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The Sell Sider

  • The Role Of SSPs Is Changing. Here’s How They Can Adapt

    SSPs had traditionally been among the first in the ad tech ecosystem to build profitable businesses. But their future in the programmatic tech stack is uncertain because they’ve evolved from publisher-centric technologies to demand aggregation businesses, often competing with their biggest customers: buy-side platforms or DSPs.

  • Rob Beeler, founder and CEO at Beeler.Tech

    Publishers, Your Top Ops Talent Needs Your Attention

    Publishers’ operational success depends on the abilities of a few specific individuals. If you have amazing operations leaders that can think strategically, you can do things other publishers can’t. But lose that leadership and the company’s future prospects take a hit, writes Rob Beeler, founder and CEO at Beeler.Tech.

  • Andrew Rosenman, VP, head of partnerships and strategy, advanced TV, Equativ

    Seller Defined Audiences Benefit Buyers, Sellers and Consumers

    In theory, there is a lot a publisher may know about how audiences interact with their content that doesn’t fit neatly into the way cookies operate or the broader categorization schemas that are used today. This is where SDAs can make all the difference, writes Andrew Rosenman, global product marketing lead for advanced TV and video at Equativ.

  • Oleksii Borysov, VP of product at MGID

    For Seller-Defined Audiences To Work, Publishers Need Better Classification

    In recent months, the IAB Tech Lab’s seller-defined audiences (SDA) have rapidly emerged as a strong contender for privacy-compliant audience classification. But many publishers still rely on time-consuming, manual processes to assign categories to their content, writes Oleksii Borysov, VP of product at MGID.

  • Steve Guenther, VP of digital auditing services, Alliance for Audited Media

    Unlike Beauty, Web-Traffic Quality Is Not Subjective

    Publishers that don’t buy traffic don’t usually have a problem, but even what you might call “good” or scrupulous publishers do have some invalid traffic, says Steve Guenther, VP of digital auditing services at the Alliance for Audited Media.

  • Lauren Fisher, GM of business intelligence at Advertiser Perceptions.

    Identity Is Driving The Convergence Of Programmatic Supply And Demand

    Supply-path optimization remains a hot industry topic. Increasingly, advertisers and publishers see the value in SPO to get closer to one another’s audiences. But identity is stoking the fire on the convergence of programmatic supply and demand, writes Lauren Fisher, GM of business intelligence at Advertiser Perceptions.

  • Kean Graham, CEO and founder, MonetizeMore

    A Recession Is Coming. Publishers Must Prepare Now

    In Q2 of 2022, ad tech witnessed a slowdown in scaled deal activity (almost 60%). The reason? Global inflation, the Russia-Ukraine war, rising interest rates and the prospect of a recession are just a few factors. But what does this mean for publishers in particular, and how can they prepare? Kean Graham, CEO and founder, MonetizeMore, offers his perspective.

  • Google’s Privacy Sandbox Is Open For Testing – So, Why Are So Few Testing It?

    Everyone in our industry has been on the edge of their seat since Google first began developing the Privacy Sandbox more than three years ago. But things have been moving slowly, writes Lukasz Wlodarczyk, VP of programmatic ecosystem growth and innovation at RTB House. The cookieless future is virtually here, and the time to experiment with alternatives is now.

  • Hamza Kourimate, VP and global head of sales marketing and data solutions at Dailymotion

    Dailymotion Is Putting All Its Eggs Into Contextual

    Forget the post-cookie future. For Dailymotion, user-based targeting is already a thing of the past. Hamza Kourimate, VP and global head of sales marketing and data solutions at Dailymotion, spoke to AdExchanger on how the video platform is using its first-party data trove to build a contextual framework for video.

  • Comic: The New Netflix And Chill

    Introducing Advertising Logistics – A New Approach For A More Observable Programmatic Ecosystem

    As technology and industry self-regulation converge to make supply and demand path optimization more seamless and efficient, we need a better name to describe optimization across the advertising ecosystem, writes Stephen Johnston, CTO of PubWise. “I’d like to submit for your consideration a new term: advertising logistics.”

