CTV Archives - Digital Content Next Official Website Tue, 02 Dec 2025 21:16:24 +0000 en-US hourly 1 Programmatic momentum is widening CTV revenue potential https://digitalcontentnext.org/blog/2025/12/08/programmatic-momentum-is-widening-ctv-revenue-potential/ Mon, 08 Dec 2025 12:23:00 +0000 https://digitalcontentnext.org/?p=46471 Connected TV (CTV) continues to evolve, with ad views surging as streaming becomes the default way to watch premium content. This rapid expansion is being fuelled by ongoing technical innovation...

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Connected TV (CTV) continues to evolve, with ad views surging as streaming becomes the default way to watch premium content. This rapid expansion is being fuelled by ongoing technical innovation that creates more opportunities for publishers and buyers. Programmatic capabilities are unlocking new inventory and broadening access for advertisers of all sizes, while emerging ad formats deliver stronger viewer engagement and a more seamless experience. 

Live streaming is also propelling CTV forward. With streaming platforms placing greater emphasis on live content – and the Winter Olympics and men’s football World Cup due to take place in 2026 – CTV is primed for sustained momentum. But what are the trends that are powering the current CTV boom, and how can stakeholders take full advantage of its success?  

Streaming’s popularity is fueling CTV’s growth 

The popularity of streaming services is a key factor behind the growth of the CTV opportunity. According to Nielsen data, the first half of 2025 saw streaming’s highest share of digital and TV viewership in the US at 46%. Over the same period, premium video ad view growth on streaming platforms across the US and Europe combined was up 27% year-on-year, the 1H Video Marketplace Report from FreeWheel shows.   

And connected TV devices are where the vast majority of streaming ads are being seen. In the US, 85% of streaming ad views are on CTV, compared to 9% on mobile or 3.5% on desktop. In Europe, where STB VOD is more common – particularly with France’s large IPTV sector – CTV still leads the way, accounting for 48% of ad views, compared to 21% on mobile or STB VOD. Overall, the number of ad views in 2025 on CTV devices grew significantly year-over-year (YOY), rising by 8% in the US and 31% in Europe.  

It’s clear that by offering audiences a high-quality viewing experience and a diverse range of content through streaming platforms, CTV has firmly established itself as the primary device for ad consumption in the premium video category. Media owners that want to further build on their streaming offering should make CTV a strategic priority. 

CTV boosts inventory value 

For streaming platforms, CTV offers some distinct advantages not least a large screen experience providing a highly immersive environment for advertising. But its ability to boost inventory value is critically important in a crowded digital advertising space. This is realized at different levels.  

  1. Audience insight: With viewers often needing to log in on their devices, streaming apps know where and who their audience is, and can utilize various consented data points to help advertisers refine their targeting, increasing the value of their inventory. 
  2. Measurement: CTV gives buyers visibility into actual outcomes beyond impressions and reach, from engagement to brand lift and conversions; making it easier for content providers to ensure the campaign reaches the intended audience, which further boosts inventory appeal.  
  3. Targeting: CTV’s robust content foundation enables smarter, privacy-safe contextual targeting. By aligning ad creative with the content viewers are already engaged in, CTV boosts relevance, resonance, and results. Research from our FreeWheel Viewer Experience Lab found that viewers report twice the engagement when ads are relevant, and brand recall significantly increases with contextual alignment. 

In particular, the benefits of contextual alignment can go further. By tagging keywords using a standardized taxonomy, such as the IAB Content Taxonomy, publishers can achieve scalability and simplified ad execution. When combined with programmatic, this approach can further transform contextual advertising into a seamless targeting solution, noticeably increasing content’s value for advertisers. 

Programmatic opens up premium inventory to new advertisers 

An increasingly big part of the appeal of CTV for advertisers is the ability to deliver ads programmatically to streaming viewers. The Video Marketplace Report shows that there has been a major rise in programmatic ad views, growing 44% YOY in Europe and by 29% YOY in the US. Overall, programmatic now represents 30% of ad delivery in the premium video ecosystem in the US, while in Europe it stands at 19%.  

The significance of programmatic’s expanding influence in streaming is that it is opening up premium video to a new cohort of advertisers, including SMEs. While in the past, TV advertising was seen largely as a way to build brand awareness (and required big budgets) today brands looking to drive performance-based outcomes are increasingly utilizing programmatic delivery to reach specific CTV audiences.  

Data shows a 14% YOY rise in the number of unique advertisers leveraging automated delivery; and they are reaping the rewards, with new-to-programmatic advertisers achieving 29% more ad views than those who entered the market in the first half of 2024. This highlights a compelling reason for publishers to tap into this increased demand for programmatic; in turn, they can increase their pool of advertisers, lessening the risk of ad fatigue for audiences from repetitive ads and improving the viewing experience.   

The importance of live environments 

Programmatic is also transforming ad delivery for live content. In the US, the majority (56%) of ad views happen in live environments due to the popularity of live sports coverage and FAST (Free, Ad-supported Streaming TV) channels. In Europe, more than three-quarters (76%) of premium video ad views are in VOD content, though growing distribution between direct-to-consumer (DTC) and FAST channels has seen the share of live environment ad views grow. Particularly in the UK, FAST is rapidly growing as audiences increasingly enjoy the familiar, ‘live’ experience of linear TV through digital devices.  

With tentpole live events on the agenda in 2026, including the men’s football World Cup, the Winter Olympics, the Super Bowl and more, there’s a major opportunity for publishers to tap into live programming and continue to open up access to their inventory and audiences through programmatic. 

Now, to truly take advantage of the opportunities that CTV brings, streamers need to ensure the buying process is as simple as possible. Traditionally, buying for TV has been a complex undertaking. For buyers used to digital channels such as social and display, straightforward and efficient access to addressable media is key. In turn, this will increase efficiency for publishers.  

With advertisers, particularly new-to-programmatic ones, seeing results from their spend in this area, platforms must focus on unlocking more content in this way to diversify their strategies and put themselves at the forefront of innovation in CTV. While publishers’ investments in monetization and technology are paying off, there’s still plenty of room to further extend automated delivery across VOD and live inventories. And with a wider pool of advertisers and support for diversified and innovative ad formats, the viewing experience can be greatly enhanced too.  

