Media Intelligence

WPP Media

Welcome to Media Intelligence, the official podcast from WPP Media, WPP’s global media collective. Dive into the heart of the media industry with us as we explore topics like strategy, technology, marketing, and the role of media in society. Featuring experts from our global agencies and divisions, we'll unpack how we're shaping a future where advertising works better for everyone. Whether you're a business leader or a media enthusiast, join us for insights that matter. Welcome to Media Intelligence by WPP Media.

  1. 3D AGO

    Meta’s Singapore billing surprise, LinkedIn growth, & NBCU’s big month

    Meta’s ad engine keeps accelerating—even as legal and regulatory pressure builds. Kate Scott-Dawkins is joined by Jeff Foster and Nidhi Shah to break down a packed earnings week and the theme they see everywhere right now: concentration and consolidation—of ad spend, audience attention, and especially AI investment. They unpack Meta’s surprisingly strong growth and a striking geographic disclosure (why Singapore suddenly shows up as a top billing market), Microsoft’s mixed ad signals across Search and LinkedIn (including rapid growth in paid video ads), and what Comcast/NBCU’s results say about the economics of streaming—where sports can lift subscribers and advertisers, but also widen losses. Plus: what luxury earnings reveal about an uneven recovery (China stabilizing, other markets shifting) and why jewelry looks more resilient than other categories. We explore: Meta earnings: strong growth, the “billing address vs. user geography” disconnect, and why Singapore stood out.AI capex arms race: Meta’s major 2026 investment plans vs. Microsoft’s narrative challenge linking AI to ad growth.Microsoft ads + LinkedIn: Search/news resilience, marketing solutions, and the surge in paid video ads.Comcast/NBCU: mostly flat ad trends, tough comps, and the coming change as Versant assets roll out of reporting.Peacock: subscriber lift, NBA-driven advertiser gains, and what bigger sports bets mean for profitability.Luxury: uneven normalization, China’s importance, broader growth pockets, and LVMH’s lower ad/promo spend.Chapters: 00:00 – Intro: Super Bowl, Olympics, and the week’s earnings theme 02:23 – Meta: growth stays strong 03:30 – Meta disclosure: why Singapore appears as a top billing market 06:22 – AI capex: Meta’s 2026 ramp and monetization paths (ads + subs) 07:17 – Market reaction: why Meta and Microsoft were read differently 10:30 – Meta headwinds: lawsuits and platform pressure vs. advertiser momentum 12:08 – Comcast/NBCU: Q4 ads, tough comps, and scale questions 14:01 – Peacock: subs, ad growth, NBA impact, and widening losses 15:58 – Microsoft: Search/news ads, LinkedIn momentum, and video growth 19:20 – Advertiser takeaways: efficiency, AI, and consolidation 21:17 – Luxury: uneven recovery, jewelry strength, and ad spend trends 24:13 – Tech preview: Apple/Samsung notes and what to watch next 26:45 – Closing

    27 min
  2. JAN 23

    Netflix’s $3B ads plan, TikTok’s US ownership shift, OpenAI tests ads

    Netflix says ads are booming—but are viewers actually watching more? Kate Scott-Dawkins and Jeff Foster dig into Netflix’s latest earnings: ~$3B in projected ad revenue for 2026, 325M paid memberships, and a surprisingly modest lift in hours watched. We unpack what that gap could mean for advertisers, why big IP (including Warner Bros. Discovery/WBD) suddenly looks even more valuable, and where Netflix may go next on content and sports. Plus: what P&G’s results suggest about a more disciplined year for CPG ad spend, the latest on TikTok’s new U.S. ownership structure (and the still-open questions around the algorithm), and OpenAI/ChatGPT testing ads—with an early focus on transparency and user control. We explore:Netflix’s 2026 ad revenue guidance (~$3B) and what it takes to scale a young ad business.Why 96B hours watched in 2H 2025 only grew ~2%—and the “attention per member” problem.Content strategy and competition: ~$18B implied 2026 content spend, sports optionality, and the pull of major franchise libraries (WBD).P&G earnings and why the company isn’t planning a big media ramp—what that signals for CPG budgets in 2026.TikTok’s U.S. divestment outcome: who owns what, what likely stays the same for advertisers, and how pressure is rising on social platforms globally.OpenAI begins testing ads: early guardrails, what “AI-native” advertising could look like, and why this launch matters. Chapters:00:00 – Intro: Netflix, P&G, TikTok U.S. deal, OpenAI ads00:42 – Netflix: ad revenue forecast to double to ~$3B in 202601:51 – Netflix: 325M paid memberships (first update in a year)02:20 – Engagement: 96B hours watched in 2H 2025 and what it implies04:29 – Content + sports: 2026 spend plans and rights questions07:30 – The hardware challenge: Netflix vs OS-controlled platforms08:38 – P&G: growth, pricing, category performance, and ad spend tone12:32 – TikTok: new U.S. ownership structure and open algorithm questions16:12 – Social pressure: under-16 bans, lawsuits, and brand risk20:29 – OpenAI/ChatGPT: testing ads, transparency, and what’s next25:27 – Weekend recommendations: AI reads/listens28:41 – Next week preview: key earnings to watch29:00 – Closing + contact

