Bryan Score |
Mr. Wiener is currently executive chairman of Dentsu Inc. -owned ad and media agency 360i, and he has been on comScore’s board since October 2017. ComScore has been without a CEO since November, when co-founder Gian Fulgoni retired from the position.
In his new role, Wiener will be charged with turning the business around following a string of accounting crises and losses.
In a March regulatory filing, the company reported that it incurred net losses of $281.4 million in 2017, $117.2 million in 2016 and $78.2 million in 2015, in addition to disclosing restated results for 2014 and 2013 that also amounted to losses. The SEC is investigating allegations regarding “revenue recognition, internal controls, non-GAAP disclosures and whistleblower retaliation,” according to the filing. “We are cooperating fully with the SEC,” comScore said in the filing.
“The worst is behind us,” Mr. Wiener said in an interview. “The last two years were a very difficult time. It was hard to innovate at the speed we wanted to innovate with that cloud over our head.”
Now, comScore’s goal is to create excitement and provide the marketplace with a third-party referee that can help brands measure media performance across digital and traditional platforms, he said. Wiener’s plan is to streamline operations that are too complex and inefficient, focus on building products that support cross-platform measurement and sell comScore to the industry in a more compelling way.
ComScore is one of only a few large companies that measure media consumption. Nielsen, the largest player in the industry, has a stronghold on national TV viewing, with its metrics serving as the currency in transactions between ad buyers and sellers. ComScore tracks local TV, digital publishing and digital ads, as well as film performance. Ad holding company giant WPP has about a 20% stake in comScore.
No comments:
Post a Comment