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Programmatic confusion is holding CTV back – can we fix it? https://digitalcontentnext.org/blog/2025/09/22/programmatic-confusion-is-holding-ctv-back-can-we-fix-it/ Mon, 22 Sep 2025 12:26:00 +0000 https://digitalcontentnext.org/?p=46004 If you read the latest analyst forecasts or industry headlines, a clear narrative emerges: programmatic is taking over connected TV. The reality is more complex. While automated deliveries are indeed...

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If you read the latest analyst forecasts or industry headlines, a clear narrative emerges: programmatic is taking over connected TV. The reality is more complex. While automated deliveries are indeed growing, programmatic’s role in CTV remains widely misunderstood – and sometimes overstated.

This matters for media owners. Confusion around definitions and measurement can distort investment decisions, complicate yield strategies, and cloud how some publishers position their ad inventory in a rapidly evolving market. Understanding where programmatic fits, and where it doesn’t, is essential for anyone making decisions about CTV monetization.

The latest FreeWheel Video Marketplace Report (VMR) found that over 70% of streaming ad views are still delivered directly, outside of programmatic channels. At the same time, some industry forecasts suggest that over 80% of CTV spend is already programmatic. The gap between these figures highlights a deeper problem: the industry still lacks a shared way of defining and measuring programmatic in CTV.

Why the disconnect exists

Programmatic, at its simplest, is about automation. Yet in everyday use, the term has stretched so far that it now covers almost everything. This can include everything from open exchange bidding and private marketplaces to programmatic guaranteed deals, and even digitized versions of old-style insertion orders.

This broad application muddies the waters. For example, guaranteed CTV buys executed through programmatic channels may be classified as programmatic, even though they behave more like direct transactions. At the same time, some forecasts group together very different formats, such as in-stream, outstream, and social video. all under the CTV umbrella. The result is an inflated picture of programmatic’s footprint in premium CTV environments, which has resulted in a narrative that does not always reflect the actual transactions taking place.

For media owners, the problem isn’t just about definitions. It directly affects how buyers perceive value, how inventory is packaged, and how technology investments are prioritised. When “programmatic” can have four or five different meanings, publishers risk being evaluated against expectations that do not align with the real economics of their supply.

CTV is not display, and not linear

Part of the challenge is that CTV doesn’t fit neatly into existing categories. It isn’t digital display, and it isn’t traditional TV. Instead, it combines TV living-room style viewing with digital-style automation.

That in-between status has consequences. Budgets often get split between TV and digital teams, leading to competing KPIs and conflicting expectations. Agencies with more established brand clients may prioritize guaranteed premium placements, while performance-led advertisers may lean towards real-time optimization. Both want automation, but they mean very different things when they use the word “programmatic.”

And then there are publisher realities. Premium inventory is finite. Direct deals remain the backbone when it comes to revenue and they allow tighter control over both supply and the viewing experience. Adding programmatic layers can introduce extra costs and unnecessary operational complexity. Not to mention ongoing issues with signal loss, fraud, lack of transparency, and inventory duplication which all make it harder to trust the open exchange. The idea of pushing all CTV into this model simply doesn’t reflect how premium video is bought and sold today.

The impact of language and alignment

A serious stumbling block for the industry is not the technology but the terminology. “programmatic” is being used to describe multiple, fundamentally different transaction models. Without clearer definitions, buyers and sellers risk building toward different futures. That leaves publishers in a difficult position. Do they double down on auction-based infrastructure, channel resources into tools that support direct guarantees, or try to straddle both? Without greater industry alignment, even the most carefully designed strategies can end up misfiring.

Buyers, too, grow wary when CTV is labelled as “programmatic” but still depends on direct negotiation. The result is a disconnect between expectation and reality. That, in turn, can hold back spend, despite CTV’s growing share of consumer attention. The confusion makes it harder for publishers to position their inventory correctly, and for buyers to evaluate its true value.

A more grounded future

A large share of premium CTV deals still happen within closed publisher ecosystems, using formats and configurations that escape conventional measurement tools. The real challenge isn’t just automation – with the risk of mirroring the display advertising model – it’s figuring out how to make programmatic truly fit CTV without reinforcing the fragmentation that already limits transparency and scale.

This will mean new models that reflect the economics of television, rather than forcing CTV into frameworks designed for other channels. It will also mean new tools that allow publishers to maintain supply control while offering buyers efficiency, better transparency, and the ability to tailor how they transact.

For media owners, progress requires pressing for greater alignment on terminology, more transparency in measurement, and continued investment in infrastructure that supports both efficiency and control. The challenges are real. But so are the opportunities.

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Who’s streaming and how to appeal to audiences https://digitalcontentnext.org/blog/2025/04/29/whos-streaming-and-how-to-appeal-to-audiences/ Tue, 29 Apr 2025 11:23:00 +0000 https://digitalcontentnext.org/?p=45044 Differences in international and generational media preferences inform evolving technology and industry patterns and continue to keep things interesting in 2025. Conventional media categories are becoming more fluid, inviting new...

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Differences in international and generational media preferences inform evolving technology and industry patterns and continue to keep things interesting in 2025. Conventional media categories are becoming more fluid, inviting new opportunities. A new report by Nielsen Media Analytics, the 2025 Global Media Planning Guide, provides actionable insights.

Overall, an accelerating trend is the convergence of multiple platforms – from streaming services to social media. This presents significant challenges:

  • Adapting to current generational media preferences. Different age groups engage with media uniquely across various markets, calling for customized strategies.
  • Understanding international users’ media habits. Media trends and the pace of transition differ across countries, requiring flexible approaches.
  • Harmonizing traditional and digital media. It’s essential to allocate investments effectively across established and emerging platforms.

Streaming audiences vary internationally

According to Nielson’s data, traditional TV remains the dominant choice among older U.S. audiences and some countries outside of the U.S., while U.S. residents in general, and younger audiences around the world, are gravitating increasingly towards digital media. Connected TV (CTV) reach has steadily surpassed live and time-shifted TV reach over the past few years, but total use of the television has remained steady since the first quarter of 2022, demonstrating its resilience.

