https://stratechery.com/2017/everything-is-changing-so-should-antitrust/

Everything is Changing; So Should Antitrust
Wednesday, September 6, 2017
Late last month WPP, the largest advertising group in the world, announced 
results and forecasts that were sharply down. Those results, though, were not 
what I found striking about CEO Martin Sorrell’s remarks on the group’s 
earnings call; after all, I argued last summer that such a decline was 
inevitable.

Rather, it was striking just how feeble Sorrell’s proposed response was:

So what’s our response to all this? Well, further focus on our 4 strategic 
priorities. Horizontality, which we moved up from, I think it was #4 a year or 
so ago to #1, is our first critical priority. And it really means ensuring that 
our people work seamlessly. They’re accustomed to working vertically and by 
agency brand, but they work seamlessly horizontally across the group together 
through client teams, I’ll come on to those, and country managers and 
subregional managers to provide an integrated benefit for clients. And clients 
are pressurizing us for more effectiveness and more efficiency, this is the 
way, probably the most significant way that we can respond.

Make no mistake, I’m a student of organizational structure and the importance 
of aligning an organization to the challenge at hand. Moreover, WPP’s 
conglomerate nature make any sort of cross-agency collaboration challenging; 
that, though gets at the real problem. If WPP must change the way it works 
internally, that by definition means the environment in which it is operating 
is fundamentally different than the one that existed while WPP grew into the 
organization it is today.

Ad Agencies and the Internet

I wrote about ad agencies earlier this year in the context of complaints about 
ads appearing next to objectionable content:

Way back in 1841, Volney B. Palmer, the first ad agency, was opened in 
Philadelphia. In place of having to take out ads with multiple newspapers, an 
advertiser could deal directly with the ad agency, vastly simplifying the 
process of taking out ads. The ad agency, meanwhile, could leverage its 
relationships with all of those newspapers by serving multiple clients:



It’s a classic example of how being in the middle can be a really great 
business opportunity, and the utility of ad agencies only increased as more 
advertising formats like radio and TV became available. Particularly in the 
case of TV, advertisers not only needed to place ads, but also needed a lot 
more help in making ads; ad agencies invested in ad-making expertise because 
they could scale said expertise across multiple clients.

Over the past few weeks (here and here) I have been revisiting Clayton 
Christensen’s Law of Conservation of Attractive Profits, a theory I first 
explored in this 2015 article about Netflix:

Breaking up a formerly integrated system — commoditizing and modularizing it — 
destroys incumbent value while simultaneously allowing a new entrant to 
integrate a different part of the value chain and thus capture new value.


Commoditizing an incumbent’s integration allows a new entrant to create new 
integrations — and profit — elsewhere in the value chain.
This starts to get at what is happening to WPP: the very idea of an ad agency 
arose from the opportunity to integrate the creation and placement of ads 
across disparate outlets, creating a one-stop shop for advertisers.

Those outlets, though, were only ever a proxy; advertisers don’t run ads for 
the sake of running ads, but rather to reach consumers. And on the Internet, 
where distribution is free and content abundant, more and more consumers found 
themselves relying on two services that focused on discovery and 
personalization: Google and Facebook. From that piece on ad agencies:

There are really only two options for the sort of digital advertising that 
reaches every person an advertiser might want to reach:



That’s a problem for the ad agencies: when there are only two places an 
advertiser might want to buy ads, the fees paid to agencies to abstract 
complexity becomes a lot harder to justify.

In fact, the issue is not even really about the money, but theory. Google and 
Facebook are the new integration points in the advertising value chain; it 
follows, then, that the rest of the value chain will modularize itself and 
re-organize around the integrated players. Or, as Sorrell put it, 
“horizontality.”

The problem for Sorrell is two fold: first, fundamentally re-orienting a 
business away from a vertical integrative approach to a horizontal modular 
approach is extremely difficult, both in terms of company culture and the 
effect on the bottom line. In truth I expect WPP to continue to lose business 
to digital agencies structured from day one with the assumption that Google and 
Facebook are the integrators in the advertising value chain.

The second point, though, is worse: what is happening to WPP is happening to 
the rest of WPP’s ecosystem — media on one side, and advertisers on the other.

The Reorganization of Everything

There used to be a limited number of media outlets — newspapers, radio, and 
television, primarily — all of which had substantial barriers to entry. That 
meant these outlets had a monopoly on reaching customers, leaving advertisers 
no choice but to pay up.

Now, though, there is an effectively unlimited amount of media: countless web 
pages, streaming music and podcasts, and services like Netflix and YouTube 
that, unbounded from the constraints of linearity, offer far more content than 
was ever accessible before. That, as noted above, meant that discovery mattered 
most, which meant Google and Facebook.