  • Karthic Bala, executive vice president of data, product and technology at CNET, a Red Ventures brand

    For CNET’s EVP Of Data, Protecting Privacy Is More Important Than Monetization

    First-party data will be indispensable in a world without third-party-cookies. But before publishers can monetize that data, they need to respect it, said Karthic Bala, executive vice president of data, product and technology at CNET, a Red Ventures-owned publisher that covers tech and consumer electronics.

  • Brands Need To Accept Responsibility For Keeping Consumer Data Safe

    While Google’s recent decision to extend the life of third-party cookies for another year didn’t come as much of a surprise, it nonetheless sent another ripple throughout the ecosystem. As we enter a future focused on restoring consumer trust, the past few years have seen a ton of changes to the digital advertising landscape, writes Mark Pearlstein, CRO of Permutive.

  • Stop Wasting Your Ad Spend On Made-For-Advertising Publishers

    There’s a new TLA (“three-letter acronym”) that’s crept into the media-buying conversation. MFA: Made-for-advertising content. MFA is a combination of paid traffic, clickbait and other incentivized traffic, engineered to create ad impressions and generate revenue. New sites pop up virtually overnight with millions of impressions, sucking up ad dollars and hurting campaign performance, writes Tal Almany, VP of publisher development at Kargo.

  • Why The Death Of Cookies Could Thwart Diversity Efforts

    Hardly a week goes by without a marketer or an investor declaring their interest in committing more support to minority-owned media. But the timing is unfortunate, writes Lashawnda Goffin, CEO of Colossus SSP. Just as brands are ready to shift more dollars toward minority audiences and publications, the death of third-party cookies is making those audiences harder to zero-in on.

  • Brendan Spain, VP of Advertising, Americas at the Financial Times.

    Why The FT Says Open Web Programmatic Isn't Worth Its Attention

    The Financial Times has long avoided chasing open web programmatic ad revenue. Now, with signal loss prompting a renaissance for contextual targeting and direct deals – and with momentum behind attention metrics, of which the FT was an early proponent going back to 2015 – the publisher’s longtime strategy seems prescient. Brendan Spain, the FT’s VP of advertising for the Americas, spoke with AdExchanger.

  • Apple’s Lockdown Mode Could Be A Preview Of Protection To Come

    Apple made an announcement that might have digital advertising ramifications sooner than news about the company’s DSP. Apple’s forthcoming “Lockdown Mode” can protect consumers from illicit activity and unwanted tracking. But it’s designed for a specific group of individuals vulnerable to attacks – plus, it can impact functionality in a way most users won’t tolerate.

  • How Publishers Can Meet The Buy-Side’s Demands For ‘Cruelty-Free’ Ad Environments

    The programmatic ecosystem is so complex and opaque that bad actors are able to game the system to fund hate and social harm. Now, advertisers are getting more concerned about funding harmful activity through ad fraud and high-velocity disinformation within social and programmatic ecosystems, writes Sarah Bolton, EVP of business intelligence at Advertiser Perceptions.

  • Retailers Are Publishers Now And They Need Better Ad Tech

    Brands without scalable first-party data are turning to retailers to connect directly with customers. At the same time, writes Andreas Reiffen, CEO of Crealytics, retailers are seeking ways to combat margin pressure, emulate Amazon’s extraordinary advertising success, deepen relationships with brand partners, and better understand their customers. Cue the retail media boom. 

  • Bill Drolet, Enthusiast Gaming CRO

    Marketers Don’t Get Gaming, And Enthusiast Wants To Help

    For Enthusiast Gaming, a publisher that specializes in ad-supported gaming content and game development, macroeconomic trends have contributed to a perfect storm. But Enthusiast is looking at the bright side, as advertiser interest in game-related properties is on the rise. Enthusiast CRO Bill Drolet talked to AdExchanger about gaming’s cross-platform value proposition, plans for continued direct sales growth, early forays into in-game advertising and more.

  • LGBTQ+ Censorship On Social Networks Needs To Stop

    The LGBTQ+ community is the fastest-growing minority group in the US, accounting for over 20% of Gen Z. Yet, to date, social platforms have not fully embraced and supported our community. Across popular social networks like Facebook and TikTok, queer creators face censorship and potential legislation to limit their rights, writes Lauren Zoltick, director of performance marketing at Storyblocks.

