Shutterstock Outlines Its Vision for Giphy’s Potential Ad Offer

  Rassegna Stampa, Social
image_pdfimage_print

The brightest minds in marketing and tech converge at NexTech, Nov. 14–15 in NYC. Get your pass for the latest on generative AI, gaming and more.

The launch of Giphy’s native advertising platform, set to be revealed at the end of this year, will be worth hundreds of millions of dollars, proclaimed its new owner Shutterstock’s chief executive Paul Hennessy during the company’s most recent quarterly earnings call.

Shutterstock acquired Giphy from Meta in May in a cut-price deal of $53 million after the social media giant was forced to sell the gif library and search engine after Britain’s Competitions and Markets Authority ruled its ownership to be anti-competitive. That ruling—which claimed to support digital advertising competition and social media use in the U.K.—cost Meta hundreds of millions of dollars. It had purchased Giphy in 2020 for around $315 million.

The advertising opportunity is in the hundreds of millions of dollars.

Paul Hennessy, Shutterstock CEO

Shutterstock claims Giphy has around 1.7 billion daily users, with the platform holding 14,000 API connections, including integrations with Instagram, Facebook, Whatsapp, Microsoft, TikTok, Samsung, Twitter, Slack and Discord. Its library currently holds more than 100 million GIFs.

It was through Giphy’s ‘Paid Alignment’ advertising service, which was available to U.S. marketers and was set to open up internationally, that triggered concern about Meta’s already strong hold in the U.K. digital ad market. Shutterstock is reviving the ad product in the coming months.

“Thinking long term, the advertising opportunity, given the size and scale of the Giphy businesses, is in the hundreds of millions of dollars,” said Hennessy. He also said he expected Giphy to become a larger part of the company in the years to come.

The future for Giphy at Shutterstock

To avoid disruption and maintain scale, the 125-person Giphy team came along with the deal.

For Meghan Schoen, Shutterstock’s chief product officer, the appeal of Giphy is its storytelling capabilities.

“That was really meaningful for us,” she explained. “At our core, we’re really focused on storytelling. Giphy is a business of micro-moments and storytelling, and with tremendous scale. It was a natural extension of our core value proposition for our users.”

We saw it as a massive opportunity to further evolve our creative engine.

Meghan Schoen, chief product officer, Shutterstock

Schoen outlined the company’s ‘three engines’—content, data and creative—which Shutterstock is focused on building to help marketers and advertisers tell their brand stories. Giphy is a platform that was “instantaneous” in doing that while having a “tremendous reach,” she told Adweek.

“We saw it as a massive opportunity to further evolve our creative engine and really create that demand engine at scale,” she added.

In terms of the advertising proposition, Schoen would not go into detail but claimed that Giphy was a platform that would help marketers be a part of everyday conversations and offer native advertising.

“Historically, they have not had an ad platform—the team’s near-term focus is setting up the ability to actually have advertising run through the platform in really native and organic ways to unlock those capabilities and that scale for marketers,” she added.

Pagine: 1 2