The specifics vary significantly across global markets, however. Take Poland versus the U.S., for example. In the U.S., CTV devices and streaming services have become the dominant viewing method. Whereas, in Poland, traditional TV remains the primary viewing platform. Only about 8% of total viewing time in Poland was spent on streaming in the first half of 2024, according to the Nielson data. In the U.S., streaming accounted for around 40% of TV viewership during the same period.

Americans spent about half of their TV viewership on broadcast and cable combined. In Poland, the combination of satellite and cable amounted to almost two-thirds of viewing time. U.S. audiences spent 38% of their time on streaming- significantly more than Polish viewers at 22%. The data emphasizes the need for flexible global media strategies, with traditional and digital platforms coexisting to meet diverse audience preferences.

Streaming audiences vary across generations

As younger audiences worldwide gravitate toward digital media, older generations retain their preference for traditional television. In the U.S., individuals aged 2-34 spend more than 60% of their TV viewing time on streaming platforms. Those ages 50-64 spent well over half of their time on broadcast and cable TV as opposed to streaming, while those 65+ spent fully 75% of their viewing time on broadcast and cable TV combined, and less than a quarter on streaming media.  

In Thailand, a similar pattern prevails, with adults over 40 preferring TV to social media or video streaming platforms. Gen Z shows the lowest preference for traditional TV viewership of all age groups in Thailand (47%), favoring digital alternatives, whereas the 55+ demographic exhibits the highest linear TV viewership (62%), according to Nielson’s data.

However, it’s important to note that older viewers generally watch significantly more total TV compared to younger audiences. This holds true in the U.S. as well as Thailand, where all types of media have a greater reach among older audiences. According to a recent Deloitte report, Boomers spent an average of 3.5 hours per day watching TV shows and movies on streaming video services, cable, or live-streaming TV, while Gen Z audiences spent about 2.1 hours per day on those activities.

This dynamic has implications not only for how content is consumed but also how it is created, delivered, and marketed. As digital natives grow up, they are driving a new era of on-demand streaming, mobile media consumption, and personalized content algorithms. Meanwhile, the media industry must continue to accommodate older people, who remain loyal to traditional formats and are often heavy consumers of media. For example, older generations are more likely to keep their cable or satellite TV subscriptions long-term, while Generation Z and millennial cable subscribers are more than twice as likely to indicate that they plan to terminate their subscriptions within the year, according to Deloitte’s 2025 Digital Media Trends report.

Why some audiences still prefer linear TV

Linear TV retains some advantages in addition to the loyalty of older and international audiences, as pointed out by Vijya Amirtham on VPlayed. It is conducive to live events, such as sports, games, and award shows, which have massive appeal to large audiences. Linear TV also enables targeting by advertisers based on channel, genre, and airtime. Viewers tend to find TV ads more credible, especially on trusted channels, and are conditioned to expect ads when watching linear TV. Amirtham also asserts linear TV audiences “are predominantly associated with affluent groups.”  

Boundaries between traditional TV and digital media are blurring with the evolution of Cloud TV and Over-the-Top-Television (OTT)- traditional TV content such as series and movies watched over the internet. These technologies are enticing viewers by combining the benefits of linear TV and more fluid digital mediums that offer on-demand viewing and are sometimes free of traditional ads. Amirtham recommends developing a linear TV app as one method for media leaders to expand and enhance audience engagement.

Maintaining and growing audiences

As DCN previously reported, younger generations are gravitating towards streaming services and social platforms and away from traditional TV. However, while media companies keep a keen eye on Gen Z trend-shapers, it is also wise to accommodate mature and international audiences, who are loyal and heavy consumers of traditional media formats.

For media leaders, it’s still too soon to abandon linear—if the goal is to reach the widest audience possible. Instead, deliver integrated solutions that merge linear TV and streaming assets, while working to enhance cross-platform integration. Effective strategies across age groups, international markets, and media platforms will depend on accurate measurement, outreach, and partnerships. The growing convergence of platforms invites opportunities to cultivate deeper connections with viewers around the world.

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CTV growth brings opportunities for the media – and audiences https://digitalcontentnext.org/blog/2025/04/14/ctv-growth-brings-opportunities-for-the-media-and-audiences/ Mon, 14 Apr 2025 12:01:00 +0000 https://digitalcontentnext.org/?p=44959 Streaming video has become a daily habit for today’s consumers, with 2024 being something of a landmark year for the industry. Worldwide, audiences flocked to streaming platforms in unprecedented numbers...

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Streaming video has become a daily habit for today’s consumers, with 2024 being something of a landmark year for the industry. Worldwide, audiences flocked to streaming platforms in unprecedented numbers to watch their favorite content and sporting action like the Olympics, Euro 2024, the World Series, the WNBA, and high-profile boxing matches.

Alongside technological advancements, CTV has established itself as the primary platform for premium viewing experiences, which has increased the popularity of live streaming for major events. This presents lucrative opportunities for media owners aiming to succeed in their ad-supported streaming ventures.

The latest FreeWheel research offers insights into these industry dynamics, exploring ad viewership trends across the premium video streaming ecosystem in European countries* and the U.S. for the second half of 2024. In this article, we’ll dig deeper into the findings to uncover how these trends impact media stakeholders and how they can make the most of streaming’s developments.

Scaling live opportunities with CTV

The continued adoption of connected television is driving strong streaming viewership, including live programming. NBCUniversal’s exclusive U.S .coverage of the Paris Olympics, for instance, saw an 82% increase in viewership across multiscreen TV compared to the Tokyo 2020 Games, while Warner Bros. Discovery’s coverage in Europe grew by four times. The WNBA 2024 season was the most streamed in Paramount+ history. And Netflix’s exclusive live stream of the fight between Jake Paul and Mike Tyson in November 2024 attracted 108 million global viewers.

It’s easy to see why live programming is also transitioning to streaming platforms. Live streaming can meet modern-day viewers’ desire for immediacy, convenience, and universally engaging experiences. Live streaming also expands traditional TV’s engagement potential to audiences with diverse needs and unique preferences.

In many cases, these needs involve watching live programming from the comfort of their own homes and simultaneously being able to enjoy social experiences with family and friends. CTV devices now account for 77% of premium video ad views for live programming in Europe, demonstrating how CTV has evolved into a class of its own, capable of delivering both high-quality viewer experiences and results for content distributors.

