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Facing Mounting Criticism, ‘Buy Safe’ Organizers Defend Campaign

Publishers weigh in on BPA, ABC pro-audit initiative.


By Bill Mickey
07/02/2008


Buy Safe Media, the BPA and ABC-backed campaign warning marketers against buying ads in non-audited b-to-b publications, has faced unusually harsh criticism since its launch last week.

Industry pundits, including consultant and noted columnist Bob Sacks, were among the first to weigh in on the program, with Sacks calling the initiative “an attack at the heart of the entrepreneurial publishing business.” Sacks wrote: “The new pathology actually disgusts me.”

Samir “Mr. Magazine” Husni lamented “how low some folks in our industry are willing to sink in order to make their business flourish.”

And it’s not just pundits who are disturbed. At Access Intelligence, where several prominent titles—including CableFax and MIN—remain un-audited, Sylvia Sierra, SVP, corporate audience development, downplays the need for an audit. “Some of our strongest brands are not audited and take advertising,” Sierra told FOLIO: this week. “It is hard to argue the $1,000-per year subscription value that readers place on the information and advertisers place on reach.”

A 'Legitimate Beef'

Ted Bahr, president of BZ Media and a supporter of the Buy Safe campaign, is more concerned about the publishers that fly under the radar and push inflated or inaccurate metrics.

“I am spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to acquire and maintain the circulation I am claiming, then I spend the money maintaining it in BPA required formats, then I pay BPA between $10,000-$15,000 to audit my books,” Bahr says. “That’s the ethical standard for publishing in this industry. My competitors are therefore able to spend way less than I do, and compete with me by cheating and lying to our mutual customers. My only recourse is to try and educate the advertisers that they need to pressure these outlaws into auditing.”

BPA CEO Glenn Hansen put it this way: “Publishers that have made that investment have a legitimate beef with those that cannot demonstrate from an independent verification that they have made that same investment.”

Ditto for the Audit Bureau of Circulations, which joined the BPA in backing the program. “The campaign site specifically notes that auditing is not a necessity for all publications,” says Neal Lulofs, ABC’s SVP, communications and strategic planning. “I can’t fathom why the promotion of media auditing would ‘disgust’ someone. We are an auditing firm and we are promoting the benefits of auditing—for publishers and buyers alike. We are not ‘forcing’ anyone to become audited. But in competitive environments, buyers usually insist on it. For instance, there isn’t a single paid-circ newspaper above 25,000 in the U.S. that isn’t audited. That’s not because we force them to do that, but because audited newspapers attract more ad dollars.”

A Question of Demand


Yet smaller ad buyers—as BPA confirmed when it was surveying client-side media buyers prior to launching the campaign—may not care or even know about audits. At Hanley Wood, which has several un-audited titles in its stable of more than 30 magazines, auditing is more of a case-by-case consideration. “It depends on the advertiser market,” says Nick Cavnar, VP circulation and database development. “Advertiser markets dominated by small advertisers that don’t work through agencies aren’t that familiar with the statement format. They don’t understand it so there’s not a great demand for it.”

This is precisely why BPA launched the Buy Safe Media campaign, but Cavnar focuses on the practicalities of auditing. “If we don’t have advertisers asking for one, then we may not audit the magazine. We work according to what advertisers are looking for. We run the circulation the same way whether it’s audited or not. It’s a question of whether it’s something that helps in the advertising sales.”

Audit Landscape Getting Complicated

Sacks and Husni took the Buy Safe program to task, in part, because they say it’s magazines attacking magazines, and that energy could be better applied to arguing the print medium’s viability against other media—TV, radio and online. “In a perfect market, where all magazines are audited, I think Bob and Samir are justified in saying, ‘Don’t fight among yourselves, fight against other media,” Hansen says. “But in a market where we’re not all yet at the same level playing field, I think that’s an unfair expectation on their behalf. It’s not the fact that it’s BPA or ABC—it’s the fact that they’ve made the investment in developing quality audience and they can prove that and that gives the advertiser accountability.”

But there is a bigger picture to be focusing on—the mash-up of media platforms. “We are now media companies whose portfolios include print magazines and many other assets,” Sierra says. “Most of the other assets—Web sites, e-letters, trade shows, Webinars—are not audited, and yet, revenue is shifting from print magazine advertising to the other assets. Advertisers want to know ‘Who are these people?’ and the audit bureaus are not showing reach, only numbers. I can't think of a single reason to pay for the current audit offerings given their shortcomings.”

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COMMENTS: 12

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Missing the trees from the woods
Submitted by Sean on Thu, 07/03/2008 - 12:07.

At the end of the day, advertisers don't care about audits. They care about leads and results. If you can't prove that you are generating them, you won't be in business for long. The number of advertisers who care about audits is rapidly dwindling.
I agree with Sacks and
Submitted by Anonymous on Thu, 07/03/2008 - 12:14.

I agree with Sacks and Husni. It is unreasonable to expect directory publishers, for example, to pay $5,000 a year to audit a publication that only comes out once. Nevertheless, annual publications are in the same media plans as monthly pubs. There needs to be room for exceptions.
Some Truth in Claims, Yet Overstated by Use of Fear Tactics
Submitted by Anonymous on Thu, 07/03/2008 - 12:19.

