Home Ad Exchange News Ad Tech’s New Favorite Acronym Is RMN; Google And Amazon Staff Up On Trade Group Know-How

Ad Tech’s New Favorite Acronym Is RMN; Google And Amazon Staff Up On Trade Group Know-How

SHARE:

Here’s today’s AdExchanger.com news round-up… Want it by email? Sign up here.

Stores Of Value

From regional chains to the largest department and grocery stores, seemingly every retailer is in the retail media network business. 

Retail ad spend forecasts have leapt to $25 billion and more. Except those numbers mostly track Amazon’s growth, plus a relatively marginal contribution by every other retailer. 

Now that retailers are in the advertising platform market, there’s an ad tech feeding frenzy to lock in accounts early in the retail growth phase. 

Uber just introduced new sponsored placements in Uber Eats, which CPG brands can use to target people as they’re finishing an order. 

PepsiCo, Uber Eats’ pilot brand, has always targeted shoppers at the cash register – with in-the-moment buys like chips and beverages. That hasn’t changed, except now Uber Eats checkout is the cash register (where a buyer can be enticed with add-ons). 

Criteo won the ad tech contract for Uber Eats, per the release, in addition to the Best Buy Ads third-party ad tech prize last September. 

Also this week, Instacart Carrot Ads, Instacart’s ad tech suite that retailers license to set up ad platforms for their own sites and apps, locked in specialty food chain Sprouts.

Working The Working Groups

Amazon and Google laid off tens of thousands of employees in the past six months or so, including from their ad platform tech and sales groups. But Big Tech still has a voracious appetite for execs who know the ad tech industry and the key working groups, mainly in the IAB Tech Lab and W3C, where ad industry standards are forged.

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

Get our editors’ roundup delivered to your inbox every weekday.

Kelly MacLean, a longtime leader of monetization product engineering groups at Meta, was just poached by Amazon as VP of the DSP business, Insider reports. Before that, she was an IAB board member for a year and a half. 

Google, meanwhile, hired Alex Cone as senior product manager for Privacy Sandbox last month. Cone was an IAB designate from AppNexus, where he was director of product management, then spent two years in leadership roles at the IAB Tech Lab. 

Google also added Victor Wong, previously of Meta and Walmart, to lead product management for advertising technology products within the Privacy Sandbox.

Who Wins The Silver Screen?

YouTube and the broadcast TV industry have sparred for years over what constitutes “premium video” or what is considered “TV advertising.”

That came to a head recently, as broadcasters formed a united joint industry committee (JIC) to settle on standards for TV and online video ad measurement.  

YouTube is user-generated content and mostly short vids monetized by even shorter ads of six seconds. Television networks with nationally branded programs and 30-second commercials feel different enough that they don’t want inventory in the same bucket. 

YouTube contends that much of its inventory, especially what it packages as premium, can actually have higher production value than TV or streaming. 

However, “o​​ne startling statistic shows how YouTube is now unequivocally the king of TV,” The Information reports, with 45% viewership rate on actual TVs. 

Google and the broadcasters may bandy about the definition of TV, but viewers set their own standards. More and more, the thing they’re watching on the TV screen is … YouTube. 

But Wait, There’s More!

Agency relationships with Amazon evolve as they adapt to retail media opportunities. [Digiday]

“We have no moat, and neither does OpenAI”: How open source generative AI and chat software could swamp Microsoft and Google. [SemiAnalysis]

EBay’s chief product officer on growing the legacy marketplace. [Modern Retail]

Apple has put its product supply chain in the hands of the Chinese government. [Financial Times]

First-Party Sets, a much-awaited Chrome Privacy Sandbox proposal, will begin its testing rollout with the next Chrome update. [Developer’s blog]

IPG’s Magna signs up for Comscore’s local TV ratings data. [TV Tech]

You’re Hired!

ThinkAnalytics names Jo Kinsella, co-founder of TVSquared, as strategic advisor. [B+C]

Outbrain announces many new senior leadership appointments. [release]

The Atlantic hires Tyler Watson as EVP of marketing. [release]

Emily Plunkett Fleischer is US director of AdGreen, a new role and organization funded by Ad Net Zero’s founding supporters. [release]

Must Read

Google filed a motion to exclude the testimony of any government witnesses who aren’t economists or antitrust experts during the upcoming ad tech antitrust trial starting on September 9.

Google Is Fighting To Keep Ad Tech Execs Off the Stand In Its Upcoming Antitrust Trial

Google doesn’t want AppNexus founder Brian O’Kelley – you know, the godfather of programmatic – to testify during its ad tech antitrust trial starting on September 9.

How HUMAN Uncovered A Scam Serving 2.5 Billion Ads Per Day To Piracy Sites

Publishers trafficking in pirated movies, TV shows and games sold programmatic ads alongside this stolen content, while using domain cloaking to obscure the “cashout sites” where the ads actually ran.

In 2019, Google moved to a first-price auction and also ceded its last look advantage in AdX, in part because it had to. Most exchanges had already moved to first price.

Thanks To The DOJ, We Now Know What Google Really Thought About Header Bidding

Starting last week and into this week, hundreds of court-filed documents have been unsealed in the lead-up to the Google ad tech antitrust trial – and it’s a bonanza.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

Will Alternative TV Currencies Ever Be More Than A Nielsen Add-On?

Ever since Nielsen was dinged for undercounting TV viewers during the pandemic, its competitors have been fighting to convince buyers and sellers alike to adopt them as alternatives. And yet, some industry insiders argue that alt currencies weren’t ever meant to supplant Nielsen.

A comic depicting people in suits setting money on fire as a reference to incrementality: as in, don't set your money on fire!

How Incrementality Tests Helped Newton Baby Ditch Branded Search

In the past year, Baby product and mattress brand Newton Baby has put all its media channels through a new testing regime for incrementality. It was a revelatory experience.

Colgate-Palmolive redesigned all of its consumer-facing sites and apps to serve as information hubs about its brands and make it easier to collect email addresses and other opted-in user data.

Colgate-Palmolive’s First-Party Data Strategy Is A Study In Quality Over Quantity

Colgate-Palmolive redesigned all of its consumer-facing sites and apps to make it easier to collect opted-in first-party user data.