Cannes is slowly winding down. Rollerboards are popping up on the Croisette, final parties are being readied and more people are sporting limps. Cannes is often a reflection of a moment in time in the global media and marketing industries, with this year symbolizing a return to reality with a subdued Cannes. Here are our takeaways from the week.
The industry is in reset mode
The total attendance at Cannes is not out, but most estimates are that 25 percent fewer people are here. There is less bustle on the Carlton Terrace, plenty of space at marquee events like The Killers performing at Spotify beach, and even the Gutter Bar is tame. Several media CEOs skipped the festival altogether: Vox Media CEO Jim Bankoff, BuzzFeed CEO Jonah Peretti and Condé Nast CEO Bob Sauerberg. Vice’s Shane Smith is in the area but holed up in his villa in the hills around Cannes, according to multiple sources. The ad tech marina was noticeably less crowded with boats.
The pivot to reality takes hold
The big rumor of Cannes was around AT&T bidding for AppNexus. The surprise: The price most often mentioned — it was most often somewhere between $1.6 billion and $2 billion — would mark a lower valuation than AppNexus’ last round of funding. This matches the gossip on the Croisette about highly funded digital media companies like Vox Media, BuzzFeed and Vice. The consensus: There are no media unicorns. Without hope in profits and funding shut off, the options will go from bad to worse.
Creativity is more diffuse than ever
Cannes is slowly returning to its roots of championing creativity. But it is now clear that creativity is no longer mostly, much less solely, the preserve of ad agencies. J&J CMO Alison Lewis spoke on Thursday about how the marketer has rearranged its agency model to create an “agency of the future” that will allow J&J to plug in creative specialists. LeBron James became perhaps the first pro athlete to win a Cannes Lion, as his Uninterrupted media entity took home a Bronze Lion. Many marketers spoke to their focus on influencers, tapping into both their creative prowess and distribution. Finally, New York Times head of advertising Sebastian Tomich said the days of fighting the platforms for scale are over; instead, the battle is over creative ideas.
Agencies are under siege
Ad agencies have long been under the gun by forces conspiring to take away their privileged middleman position. Many of these appear to be coming together. The biggest threat looms from consulting firms, which used Cannes to flex their muscles. But another looming issue is the propensity for clients to take more marketing in-house. The shift in priorities to first-party data means clients will inevitably have more direct control of their marketing as it becomes more programmatic-led. That positions consultancies — they’ve for years advised on tech implementations — in a good position to usurp agencies.
GDPR is having an impact
Visit NYTimes.com in Cannes and you will get a bunch of house ads. That’s because of GDPR, according to Tomich. Right now, there are no plans to turn back on programmatic, with the Times instead adopting a wait-and-see approach. GDPR is also a factor in the thinned ad tech flotilla. And one persistent talking point: GDPR is a headache, but the California Ballot initiative underway could very well become a nightmare. The reality is a privacy revolution has begun that will result, in an ideal circumstance, in less but better data in media and advertising. — Brian Morrissey