Smart TV Makers Try Alt IDs; Podcast Ad Revenue Slumps
Smart TV makers are starting to adopt The Trade Desk’s UID 2.0. Plus: Podcast advertising revenue growth slows down.
Smart TV makers are starting to adopt The Trade Desk’s UID 2.0. Plus: Podcast advertising revenue growth slows down.
Only a small handful of identity solutions will still be standing within the next five years, according to ID5 CEO Mathieu Roche – and he intends ID5 to be one of them.
A weekly comic strip from AdExchanger.com that highlights the digital advertising ecosystem…
Despite their perilous position, some companies still aren’t preparing for the end of third-party cookies. But the lack of testing isn’t because they aren’t concerned.
Ad industry veteran and event stage mainstay Amanda Martin is taking on a new role as Mediavine’s SVP of partnerships and business strategy. Martin will be moving from the buy side to the sell side after a nearly eight-year stint at ad agency Goodway Group.
The alternative ID landscape is incredibly fragmented. So how are publishers – especially long-tail publishers that tend to be strapped for tech resources – supposed to pick the ID solutions that work best for them?
The advertising and ad technology industries undergo a major landscape shift every five years or so, and we’re in the middle of a seismic change with third-party signal loss. As with every exploration and monetization of a new frontier, the next era of digital advertising requires a recommitment to shoulder-to-shoulder collaboration, writes Bob Walczak, CEO of MadTech Advisors.
Well, here’s the most ad techy thing ever: Clean room platform InfoSum is integrating with Unified ID 2.0 to expand how advertisers can use their first-party data in the bidstream. Omnicom Media Group is one of the first buy-side partners planning to take advantage of the integration.
There’s an industry-wide scramble to replace third-party cookies – but it’s unreasonable to expect that just one solution will become a silver bullet, writes Garrett McGrath, SVP of product at Magnite. Solving for identity will require a range of solutions and more involvement on the sell side.
Earlier this month, ESP, not to be confused with PPIDs, entered open beta in GAM, so feel free to rev up your UID2s. In English: Google is moving forward with its solution, called encrypted signals from publishers (ESP), that allows publishers to share encrypted first-party signals, including Unified ID 2.0 identifiers, with buy-side platforms of their choosing via Ad Manager. Here’s the DL on all things ESP.