Our data also shows that while still relatively small, programmatic transactions are growing strongly, with 37% in the US and 40% in Europe. This type of transaction will continue to expand as rising investment in programmatic is opening up new inventory opportunities.

Harnessing VOD’s flexibility

FreeWheel’s research shows that in the US, the majority of ad views (57%) were on live content, with the remaining 43% on VOD. In Europe, however, VOD captured the majority of ad exposure, 76%, compared to 26% of live programming.

This preference for VOD in Europe can be partly explained by the historical presence of free public service broadcasters (PSBs) and the prevalence of operator authentication in the region. In the U.S., the tendency is towards OTT distribution, which accounts for 65% of ad-supported content that is consumed.

Publishers are harnessing the flexibility of on-demand to further monetize their video inventory. And while VOD offers various monetization models, including subscription-based access (SVOD), pay-per-view (TVOD), and advertising-based access (AVOD), it’s the latter category where we’re seeing impressive growth. verall ad viewership on streaming platforms in the second half of 2024 was up by 24% year-on-year in Europe compared to 10% in the US.

Going beyond with interactivity

Our report also identifies interactivity as a potential growth area. The digital nature of streaming and CTV means they are primed for interactive viewer experiences that media owners and advertisers can utilize to boost engagement. The use of ad formats such as QR codes, clickable ads, and trivia quizzes are becoming more common to drive engagement at all stages of the marketing funnel.

Beyond helping brands to make more meaningful connections with consumers, interactive ads present an opportunity for media owners to capture deeper insights on how audiences interact with content and the ads. This offers a better understanding of which formats and approaches work – and which don’t.

Video, by its very nature, is never static. But these latest innovations are ushering in a new, golden age of video. CTV in combination with interactivity creates the ideal conditions to deliver a new genre of ads that can flow with the content to enhance viewer engagement and enjoyment. Harnessing streaming’s next phase of evolution will be critical to ensure content providers, advertisers and their agencies keep innovating and delivering new exciting experiences for the viewers.


*The data set used for the FreeWheel Video Marketplace Report H2 2024 is one of the largest available on the usage and monetization of professional, rights-managed ad-supported video content worldwide and is based on aggregated advertising data collected through the FreeWheel platform. The European countries included are Belgium, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom.

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2024 in review: Trends in digital media monetization https://digitalcontentnext.org/blog/2024/12/11/2024-in-review-trends-in-digital-media-monetization/ Wed, 11 Dec 2024 12:22:00 +0000 https://digitalcontentnext.org/?p=44235 As 2024 comes to a close, it’s clear that this year has been defined by transformative shifts in how publishers and broadcasters approach digital media monetization. From advancing privacy-first strategies...

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As 2024 comes to a close, it’s clear that this year has been defined by transformative shifts in how publishers and broadcasters approach digital media monetization. From advancing privacy-first strategies to adapting to the dominance of Connected TV (CTV), the industry has shown resilience and innovation.

Looking back, these pivotal moments offer valuable lessons, while also pointing toward the priorities for 2025:

1. Brand safety took center stage

In 2024, publishers prioritized brand safety, recognizing its essential role in maintaining trust with advertisers and audiences. Advanced contextual targeting tools, coupled with stringent editorial standards, helped build confidence in ad placements. As content environments become more complex, this focus on safety and transparency will deepen in 2025, with publishers investing in more precise, AI-powered brand safety solutions to enhance advertiser confidence.

2. Sustainability became non-negotiable

This year saw sustainability move from a “nice-to-have” to a “must-have.” Publishers adopted greener technologies and committed to measurable ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) goals. Advertisers partnered with eco-conscious media outlets, aligning campaigns with consumer demand for responsible practices. In 2025, sustainability metrics like carbon impact will become more sophisticated, and partnerships around ethical advertising will deepen.

3. Subscription models found their groove

2024 solidified the role of subscription models as a key revenue driver. Publishers balanced subscription growth with ad-supported strategies, creating hybrid models that appealed to a broader audience base. Enhanced user experiences, including personalized content and seamless interfaces, became the standard. Heading into 2025, these strategies will be refined to further integrate advertising and subscription revenue streams without sacrificing user satisfaction.

4. The Cookieless landscape remained in transition

Despite Google cancelling the phaseout of third-party cookies, publishers prepared diligently for a cookieless future, which–regardless of the future of cookies–was not a bad thing. First-party data ecosystems matured in 2024, with publishers focusing on fostering direct relationships with audiences to enhance consented data collection. Contextual targeting gained momentum as a privacy-compliant alternative to behavioral targeting. In 2025, publishers will double down on these efforts, enhancing collaboration within industry consortiums to scale identity solutions and ensure consistent audience addressability.

5. Algorithms challenged publishers yet again

Platform algorithm changes disrupted referral traffic and revenue streams throughout 2024, prompting publishers to seek greater independence from big tech. Many pivoted to direct traffic strategies, premium content offerings, and diversified revenue streams. Looking ahead, 2025 will likely see media companies make an increased push toward leveraging first-party data for direct monetization and strengthening collaborations with advertisers on transparent revenue-sharing models.

6. CTV dominated the monetization landscape

Connected TV (CTV) solidified its role as a top revenue driver for broadcasters and publishers in 2024. With programmatic capabilities maturing and advertisers shifting budgets to CTV, the sell side capitalized on high-impact formats and premium inventory. Heading into 2025, cross-platform measurement tools will gain prominence, addressing fragmentation and unifying reporting across linear, CTV, and digital platforms to maximize revenue opportunities.

7. Interactive and video content drove engagement

Interactive and video content stood out as key formats in 2024, delivering higher engagement and monetization opportunities for publishers. Shoppable video, gamified experiences, and dynamic storytelling resonated strongly with audiences and aligned with advertisers’ goals. In 2025, publishers will explore more immersive formats like augmented reality (AR) and metaverse integrations to maintain their competitive edge and deliver differentiated ad experiences.

8. Privacy-first innovations gained momentum

Stricter global privacy regulations spurred publishers to adopt privacy-by-design strategies in 2024. Building robust consent management frameworks and exploring privacy-preserving technologies, such as federated learning and differential privacy, allowed publishers to continue providing actionable insights while protecting user data. In 2025, these innovations will become integral to the sell-side toolkit, as publishers work to balance data privacy with advertiser demands for precision targeting and measurement.

