
Captify on Wednesday in partnership with Xandr
announced a tool allowing programmatic buyers to activate live, intent-driven audiences built on billions of real-time searches from global publisher and ecommerce sites. It brings search intent into
the top of the funnel.
This partnership combines Captify’s search-powered audience segments through its Programmatic Search Intelligence (PSI) product with Xandr's inventory. It creates
data sets for brand-awareness strategies that are activated across Xandr's multi-seller video and connected TV (CTV) private marketplaces (PMPs) in what Captify describes as “one of the largest
omnichannel, global exchanges.”
“As brands try to find new customers and compensate for those lost this year, prospecting is a major challenge,” said Matthew Papa, SVP
of global partnerships at Captify.
advertisement
advertisement
By buying data from private marketplaces that include search-powered audiences with premium inventory, the goal is to give media buyers confidence in where
their ad dollars are spent.
Up until now, search data hasn’t had a role to play at the top of the funnel, and that's what makes this really unique, Papa said.
Publishers,
retailers and data providers often have valuable data assets they are not monetizing effectively due to the lack of existing sales channels that offer the commercial control they want with the
programmatic tradability that buyers demand, said Ben Keen, senior director of product management at Xandr.
They are looking for ways to efficiently transact business to reach the widest
demand and maximize margins. They want to be able to sell their packages to any buyer on any demand-side platform (DSP).
These publishers, retailers and data providers want control of
their data to monetize on their own terms without having to share it with third parties. Some apply different pricing terms per buyer or packaging offers across sales channels such as combining
digital advertising and in-store promotions.
When asked whether Google’s switch to using Cohorts -- a group of users who share a common characteristic to target ads -- affects Xandr
Curate, Kneen said, adding that the technology relies on first-party data, rather than identifiers.
This opens a new approach to identity, as Xandr Curate solves for fragmentation of inventory
that may occur in the future by enabling publishers to overlay their first-party data onto individual deals for demand-side platforms (DSPs) to targets that contain multiple sources on inventory, he
said.