Turner Turns Listening Into Upfront Specialty
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Turner Broadcasting is going into this year's upfront in a
cooperative mood. Once May and June arrive, Turner will still be aggressive as
ever in pushing for broadcast-sized price increases. But before getting to the
bargaining table, it is working hard to be easy to work with.
This cooperative spirit follows last year's hiring of Donna
Speciale, the well-regarded senior media buyer, and a reorganization that
allows agencies and advertisers to access as much of Turner as they want
through a single, primary contact.
"What's really important is that now what Turner stands for
at this point in our evolution is, 'we listen,'" says Speciale. "The clients
now are seeing us as a holistic company. They want us to be their partner."
One example of Turner's collaborative sprit is a deal with
media agency Zenith for a long-term study of viewer consumption habits in
multiscreen environments. The test, using Zenith client brands and Turner
resources including the Time Warner Media Lab and set to continue through this
summer, is looking at how consumers respond to shows employing Automatic
Content Recognition technology on smart TVs in order to develop engaging
experiences and create consumer rewards. Turner wants to set up more of these
projects during this upfront.
Turner also has a yearlong deal that makes MillerCoors
products the only brews that are integrated into original series on TBS and
TNT. MillerCoors also bought customized promotion on platforms including CNN,
TruTV, Funny Or Die, NBA on TNT, Bleacher Report and NASCAR.com.
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"What they are right now is significantly more flexible,"
says SMGx chief investment officer John Muszynski, a veteran media buyer who
has worked closely with Turner for years. "They listen much, much better these
days. They're better business partners than they ever have been."
Muszynski says Turner was already a great partner, but, "a
lot of time you'd ask for something and what was responded back was why they
couldn't do that." Now, "their first response is ‘What are you trying to
accomplish? Let me see if I can help.' They're much more can-do."
David Levy, Turner president of ad sales, distribution and
sports, reorganized his ad sales team after longtime deputy Linda Yaccarino
left for NBCUniversal.
Speciale left MediaVest USA and was named president of
Turner Entertainment & Animation Ad Sales, overseeing a broader swath of
networks. Under Speciale, Turner veterans Frank Sgrizzi and Joe Hogan were
promoted to executive VPs, with Sgrizzi in charge of TBS and TNT and Hogan
responsible for TruTV, Cartoon Network and Adult Swim.
In its pre-upfront meetings, Turner's sales team is
introducing clients to its programming executives. "We're really putting
clients and marketers much closer to the content," Speciale says.
With a year-round supply of content, the idea is to put
together packages that reach consumers across networks and across platforms,
with branded entertainment and new technology such as second-screen apps.
"There's going to be new products around different types of
content offerings, different types of marketing offerings around sync apps.
Those are things we'll be introducing in the next few months," Speciale says.
"What we know is that the consumer is using a
second screen. They're doing something with it," says Sgrizzi. "If us, or
anyone, could figure out a way to keep them engaged, which we feel our sync
apps do, that's one aspect of it. And the other aspect is to figure out the
best way to communicate that. Through research, that's heightening what we can
provide and what many other folks can't."
Jon has been business editor of Broadcasting+Cable since 2010. He focuses on revenue-generating activities, including advertising and distribution, as well as executive intrigue and merger and acquisition activity. Just about any story is fair game, if a dollar sign can make its way into the article. Before B+C, Jon covered the industry for TVWeek, Cable World, Electronic Media, Advertising Age and The New York Post. A native New Yorker, Jon is hiding in plain sight in the suburbs of Chicago.