9. Commitment to supply path optimization (SPO) grew

Publishers focused on providing greater transparency into their inventory through tools like ads.txt and sellers.json, bolstering trust with advertisers. Supply path optimization (SPO) became a cornerstone strategy for reducing inefficiencies and maximizing revenue. In 2025, publishers will continue to refine their SPO strategies, emphasizing collaboration with trusted partners and leveraging advanced fraud detection tools to ensure quality ad experiences.

10. Enlisting support for quality journalism became critical

In 2024, publishers emphasized the critical value of quality journalism, recognizing its role in fostering trust, user loyalty, and timely access to reliable news. With global elections drawing attention, traditional news sites stood out for delivering brand-safe environments, engaged audiences, and measurable performance. 

Teads’ “Value of Traditional News” study highlighted a strong correlation between ad attention and upper-funnel brand outcomes, revealing a 77% lift in brand outcomes when ads appeared alongside trusted news content. As we move into 2025, supporting journalism must remain a cornerstone for advertisers and publishers, driving long-term value and reinforcing the vital role of trusted information in democracies worldwide.

Looking forward to 2025

As we turn toward 2025, the themes of trust, sustainability, and innovation will remain paramount. Publishers and advertisers who focus on privacy-first strategies, advanced contextual advertising, and cross-platform collaboration will be well-positioned to navigate the challenges and opportunities ahead.

Expect to see further advancements in AI-driven creative optimization, more sophisticated approaches to audience addressability, and a continued push for transparency across the entire digital advertising ecosystem. By building on the lessons of 2024, industry leaders can drive meaningful connections with audiences while maximizing monetization opportunities.

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What neuroscience reveals about successful CTV ads https://digitalcontentnext.org/blog/2023/09/26/what-the-neuroscience-reveals-about-successful-ctv-ads/ Tue, 26 Sep 2023 11:29:00 +0000 https://digitalcontentnext.org/?p=40245 In the evolving advertising landscape, the shift from traditional linear television to digital platforms offers new ways for marketers to reach their audiences. However, while advertisers have new tools and...

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In the evolving advertising landscape, the shift from traditional linear television to digital platforms offers new ways for marketers to reach their audiences. However, while advertisers have new tools and techniques to target audiences, viewers are confronted with ads that disrupt their viewing experience, feel irrelevant, or annoy them. And new research uses neuroscience to demonstrate how context and tone affect advertising’s impact in CTV environments.  

Integral Ad Science (IAS) and Neuro-Insight’s new study, The Mind on the Stream, explores how advertisers can enhance the relevance of their CTV ads through tone and context. The research shows an increase of 14% in brand impact when the ads match the tone of the content viewed on CTV. Ads that match the context of the content experience show a significant boost in brand impact, +39%. Moreover, ads that match tone and context result in a greater significant increase of 49% in brand impact.

Matching advertising with content’s tone and context

The study includes a cohort of 137 participants in a controlled environment simulating an ad-supported streaming experience. All participants watch the same program content. During this simulated streaming experience, participants see 20 ads from 20 known brands across various verticals, including food/beverage, telecommunications, entertainment, finance, and consumer packaged goods (CPG). The ads vary in terms of length and narrative style.

The research tests the ads in two ways: tone/context and frequency.

Group 1 participants undergo tone and context variations, where some ads match the show’s context, some match its tone, and some match both tone and context.

  • Tone matches when advertisers ensure that their ads align with the overall feeling or voice of the content they accompany. In this study, since the program content is humorous, the research examines the impact of running ads that are also humorous.
  • Context matches when there’s a thematic or tangible connections between an ad and the program content. For instance, if the show features basketball, a contextually matched ad would also incorporate basketball elements.

Group 2 participants encounter different ad frequencies, with some ads appearing once, twice, three times, or four times during the program.

The study includes several metrics to measure the impact between Group 1 and Group 2 exposures.

  • Detailed memory measures ad memorability and brand impact by analyzing how well viewers retain specific details from the ads.
  • Emotional intensity gauges the emotional impact of the ads on viewers, with high scores indicating a strong emotional connection.
  • Global memory assesses how well viewers remember the visual, audio, and thematic elements.
  • Engagement measures the personal relevance of ad content to viewers.
  • Approach/Withdraw identifies the “lean in” or “I want to learn more” response from viewers, indicating likeability and overall positivity or negativity towards the ads.

Ad frequency

Interestingly, viewers overall show lower interest in ads repeated multiple times on CTV. However, ads that align with the video content mitigate the negative impact of repetition and perform better among viewers despite increased frequency. While brand impact remains consistent through the third viewing of a CTV ad, the fourth viewing results in a significant decline of 26%. This emphasizes the importance of limiting ad frequency to three viewings to preserve viewer connection and comprehension.

Advertisers and streaming publishers can optimize their ad strategies and drive better results when matching ad tone and context with the content viewed on CTV. The study also underscores the critical role of ad frequency in viewer engagement. By embracing contextual targeting, marketers and publishers have an opportunity to shift ad budgets and deliver impactful results in the digital advertising landscape.

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Here’s why publishers should be thinking about CTV revenue https://digitalcontentnext.org/blog/2023/08/07/heres-why-publishers-should-be-thinking-about-ctv-revenue/ Mon, 07 Aug 2023 11:28:00 +0000 https://digitalcontentnext.org/?p=39809 Once again, the media world has found itself in belt-tightening mode. A number of high-profile media companies have announced layoffs, and ad spend has grown more slowly in 2023 than...

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Once again, the media world has found itself in belt-tightening mode. A number of high-profile media companies have announced layoffs, and ad spend has grown more slowly in 2023 than in the previous few years. Publishers are looking for revenue streams beyond subscription packages – and for those who have video content, CTV offers a lot of promise. 

After all, CTV is where the growth is, in terms of ad spend and audience. For publishers that are already monetizing video on desktop and mobile, CTV is the most intuitive next step for diversifying revenue. For those that aren’t monetizing their video content yet, that’s all the more reason to jump into CTV.