The parallel should be obvious: the clearest manifestation of how the media 
value chain has been fundamentally reconfigured is the fact that advertising 
has fled newspapers in particular; in other words, the media story is an 
advertising story, which is to say that given the upheaval in the media 
industry, the most surprising part of WPP’s struggles is that it took this long 
to manifest (thanks, primarily, to television’s resilience).

The exact same value chain reorganization is happening to WPP’s clients: major 
advertisers like consumer packaged goods companies which built their businesses 
on integrating the creation and distribution of consumer staples. From Dollar 
Shave Club and the Disruption of Everything:

P&G leveraged these resources in a simple formula that led to repeated success:

Spend significant resources on developing new products (more blades!) that can 
command a price premium
Spend even more resources on advertising the new product (mostly on TV) to 
create consumer awareness and demand
Spend yet more resources to ensure the new product is front-and-center in 
retail locations everywhere
In a world of scarcity this approach paid off time and again: P&G grew not only 
because its markets grew, but also because it continually justified price 
increases due to its innovations.

The most obvious change has been the rise of Amazon: instead of limited shelf 
space, the selection is orders of magnitude greater than any bricks-and-mortar 
store, and integrated with a scaled fulfillment operation. That new integration 
means that suppliers and merchants have no choice but to modularize and build 
their businesses around Amazon.

Of course that isn’t the only option: new, smaller companies, like the 
aforementioned Dollar Shaving Club, can leverage the big platform providers — 
YouTube, Facebook, AWS, etc. — to compete with massive companies like P&G on 
far more equal terms than before.

A New Reality

For long time Stratechery readers this analysis isn’t that novel; the shift in 
value chains that result from the Internet enabling zero distribution and zero 
transactional costs are the foundation of Aggregation Theory. It certainly is 
gratifying, in a way, to see the theory play out in what has long been the part 
of the value chain most resistant to upheaval (TV advertising and TV 
advertisers).

There is another context, though: the increasing appreciation outside of 
technology of just how dominant companies like Google, Facebook, Amazon, and 
even Netflix have become, and more and more discussion about whether antitrust 
is the answer. The problem is that much of this discussion is rooted in the old 
value chain, where power came from controlling distribution.

What is critical to understand is that that world is fading away; the 
fundamental nature of the Internet is abundance, and the critical competency is 
discovery. Moreover, the platform that harnesses discovery also harnesses a 
virtuous cycle between users and suppliers that leads to a winner-take-all 
situation inherent in two-sided networks. In other words, to the extent these 
platforms are monopolies, said monopoly is much more akin to AT&T than it is to 
Standard Oil.

This matters for three reasons:

First, the fact that newspapers, for example, or perhaps one day WPP, are being 
driven out of business is not a reason for antitrust action; their problem is 
their business model is obsolete. The world has changed, and invoking 
regulation to try to change that reality is a terrible idea.
Second, the consumer-friendly approach of these platform companies is no 
accident: when market power comes from owning demand, then the way to gain 
power is to create a great experience for consumers. The casual way in which 
many antitrust crusaders ignore the fact that, for example, Amazon is genuinely 
beloved by consumers — and for good reason! — is frustrating intellectually and 
eye-rolling politically.
Third, the presence of these platforms creates incredible new opportunities for 
businesses that were never before possible. I already described how Dollar 
Shaving Club was enabled by platform companies; Amazon has also enabled a 
multitude of merchants, Facebook an entire ecosystem of apps and personalized 
startups, and Google every possible service under the sun.
In a 30-second commercial, of the sort that WPP might have made, drawing clear 
villains and easy narratives is valuable; the reality of aggregators is far 
more complicated. That Google, Facebook, Amazon, and other platforms are as 
powerful as they are is not due to their having acted illegally but rather to 
the fundamental nature of the Internet and the way it has reorganized value 
chains in industry after industry.

Moreover, these platforms have far more positive outcomes than 
distribution-based monopolies ever did: the consumer experience is better, and 
there are huge new opportunities to build new businesses (especially serving 
niches completely ignored in a distribution-based world) on top of them. That 
is a good thing, worth preserving.

To that end any antitrust regulation, if it comes, needs a fresh approach 
rooted in the reality of the Internet. I agree that too much concentrated power 
has inherent problems; I also believe a structural incentive to provide a great 
customer experience, along with the potential to create completely new kinds of 
businesses, is worth preserving. Antitrust crusaders, to whom I am clearly 
sympathetic, ignore these realities at their political peril.



Sent from my iPhone

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