Home Online Advertising Zeta Global Signs A Deal With IgnitionOne For Its DSP Business

Zeta Global Signs A Deal With IgnitionOne For Its DSP Business

SHARE:

Zeta Global continued its annexation of the demand-side platform (DSP) category on Wednesday, closing a deal with IgnitionOne to take over as its default DSP.

The deal also includes the transfer of some employees and accounts, primarily attached to small and mid-size brands.

Terms were not disclosed.

“It’s an expensive proposition to run a DSP yourself,” said Zeta founder and CEO David Steinberg. “Running a small DSP today is an inefficient business model.”

And so, IgnitionOne is exiting the DSP business, which comes, as Steinberg pointed out, attendant with heavy product maintenance and engineering costs.

Having offloaded its DSP biz, the company is returning to its roots in tech and data services. IgnitionOne completed a spinoff from Dentsu in 2013, three years after the Japanese holding company bought the firm in 2010.

IgnitionOne will continue to operate and provide enterprise data and technology services for holding companies and large brands, Steinberg said. Although IgnitionOne will still construct audiences and run managed media campaigns, its programmatic buys will use Zeta’s DSP.

Zeta has been on a tear recently, signing multiple similar, arguably opportunistic, deals with buy-side technology companies.

Last year, Zeta invested in and then outright acquired Visto (formerly Collective). In April, it snapped up the Sizmek DSP and Rocket Fuel managed media business out of bankruptcy proceedings, and just a few months later took over PlaceIQ’s managed media business, including 20 employees, when the location data company abandoned its DSP to focus exclusively on data sales.

The fact is, the market has dried up for most bespoke DSP providers. Data companies such as PlaceIQ or Drawbridge that launched DSPs have since retreated, and channel specialists for mobile or video have been losing out to more scaled, multi-channel DSPs like The Trade Desk. (Well, mostly they all just lost to The Trade Desk.)

For its part, IgnitionOne raised more than $85 million since 2013, and the company is folding its chances of a DSP exit beyond the deal with Zeta. The partnership does ease IgnitionOne’s annual costs, however, and provides access to Zeta’s data cloud as part of the deal, improving campaign performance for IgnitionOne’s managed media practice without it having to buy data from other sources.

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

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

So, why does Zeta want yet another DSP business when the market simply didn’t pan out for many ambitious early players?

Zeta has been pitching programmatic companies on its approach, Steinberg said, which entails those companies ditching their own inefficient or unprofitable DSPs to run on Zeta’s technology, or to sell off part of the company as part of a larger partnership with its marketing cloud.

Zeta doesn’t have to worry about the high product development investment required to run a DSP, because it has much deeper pockets than programmatic vendors. According to Steinberg, most of Zeta’s revenue comes from software licenses for its data cloud, not the media business, which accounts for less than 10%. This means the company gets value from the DSP as a way to distribute its core data cloud assets even if the media-buying tech isn’t lucrative.

Taking over DSP market share via partnership and/or acquisition is also not as disruptive a process as when other marketing clouds bought their way into new categories, Steinberg said. The painful digestion of new companies by cloud giants like Salesforce and Oracle come about because those clouds need to kludge large, disconnected code bases into one cohesive product.

“With every deal we’ve done we’ve sunset the tech and migrated customers to our stack,” Steinberg said. “We’re not cobbling stuff together.”

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.