As a former auditor/manager of BPA Worldwide, I understand the position that Buy Safe is taking regarding unaudited circulation. Numerous occasions, I witnessed publisher error that was so substantial, particularly on initial audits, that it's a wonder why any advertiser would purchase an ad with an unaudited publisher. However, I intentionally say publisher and not publication/product because I seldom found any substantive errors from publishers who had other products already audited. Once a publisher streamlines his or her operations to become audit compliant for one product, it's easy to set up all products to follow the same system of procedures. It's actually too cumbersome and not cost-efficient to try to run non-audited products under a different system of procedures. So Buy Safe is helpful in making advertisers more aware of publishers who might be short-changing them due to shortcuts they otherwise take if they've never been audited, but larger publishers follow the same procedures for their unaudited products as they do for their audited products, so the threat of buying unaudited advertising being a waste of spending is largely overstated and based more on fear.
Wrath of Critics
Submitted by Steven Capasso on Thu, 07/03/2008 - 12:38.

I respect and understand what Ted Bahr has to say but to call the publisher's of non-audited titles "outlaws" suggests they are engaging in illegal activity. This sort of rhetoric will only add fuel to the fires and have advertiser’s running to the portals of the web instead of to the pages of our magazines—audited or not. I for one would not get in the middle of a “domestic” dispute.
Pro audit campaign
Submitted by Jerry Wolfe on Thu, 07/03/2008 - 12:42.

What a negative self-defeating effort! What is the effect on new magazines not yet qualified for audit? Start ups already have difficulty with many advertisers and their agencies who as a policy will not buy ad space in new magazines until they have an audit. Remember Mr. BPA and ABC these are future customers - who might replace those ceasing publication every day!
“In addition to print, BPA
Submitted by Glenn Hansen on Thu, 07/03/2008 - 12:53.

“In addition to print, BPA audits web sites, E-newsletters, trade shows, and can audit online Webinars just as we audit in-person conferences. If you can document who you reach, it can be audited. I agree advertisers want to know who the users are. Keep in mind the role of an auditor is to verify the accuracy of data already collected. If media owners can't tell us, we can't vouch for it to the advertisers' benefit. BPA has been told the reason these forms of media are not being audited is lack of advertiser demand. It is not the shortcomings of the service or the offering. The buysafemedia initiative will prove this as the program shifts from print-only to on-line and in-person media. I am confident that with the rise in advertiser awareness, there will be a rise in the cry for accountability.”
Whoa!!
Submitted by Anonymous on Thu, 07/03/2008 - 13:04.

This seems to be quite a hot issue ...
Yes, it is a hot issue. But
Submitted by Glenn Hansen on Thu, 07/03/2008 - 13:51.

Yes, it is a hot issue. But people are commenting without having first visited www.buysafemedia.com and seeing what is stated there. For starters, this is about BtoB media, not consumer magazines sold on the newsstand. It is about creating awareness amongst BtoB advertisers making the buying decision in absence of an agency media planner. It is about these advertisers not understanding the value a publisher presents in having their quantity of delivery and quality of recipients independently verified. It is about valid and invalid reasons for using unaudited media. But more often than not we find the reasons/excuses for not providing advertisers with the accountability they need, are not reasons we believe advertisers should accept. Go to www.buysafemedia.com. Have a look. React to what we are saying and let’s keep the dialog alive. Post your comments on the blog there or here.
Those in glass houses shouldn't throw stones
Submitted by Mister on Thu, 07/03/2008 - 14:04.

As I see it, there's an issue of legitimacy with BPA audits. There's only one book in our market that's audited, and it's ironically the one that no one reads, and frankly you can't even subscribe to it by visiting their website - and there's NO subscription card in the magazine! This publisher scraped names off a website registration tool and started calling people they sent a magazine to subscribers, even though they never subscribed to a magazine. How do I know? I'm one of them! Still, BPA cashed their check.
when did an advertiser or agency ask you for a BPA?
Submitted by Anonymous on Thu, 07/03/2008 - 16:47.

If advertisers and agencies see no value in audits then fear mongering isn't going to fix the BPA business model
Example of Negative Selling at its best
Submitted by Anonymous on Sun, 07/06/2008 - 17:58.

Buy Safe Media is a poorly executed scare tactic that supports established publications and provides major publisers a halo effect for all their books- allowing for two sets of rules. Where on Buy Safe Media does the campaign single out the books that are audited and applying for audit - the site lists Partners - aka Publishers who audit a lot of books, but not all their books, nonetheless BPA gives them a pass because they are big companies. Meanwhile, it fails to list all the publications that are in process of completing their BPA audit; therefore penalizing them for going through the process by sending negative letters to accounts and again having their standing in question. Great idea - probably. Poorly executed - definately. Doesn't BPA represent all - not just their fav five partners. C'mon Glenn - take down the site - clean it up and try again...admitting mistakes is the start of doing it right. BTW, send a letter to all those saying that you wanted to generate awareness, but failed to cover the scope of companies. Imagine an account getting a nasty letter from Glenn looking at Buy Safe and only seeing a select list of Partners; therefore suggesting that the book they are buying is not audited. Does that accomplish the objective? The Partner portion of your site is a joke.
Admission of audits’ waning relevance?
Submitted by David K on Mon, 07/07/2008 - 14:32.

Auditing controlled circulation B2B titles has been around for ages. Do advertisers really need an awareness campaign to know some books are audited and others aren’t? (Especially considering how often the books in their market that are audited will incessantly remind them of that fact?) No, what this is about is the declining relevance of auditing circulation, when advertisers are increasingly more concerned with click-throughs and other more tangible metrics coming from online media. Besides, if an unscrupulous publisher is mailing to nothing but hair barbershops and convicts, advertisers will wake up to that bitter fact soon enough. At the end of the day, if you’re an advertiser and you’re buying space, what do you want to go with? A platform that actually drives awareness/response, or a book that *says an audit says* it will drive awareness/response? (PS: Every mag I’ve ever worked on since 1993 has been audited. It’s not that I don’t think they have or had value; I just think they are losing relevance over time in the decision-making process.) Sorry for the novel.
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