In terms of both viewership and the influx of ad dollars, CTV is growing like gangbusters. Streaming CTV ad spend is tracking to reach $23 billion by 2026 – a double-digit increase from today. Streaming video consumption has surpassed linear TV, as experts had predicted, and there will be 3.5 users of over-the-top (OTT) streaming services globally by 2027. 

Right now, the audience growth is coming from ad-supported tiers, which is an ad inventory source so desired by brands that supply can’t keep up with demand. This sure sounds like a field day for the Netflixes and Hulus of the world. But while the largest streaming platforms get the lion’s share of attention in the industry trades, they won’t be – and, considering demand, can’t be – the sole beneficiaries of this influx of ad spend.

Power to the content owners

According to industry experts, more than 90% of CTV ad spend coming through DSPs goes to around 30 streaming platforms. That’s a much larger number than the handful of big names that get name-dropped most frequently in CTV conversations. Not many of these platforms own all, or even most, of their content outright. They source it through deals with other media creators. And those creators have a distinct advantage: They reserve the rights to sell ads on their content. Streaming services don’t have exclusivity in the same way as the publisher who creates the content. 

Clearly, media companies stand to benefit greatly by partnering with CTV services for video syndication. There are two types of publishers who can most easily grab those ad dollars: those that already stream their content on CTV, and those that have video content on their owned and operated properties that they’re not monetizing via CTV yet. 

We’ve heard about leading publishers who have launched their own video apps on CTV services including The Economist, Vox, the Wall Street Journal, and the Washington Post. But across the broader landscape of publishers who produce the high-quality video content advertisers crave, there’s a great untapped opportunity for ad revenue. 

Good news for publishers: The bar for entering the CTV space isn’t nearly as high as it was a few years ago. Free ad-supported streaming TV (FAST) services have democratized access to the streaming ad market, as it’s not nearly as costly as developing a subscription app – the means of access in the days before FAST. 

Publishers who already have the video content can launch their own channels across multiple CTV platforms and devices, at a reasonable cost. For the great many publishers who already have experience syndicating video across social channels, it’s an intuitive move and it opens up inventory that delivers higher CPMs, is more desirable to advertisers than pre-roll on the video players hosted on publishers’ own digital properties, and presents opportunities for advertisers to connect with viewers in a wider variety of viewing environments and viewer mindsets. 

CTV calls for a strong data strategy

Expanding to CTV will be an easier task for publishers who partner with data platforms that offer flexibility and interoperability. The limited availability of actionable, scalable first-party data remains a pain point not only for advertisers, but for publishers looking to get into streaming. This presents challenges in working across streaming platforms and devices, which have their own data but are reticent to share it. To drive the most revenue, publishers will want to be able to connect their data with any of their ad partners who need it for campaign optimization. That means the ability to solve for identity, and to provide interoperability, are essential pieces of the puzzle.

A solid, well-applied data strategy opens up key advertising functions like cross-platform targeting, frequency capping, and personalization at scale. Publishers don’t have to consider themselves out on their own in sourcing the necessary data, though. Streaming device makers are one place to look, although publishers may need to match the device makers’ proprietary IDs for actionable cross-platform insights. Using IP as a proxy (common in CTV) enables measurement in CTV, although IP may not be the best proxy in other digital environments, or for targeting at the individual level. Demographic, location, behavioral, and other data from data providers will enable programmatic buying, and incentivize advertisers that want the scale and efficiency of programmatic. 

To get the most value from CTV, publishers benefit from having a capacity to break down data silos and unify all identifiers (and the data signals used for ID enrichment). This opens up access – access to inventory for buyers, and to new revenue for publishers. It also allows for targeting across the broader ad ecosystem, while limiting wasted spend. 

A strategy that unifies data from relevant sources, and the ability to solve for identity, enhances a publisher’s value proposition to advertisers in CTV. It presents a great revenue opportunity for publishers. And delivering the value of actionable data insights is central to deepening long-term relationships with advertisers.

Making the most of the opportunity

At this stage of the CTV marketplace’s growth, there’s a real opportunity for any creator with quality video content. Therefore, publishers should be taking advantage of their video libraries. To fully capitalize on those advantages, they’ll need to be able to access and fully leverage the data that advertisers are looking for. 

Publishers who can bring both to CTV will be in a better position to weather economic unpredictability that may come to the digital media marketplace in coming months and years. Resilience hinges upon the ability to vary revenue sources, reach new audiences, and capitalize on an ever-expanding viewer base. And a strong data strategy, based on bringing together data from all relevant sources, will be key to truly realizing the revenue potential CTV holds. 


About the author

For over a decade Hunter has held and managed a variety of sales, consulting, and partnership positions in Advertising/Marketing Technology (#MADtech) throughout the US, Southeast Asia, and Australia. Currently based in Baltimore/DC after six years in the Asia Pacific, Hunter leads Lotame’s Connected TV initiative focusing on household graphing, viewership data partnerships, and data enrichment throughout various supply and demand channels.

Prior to his current role, Hunter led Lotame’s Global Solutions Consulting team solving leading marketer and publisher challenges through identity resolution and data enrichment methods. Additionally, Hunter has helped expand the Lotame Sales and Account Management teams in their Singapore and Sydney offices during his tenure in APAC.

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How video providers can create a compelling CTV ad experience https://digitalcontentnext.org/blog/2023/07/17/how-video-providers-can-create-a-compelling-ctv-ad-experience/ Mon, 17 Jul 2023 11:29:00 +0000 https://digitalcontentnext.org/?p=39554 Audiences can now choose from a veritable buffet of advanced TV channels. Viewers can feast on their favorite shows via broadcaster catch-up services, online social video aggregators, free ad-supported streaming...

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Audiences can now choose from a veritable buffet of advanced TV channels. Viewers can feast on their favorite shows via broadcaster catch-up services, online social video aggregators, free ad-supported streaming services (FASTs) and Smart TV apps, video-on-demand, and addressable linear. According to the recent Streaming Video: CTV Uncovered 2023 study from  AudienceXpress, 46% of UK connected TV (CTV) viewers surveyed also tuck into free streaming platforms daily to watch content.