    29 min
  3. JAN 16

    Will AI shop for you? Bank ad growth, World Cup on TikTok, app advertising trends (feat. Madison & Wall)

    Is your next big purchase going to be made by AI? In this “super pod” crossover between WPP Media Intelligence and Madison & Wall, Kate Scott-Dawkins, Brian Wieser, Luke Stillman, Jeff Foster, and Nidhi Shah unpack the week’s biggest shifts in media and marketing. We explore: Google & OpenAI’s new agentic commerce protocols — and what AI shopping means for brands.Why US banks grew ad spend 12.5% in 2025 despite economic uncertainty.TikTok’s World Cup deal and what it signals for sports media rights.The evolving creator economy and where the dollars are really coming from.Insights into app advertising & mobile gaming following LiftOff’s IPO filing.Chapters:00:00 – Intro: AI shopping & what’s ahead in media and marketing01:20 – Agentic commerce: Google vs OpenAI protocols & retail media impact08:36 – US economy: Bank earnings and why ad spend is still rising17:28 – Sports media rights: TikTok’s global World Cup video partner deal20:40 – Creator economy: Where the money comes from and industry effects25:53 – App advertising & gaming: LiftOff IPO, AppLovin, mobile ad quality31:52 – Market outlook: Risks, opportunities, and sector growth potential32:13 – Next week preview: Key earnings, inflation data, and major events34:56 – Closing thoughts & outro WPP Media Global Advertising Forecast, Dec 2025: https://www.wppmedia.com/news/report-this-year-next-year-december-2025 Cross-over episode disclaimer: The views of Madison & Wall do not represent the opinions of WPP or WPP Media

    35 min
  4. JAN 9

    Smart glasses crowd CES, top 25 media owners hold 73.9%, 2026 outlook

    Smart glasses everywhere, robots in your living room, and 73.9% of global ad spend concentrated in just 25 companies. Kate Scott-Dawkins, Jeff Foster, and Nidhi Shah break down what really matters for advertisers from CES: the explosion of robotics and smart home ecosystems, a wave of smart glasses and next-gen TVs, and what this growing “surface area” for media means for targeting, measurement, and creative. They also unpack WPP Media’s latest Top 25 Global Media Owners update, where those players are now expected to account for 73.9% of total ad industry revenue — and how consolidation, regulation, and AI could reshape that landscape. We also look ahead to 2026: the impact of a packed sports calendar and US midterm elections on ad pricing and inventory, rising youth-focused social regulation (inspired by Australia and Europe), and new AI-driven business models on both the content and media owner side. Listen for: What CES 2026’s robots, smart homes, and smart glasses really signal for brandsHow the Top 25 media owners reaching 73.9% share changes planning and partnership strategyWhere new ad opportunities may emerge in ecosystems like autos, connected homes, and creator platformsKey risks and catalysts for 2026: regulation, labor negotiations, mega-deals, and sports/election cycles00:00-CES recap: robots, smart homes and health tech03:29-Macro backdrop: jobs, inflation and retail context05:39-Next-gen TVs and hardware ecosystems09:23-Autos, energy tech and AI infrastructure13:10-Creators, fandom and sports at CES14:50-Top 25 global media owners and consolidation18:22-Smart glasses boom and new ad surfaces20:49-2026 outlook: deals, sports, elections and AI26:16-Advertising Intelligence framework and earnings preview

    27 min
  5. 11/13/2025

    Amazon’s 315M Prime Video ad viewers, Tubi hits profitability, & Disney boosts sports ad sales

    Earnings season meets forecast crunch time | Kate Scott‑Dawkins, Jeff Foster, and Nidhi Shah break down the latest media and marketing shifts: European broadcasters in decline, OOH gains from travel rebound, Amazon’s surge in cloud and streaming ads, Tubi’s early AVOD profitability, and the mixed fortunes at Peacock, Paramount+, Warner Bros. Discovery, and Disney. From sports rights battles to identity‑based targeting and looming M&A moves, the team unpacks what’s driving TV and streaming ad revenues — and what brands and advertisers need to know now. Listen for:• Trends in linear TV vs. streaming ad revenue growth• Why sports rights remain top-tier ad inventory• AVOD’s profitability milestone and what’s next• How consolidation could reshape the media buying landscape 00:00 – Introduction and forecast season overlaps02:27 – European broadcaster earnings, consolidation moves, and OOH trends09:35 – Amazon earnings: Cloud, advertising, Prime Video reach, and sports rights15:03 – Fox earnings: Tubi’s growth, early profitability, and login strategy18:52 – Comcast: Peacock’s subscriber trends, ad revenue, and M&A speculation21:11 – Paramount/Skydance: Ad revenue decline, price hikes, and theatrical expansion24:32 – Warner Bros. Discovery: Revenue and ad declines, streaming subs, strategic options26:07 – Disney highlights and advertiser implications27:30 – Forecast wrap‑up and upcoming focus areas

    29 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
4 Ratings

About

Welcome to Media Intelligence, the official podcast from WPP Media, WPP’s global media collective. Dive into the heart of the media industry with us as we explore topics like strategy, technology, marketing, and the role of media in society. Featuring experts from our global agencies and divisions, we'll unpack how we're shaping a future where advertising works better for everyone. Whether you're a business leader or a media enthusiast, join us for insights that matter. Welcome to Media Intelligence by WPP Media.

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