  • Brands Are Wary Of News – It's Up To News Publishers To Change Their Minds

    Marketers are often mission-driven. But too often, when informing the public through news and information is of utmost urgency, marketers choose to steer clear not just from bad or hot-button issues, but from all news content entirely, choking off potential revenue for news enterprises and doing a disservice to the public good, writes Dev Pragad, CEO of Newsweek.

  • To Survive, Publishers Have To Focus On Building Trust

    Multiple threats to the ad tech industry make navigating forward complicated, writes Rob Beeler, Founder and CEO of Beeler.Tech. But as “fun” as it is to bet on what dooms us, might I suggest we start placing bets on what saves us? For publishers, the way forward lies in revenue diversification and building real trust with consumers.

  • Advertisers Have An Environmental Responsibility

    All ad tech activities, from buying impressions to processing data, require electricity. And it’s estimated that the Internet’s overall environmental impact is around 2%-4% of global carbon emissions, which is on par with the airline industry. But there’s a very real opportunity to ignite real, long-term change that can benefit all stakeholders involved, writes John Goulding, global chief strategy officer at MiQ.

  • Matt Young, CRO at Recurrent

    Why Digital Media Company Recurrent Is Prioritizing PMPs And M&A

    Investment firm North Equity has amassed a portfolio of established media brands like Popular Science, Field & Stream and Saveur with a few new media upstarts mixed in, including The Drive, Task & Purpose, Donut Media and MEL Magazine. In 2021, North Equity launched Recurrent Ventures as its media division. Its CRO, Matt Young, spoke with AdExchanger about Recurrent’s acquisition strategy, its ambitions in CTV and gaming and why the company is prioritizing its private marketplace business to reduce its reliance on open web programmatic.

  • Post Third-Party Cookies, You’ll Need This First-Party Media Monetization Checklist

    One of the most overlooked caveats around the shift to first-party assets is that no successful monetization strategy can be built in isolation. A future-facing media monetization strategy must work in two concentrical contexts: within the media owner’s environment itself and within the advertising environment, writes Alessandro De Zanche, audience and data strategy consultant.

  • Can Standardized Content Taxonomies Level The Playing Field For Publishers?

    Scale. That’s the dirty five-letter word that keeps advertisers and agencies spending their budgets with Google and Meta. Even the largest and most prestigious publishers can’t come close to delivering that kind of scale. But one area where publishers have an advantage over the duopoly is content.

  • Publishers Deserve To Be A Priority For Ad Tech

    Digital media is undergoing rapid evolution. However, from CTV adoption to industry protocols around user privacy, growth and innovation tend to focus first on advertiser challenges, writes Andrew Smith, SVP of publisher products at DoubleVerify. Publishers need a seat at the table, too, he said, rather than being forced to make do with limited resources and bridge gaps in tech stacks.

  • Google’s Topics API Picks On Smaller Publishers

    Google recently began testing Topics API, the latest part of its Chrome Privacy Sandbox. It’s a significant improvement over FLoC, but it leaks audience information from trustworthy sites and enriches large platforms at the expense of niche or independent sites – especially sites that invest time and skill to cover categories in detail, writes Don Marti, VP of ecosystem innovation at CafeMedia.

  • Five Reasons Why Ad Networks Just Won’t Die

    For years now, the digital advertising industry has been talking about the premature death of the ad network, writes Omri Argaman, chief growth officer at Zoomd. But there’s a reason why ad networks have survived for so long – they have standardization and massive reach, and are primed to become major growth engines for certain channels (such as in-app and mobile gaming) compared with programmatic exchanges.

  • As Ad Tech Consolidates, Publishers Need To Tread Carefully

    Ad exchanges used to be a regular feature of the ad tech landscape. Now? You can hardly find a stand-alone ad exchange because other ad tech players (including SSPs) and ad servers rolled all the exchanges into their service suites. And consolidation is a system in which the best company doesn’t always win, writes Jayson Dubin, CEO of Playwire. Publishers can protect themselves in the midst of disruption by taking a few easy steps.

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