So, how can broadcasters and premium video providers ensure the advertising experience captures these viewers’ attention? The latest consumer insights from AudienceXpress reveal current audience preferences to inform best practice; here are the biggest takeaways from the full study.

What’s on the CTV menu for UK audiences?

Understanding viewing habits is imperative for premium video providers when creating their content offerings. Almost U.K. CTV participants in the AudienceXpress study, for instance, state they watch more free ad-supported streaming platforms than live broadcast TV. To capture this audience, some broadcasters are diversifying their business models to include different platforms and models.

Viewers appear to prioritize accessing premium content over using specific platforms or channels; 59% of UK CTV audiences surveyed tune in to free on-demand platforms, including FASTs, when nothing on traditional TV channels grabs their interest. While these ad-supported advanced TV platforms are rapidly gaining traction among viewers, it is important to note that the AudienceXpress study also found that broadcasters’ live TV (37%) and catch-up services (35%) continue to attract a significant proportion of viewers, reaffirming that the main driver of platform success is content. As such, media buyers are looking to connect with viewers across all touchpoints, with advanced TV channels enabling them to drive incremental reach and capture the attention of elusive audiences.

Sharing personal data leaves a bitter taste for many viewers

According to the Streaming Video: CTV Uncovered 2023 study, only 26% 26 U.K. respondents with a CTV screen are comfortable sharing their personal data with brands in exchange for more personalised TV advertising. Data sharing seems to be on top of mind for U.K. viewers. (This could possibly be a ripple effect from major web browsers’ removal of third-party cookies.) Although this shift does not impact the TV and premium video advertising ecosystem directly, it requires media owners to keep privacy-conscious viewers front of mind when refining their advertising operations.

Audiences’ views on data privacy will continue to shape the future of premium video advertising and many remain cautious about how their data is used. For this reason, TV and premium video providers need to uphold audience trust. They can do this by being transparent about data practices. They must also clarify why advertising is critical for making premium content more accessible to video-hungry viewers and for funding new, quality productions, as well as leveraging data to cook up a compelling and relevant advertising experience.

With that in mind, which elements of advertising resonate best with U.K. CTV viewers?

Create an appetizing ad experience

Despite being apprehensive about sharing data, audiences still appreciate some degree of targeted advertising. Almost one third (32%) of U.K. CTV participants in the AudienceXpress study prefer ads that harmonize with the context of the content they watch, one in four prefer ads based on their geolocation, and one in five like ads relevant to their personal interests.

Capturing attention could likely be the ad industry’s top priority as many advertising environments become saturated. In fact, ad volume can make or break the viewing experience with seven in 10 UK CTV respondents feeling there are too many ads on social video aggregators. It is important that TV and premium video providers continue to carefully manage their ad volumes using advanced digital capabilities to further enhance the advertising experience through frequency capping and ad podding.

Nearly six in 10 U.K. CTV respondents also affirm that when accessing free premium video and TV-like content on their CTV screen, they would prefer pre-roll style ads with no ad breaks afterwards. It is necessary for TV and premium video providers to account for this and balance sustaining a quality ad experience with helping advertisers meet their KPIs and attracting greater spend.

In addition, almost three-quarters of these CTV viewers surveyed indicate that they pay more attention to advertising on premium on-demand TV platforms compared to social media or video aggregators. Through ensuring their advertising experience is contextually relevant and features long-form ads with high-impact creative, TV and premium video providers can secure high levels of attention that increase the value of their inventory.

As the advertising landscape is rapidly evolving, TV and premium video providers need to continually taste-test how their advertising experiences and business models align with audience habits. With in-depth insights of the current market, they can plate up successful offerings that meet the expectations of viewers and media buyers, define best practices for advanced TV advertising, and secure an essential valuable delicacy — audience attention.

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Technology moves fast. Automation helps publishers keep up https://digitalcontentnext.org/blog/2023/03/22/technology-moves-fast-automation-helps-publishers-keep-up/ Wed, 22 Mar 2023 11:34:00 +0000 https://digitalcontentnext.org/?p=38402 Technology is an essential tool for enabling efficiency in today’s fast-paced media landscape. This is especially true of new media platforms—including retail media networks, connected TV (CTV), and streaming services—whose rapid growth...

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Technology is an essential tool for enabling efficiency in today’s fast-paced media landscape. This is especially true of new media platforms—including retail media networks, connected TV (CTV), and streaming services—whose rapid growth has left publishers with little time to reevaluate and optimize their ad monetization processes. Most of these platforms are utilizing legacy ad ops processes as a result, the majority of which are highly manual and not suited for the pace of digital media.

The consequences of this trend have led to mounting challenges for publishers, including delivery delays, higher error rates, increased makegoods, and slower revenue recognition processes. To eliminate these inefficiencies and enable growth at scale, publishers must leverage automation. If your business struggles to keep pace with the rapid evolution of new media and ad revenue models, here’s how automation can help you streamline your manual workflows and future-proof your ad ops processes.

Out with the old, in with the new

The ad ops processes that have worked for long-standing, traditional publishers cannot meet the needs of today’s modern digital media players. They need to be run continuously to keep up with rapidly evolving ad revenue models, which is challenging because they employ time-consuming manual processes such as audience targeting and data analysis.

Unfortunately, many media players continue to adopt these legacy workflows because they have been the norm for so long and are the path of least resistance. But this is simply not sustainable. The demand for targeted audience reach, coupled with the speed at which these platforms are growing, means that workflow inefficiencies will only increase. At the same time, ad ops teams are put at a major disadvantage because they typically work on parallel campaigns across multiple platforms and ad servers. This creates siloed and fragmented data and makes tracking and analyzing campaign metrics extremely difficult.

Automating manual processes is the key to eliminating workflow inefficiencies and increasing productivity. It’s also essential for enabling career growth and professional development. When ad ops teams use automation to relieve members of repetitive and menial tasks such as data entry and reporting, they can turn their attention to the higher-value jobs that require strategic thought and therefore can only be carried out by human beings. Rather than seeing automation as a threat to job security, it can be viewed as a tool for skill expansion and professional growth.

