Toyota Is First To Sponsor NBCUniversal-AOL Content Alliance

September 29, 2015 | 06:00AM PT
Brian Steinberg
Senior TV Editor
@bristei
Ad money, so one prevailing theory goes, is moving from TV to online video ā and quickly. To get additional ad dollars, however, one big provider of TV content and a prominent digital-media outlet have decided to team up rather than getting dirty in a tug of war.
Toyota Motor has signed on as the launch sponsor of a partnership unveiled in April that will stream video content from NBCUniversalās various properties on AOLās āOnā outlet that works online, via mobile app and on sundry broadband outlets. The idea, said Dionne Colvin-Lovely, national director of traditional and new media for Toyota Motor Sales, is to place the companyās commercials alongside high-quality content that is delivered to all the places where younger consumers might see it.
āMillennials are more likely to consume content on a mobile device than in front of a TV on the sofa,ā she said in an interview. āWhen we reach people in an online space, we are reaching a light television viewer, and we know we are minimizing the duplicationā of efforts already achieved with traditional TV commercials.
Is it a first? A major marketer is admitting that it uses both TV and digital and needs to find smart ways to mix the two. Consumers demand āa seamlessnessā between high-quality video from companies like NBCUniversal and access to it through digital venues like AOL, said Colvin-Lovely. Toyota is sort of ābuying the Venn diagramā by agreeing to advertise in a venture that mixes different media, said Bob Lord, president of AOL Inc, in an interview.
Neither Lord nor Linda Yaccarino, chairman of advertising sales and client partnerships at NBCUniversal, would comment on how much Toyota was spending on the initiative. But Lord qualified the money as āextra spendā beyond what either company secured with the automaker individually.
The NBCUniversal content made available through the AOL partnership includes clips from shows such as āThe Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon,ā āSaturday Night Live,ā āThe Blacklist,ā and suits āSuits,ā as well as content from its news properties such as āMorning Joe,ā and āThe Rachel Maddow Show,ā and Hispanic programming, including āAl Rojo Vivoā and āUn Nueva Dia.ā As part of the distribution deal, AOL receives exclusive access to clips from āThe Biggest Loser,ā āWatch What Happens Live,ā āThe Profitā and āAmerican Greed. Under terms of the pact, NBCU and AOL have been exploring ways of having AOL personalities appear on certain NBCU programs and are expected to co-develop and co-produce original streaming-video series that can appear in outlets that either one operates.
Toyota will sponsor the aforementioned programming, but will also attach its promotions to new ideas that could spin out of the NBCU-AOL collaboration. Those could include long form videos or content tailored for mobile audiences, said Colvin-Lovely, the Toyota executive. The deal was borne out of the digital ānewfronts,ā a series of Spring pitches from digital-media companies to Madison Avenue, he said.
Toyota has advertised with both companies for some time. The automaker has, for example, sponsored an annual summer concert series shown on NBCās āTodayā and has also bought ads on AOL properties like Huffington Post, Engadget and TechCrunch.
The deal suggests new types of arrangements that could come to pass as more traditional media companies join forces with or invest in new outlets and upstarts. While the AOL pact was announced in April, NBCU has since that time invested $200 million each in Vox and BuzzFeed, two of the webās better known digital-media outlets. āThese are very strategic partnershipsā that are supposed to boost both companies, said Yaccarino. āItās not about linear versus digital.ā

Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images
September 29, 2015 | 06:00AM PT
Brian Steinberg
Senior TV Editor
@bristei
Ad money, so one prevailing theory goes, is moving from TV to online video ā and quickly. To get additional ad dollars, however, one big provider of TV content and a prominent digital-media outlet have decided to team up rather than getting dirty in a tug of war.
Toyota Motor has signed on as the launch sponsor of a partnership unveiled in April that will stream video content from NBCUniversalās various properties on AOLās āOnā outlet that works online, via mobile app and on sundry broadband outlets. The idea, said Dionne Colvin-Lovely, national director of traditional and new media for Toyota Motor Sales, is to place the companyās commercials alongside high-quality content that is delivered to all the places where younger consumers might see it.
āMillennials are more likely to consume content on a mobile device than in front of a TV on the sofa,ā she said in an interview. āWhen we reach people in an online space, we are reaching a light television viewer, and we know we are minimizing the duplicationā of efforts already achieved with traditional TV commercials.
Is it a first? A major marketer is admitting that it uses both TV and digital and needs to find smart ways to mix the two. Consumers demand āa seamlessnessā between high-quality video from companies like NBCUniversal and access to it through digital venues like AOL, said Colvin-Lovely. Toyota is sort of ābuying the Venn diagramā by agreeing to advertise in a venture that mixes different media, said Bob Lord, president of AOL Inc, in an interview.
Neither Lord nor Linda Yaccarino, chairman of advertising sales and client partnerships at NBCUniversal, would comment on how much Toyota was spending on the initiative. But Lord qualified the money as āextra spendā beyond what either company secured with the automaker individually.
The NBCUniversal content made available through the AOL partnership includes clips from shows such as āThe Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon,ā āSaturday Night Live,ā āThe Blacklist,ā and suits āSuits,ā as well as content from its news properties such as āMorning Joe,ā and āThe Rachel Maddow Show,ā and Hispanic programming, including āAl Rojo Vivoā and āUn Nueva Dia.ā As part of the distribution deal, AOL receives exclusive access to clips from āThe Biggest Loser,ā āWatch What Happens Live,ā āThe Profitā and āAmerican Greed. Under terms of the pact, NBCU and AOL have been exploring ways of having AOL personalities appear on certain NBCU programs and are expected to co-develop and co-produce original streaming-video series that can appear in outlets that either one operates.
Toyota will sponsor the aforementioned programming, but will also attach its promotions to new ideas that could spin out of the NBCU-AOL collaboration. Those could include long form videos or content tailored for mobile audiences, said Colvin-Lovely, the Toyota executive. The deal was borne out of the digital ānewfronts,ā a series of Spring pitches from digital-media companies to Madison Avenue, he said.
Toyota has advertised with both companies for some time. The automaker has, for example, sponsored an annual summer concert series shown on NBCās āTodayā and has also bought ads on AOL properties like Huffington Post, Engadget and TechCrunch.
The deal suggests new types of arrangements that could come to pass as more traditional media companies join forces with or invest in new outlets and upstarts. While the AOL pact was announced in April, NBCU has since that time invested $200 million each in Vox and BuzzFeed, two of the webās better known digital-media outlets. āThese are very strategic partnershipsā that are supposed to boost both companies, said Yaccarino. āItās not about linear versus digital.ā