
David Cohen has been named president-CEO of the Interactive
Advertising Bureau (IAB), succeeding Randall Rothenberg who will remain executive chair through 2022.
Cohen, who becomes the fourth CEO of the IAB -- originally founded in 1996 as the Internet
Advertising Bureau -- joined the trade advertising bureau as president in March after a long career on the agency side, primarily at various Interpublic media units.
Rothenberg, who was
originally supposed to leave the IAB last year, said its board asked him to extend his contract another two years. He said he'll continue working full-time through the end of 2021 and then will serve
on a part-time basis.
He said he plans to consult, serve on company boards and focus on his passion for photography, especially photographing birds and sea life.
"I plan to spend as
much of my time looking under the water and up at the sky," he told MediaDailyNews.
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Rothenberg, who served nearly 14 years as IAB chief, said he considers his greatest accomplishments the
recent development of the IAB's focus on the "direct brand economy," a direct-to-consumer (D2C) marketing category utilizing digital media and platforms to rapidly scale new consumer product
introductions, as well as the IAB's work with other industry trade associations to create standards, guidelines, and a self-regulatory and compliance framework.
He explicitly cited the
formation of the Digital Advertising Alliance (DAA), Trustworthy Accountability Group (TAG), as well as a variety of anti-fraud initiatives.
He also singled out the creation and spin-off of
the IAB Tech Lab as a crucial industry innovation under his watch.
Rothenberg said he believes he is leaving the IAB as a truly cross-industry representative organization that has evolved from
its "sell-side" roots, noting that "advertisers have an equal seat at the table" with more than 200 brand members at the IAB and at least four senior marketing executives on the IAB's board of
directors.
As for the timing of his departure, Rothenberg said he believes we are at "an inflection point, not just for the industry, which is always at an inflection point, but for society
and culture too.
"It is one of the things making me increasingly uncomfortable making all the decisions we have to make for our small company, as well as the industry-at-large."
According to the IAB's 2018 tax filing with the Internal Revenue Service, Rothenberg earned $1,069,490 in salary and other compensation as CEO.