Using automation to support the foundational needs of media companies

The benefits that both new media and traditional publishers can gain from automation are plentiful and help support three foundational needs:

  • Unity. Automation can integrate internal platforms, improve communication between teams, eliminate data silos, and enhance data visibility.
  • Performance. Automation can streamline manual tasks to reduce errors, makegoods, and delivery delays. It can also boost campaign performance and improve client satisfaction by allowing campaigns to be optimized in flight.
  • Guidance. Automation can be used to develop user-friendly systems that improve internal knowledgeability, as well as create platforms that notify teams of potential errors so they can troubleshoot before mistakes occur.

Automation also helps increase profits by allowing teams to focus on revenue-boosting activities like business growth strategy and client management. It frees them up to run more campaigns, which is a win-win for everyone: Advertisers appreciate the maximized brand exposure, and publishers benefit from the incremental revenue. Finally, automating order-to-cash processes allows for quicker invoicing, which means faster revenue recognition and more cash to reinvest into new business initiatives.

The time to automate is now

While the current economy has forced all industries to do more with less, efficiency has always been a necessity for publishers. Now that advertising has become a key revenue model for new media players, it’s essential for them to leverage technology to enable productivity and scale. The time to automate is now, as artificial intelligence, machine learning, and automation tech become more accessible and affordable. Publishers — especially new media players like retail media networks and CTV companies — must take advantage of this time to implement automation or risk getting left in the dust.

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TV advertising has evolved. It’s time to think like a viewer https://digitalcontentnext.org/blog/2022/10/19/tv-advertising-has-evolved-its-time-to-think-like-a-viewer/ Wed, 19 Oct 2022 11:13:00 +0000 https://digitalcontentnext.org/?p=36748 The advanced TV landscape—including video-on-demand (VOD), connected TV (CTV), OTT and addressable linear TV—has experienced rapid growth and change. We’re also seeing the rise of ad-supported video-on-demand (AVOD) and free...

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The advanced TV landscape—including video-on-demand (VOD), connected TV (CTV), OTT and addressable linear TV—has experienced rapid growth and change. We’re also seeing the rise of ad-supported video-on-demand (AVOD) and free ad-supported streaming services (FAST). As a result, more premium video inventory is becoming available to ad buyers. Luckily, innovation within the advertising ecosystem is beginning to make this more accessible. So, what’s up next for this evolving space?

Seven in 10 UK marketers believe their advanced TV budgets will increase in the coming 12 months, according to the latest survey from AudienceXpress, FreeWheel’s premium video sales house. What’s more, almost nine in 10 respondents intend to spend more on AVOD and FAST.

Ad buyers are investing in the channels where the eyeballs are. But now the industry must go a step further and truly think as audiences do. Content, quality, and connectivity appear to be front of mind for viewers. So, how can marketers also make these a priority?

Audiences only have eyes for content, so ad buyers should too

When viewers tune in to TV and premium video content, they can now access it through a diverse selection of platforms, channels, and devices. The fact that audiences have become more and more fragmented proves that what they watch is significantly more important than how they watch it. 

If ad buyers plan to succeed in the TV advertising landscape, they need to adopt this attitude. By taking a unified approach to advanced TV and premium video, they can shift their focus away from fragmented endpoints and towards what matters most: the audience and what they enjoy watching. To help buyers achieve this, the advertising ecosystem is refining its tools for unified campaign planning, ad buying, and performance measurement. 

New technologies and best practices, such as ad podding, are improving both efficiencies for buyers and the premium video experience for viewers. Advanced contextual advertising, meanwhile, is allowing buyers to connect with audiences through specific topics and genres, as well as combine semantic analysis and keyword targeting to maximize ad relevance. 

While further collaboration is required to accelerate this progress, advanced TV is enabling advertisers to engage typically hard-to-reach audiences through quality content.

Why aggregation is the answer to precise ad targeting

The key drivers of advanced TV spend emphasize marketers’ goal of reaching the best viewers however they consume TV and premium video content. Our AudienceXpress survey found that respondents considered sophisticated audience targeting capabilities as the top growth accelerator for advanced TV, followed by the opportunity to reach viewers across screens. 

Enabling precise ad targeting and allowing buyers to be agile as their audiences move between platforms and devices are therefore highly important for capturing investment. While it may seem paradoxical, aggregation is necessary for this to happen. By aggregating a bigger pool of premium video inventory, the advertising ecosystem can facilitate efficient, streamlined ad buying and deliver desired audiences at scale. 

This again requires buyers and sellers to treat advanced TV channels as viewers do—that is, equally—as they unify their approach to TV advertising. 

Joining the measurement dots

Consolidating measurement across endpoints is as critical to the future of TV advertising as consolidating inventory and audiences. Buyers need a single view of how impactful their ad campaigns are, both while they are running and after they are wrapped up, much like any great TV show. 

Unfortunately, legacy measurement tools and newer alternatives currently struggle with capturing performance across screens and providing ad buyers with a full understanding of campaign impact. Buyers need this to pinpoint the elements of their strategies that are generating the best results and carry out informed campaign optimizations. Additionally, accurate measurement solutions are necessary for effective frequency management, which safeguards against ad fatigue and maintains the quality viewing experience for audiences. 

Greater standardization of advertising metrics is a crucial next step towards unifying measurement. This provides clarity between buyers and sellers, allowing the former to plan, purchase, and optimize all forms of TV inventory and the latter to better communicate the value of their offerings. 

Connectivity will solve complexity 

Speaking the same language across the ecosystem also lays the foundation for better interconnectivity between all players. In turn, this will help tackle complexity, which has become a concern in the rapidly evolving advanced TV landscape. 

Alongside building a shared language, interoperability must be a priority in the year ahead. Technological innovation is critical for overcoming the challenges buyers face with planning, executing, and monitoring advanced TV campaigns. But ensuring these innovative solutions are widely compatible will help make TV and premium video advertising available to all. This will drive growth and progress throughout the ecosystem, letting buyers purchase from bigger pools of aggregated inventory, increase efficiency, and extend their reach, while also allowing publishers to streamline their advertising business models and maximize yield. 

Connectivity is enabling viewers to consume TV and premium video content how they want, when they want. It is also the key to enabling ad buyers to purchase the inventory they want, how they want. Not only is this beneficial to the future of advanced TV advertising, but also to audiences by ensuring they receive the most relevant ads and a quality viewing experience.

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