it comes to competition.

“Most [CTV] OEMs have almost exclusive audiences,” Kodige said, which makes sense. Someone with an LG TV, for instance, probably doesn’t also have a Samsung TV.

According to Kodige, that makes the various OEMs “must-buys” for marketers trying to break into those exclusive footprints at a household level. OEMs are the next “CTV battleground” because that’s where the ad dollar allocation is going, he said.

For the moment, Roku isn’t a direct competitor in that regard. But that would change if Roku did start making its own TVs.

Despite the fact that hardware is initially a “loss leader” on margins, Kodige said, CTV OEMs have advantages when it comes to scale, control over inventory and even the user experience.

For example, larger OEMs can afford to invest in a proprietary operating system (OS). A smart TV company needs both hardware and software to enable reach, scale and good experiences.

“Someone else’s hardware might not have the best specs for your OS,” Kodige said. But having control of the “entire vertical integration” as a single unit, he noted, is the best way to “optimize all of the pieces.”

Must Read

The Trade Desk Lays Out Its Case To Beat Walled Gardens. Does Wall Street Buy It?

The Trade Desk continued its shaky 2025 earnings schedule when it reported Q2 results on Thursday.

Magnite Targets CTV, SMBs And Google's SSP Market Share

The SSP is betting on the DOJ’s antitrust remedies, plus closer relationships with agencies, DSPs and mid-sized advertisers, to help it eat some of Google’s lunch.

Zillow Pilots Containerized RTB, As It Rethinks The Equation Of Quality And Cost

Zillow is the pilot brand advertiser to test a new programmatic buying strategy known as containerized RTB. The strategy embeds the DSP or ad-buying platform intelligence, in this case the startup Chalice Custom Algorithms, within the SSP, which is Index Exchange.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

Shell Shutters Its Volta EV Charging And Media Division

Volta Media, which is owned by the gas station and energy giant Shell, will be shuttered by November and its network of more than 2,000 charging stations will be dismantled this year.

Comic: Traffic Jam

People Inc. Has A New Name, But It Still Faces The Same Old Google Search Traffic Drought

People Inc. – the former Dotdash Meredith – is fighting on multiple fronts to keep its business growing as Google Search declines precipitously as a source of referral traffic.

Monopoly Man looks on at the DOJ vs. Google ad tech antitrust trial (comic).

More Like No Yield: A New Book Explores How Google Soaked Up The Web’s Ad Profits

“I tried to write it so it’s not exclusively for ad tech nerds,” Ari Paparo told AdExchanger of his new book, about Google’s advertising dominance. “And I mean that affectionately.”