
Programmatic Boom and AI Growth: How Streaming Ads and CTV Reshape Digital Marketing in 2025
28.04.2026
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In the past 48 hours, the advertising industry shows robust growth in programmatic and connected TV sectors despite regulatory pressures. VaynerX launched Tamara Group on April 27, a production-led agency with nearly 100 employees and clients like Ulta Beauty, responding to shifting consumer attention spans.[1] Meanwhile, the FTC ordered WPP, Publicis, and Dentsu to halt alleged brand safety collusion that restricted ads on conservative media, marking a key regulatory shift.[1][5]
Programmatic and CTV momentum surges with fresh partnerships: The Trade Desk inked its first DSP deal with DramaBox on April 26, tapping a projected 3 billion dollar short drama market in 2025 with 250 million monthly users; Teads expanded its LG Ad Solutions pact on April 27 for high-attention CTV in APAC and EU; Magnite deepened ties with Hearst and AMC for web, CTV, and programmatic TV.[3]
Netflix is reshaping streaming ads, dropping CPMs from 60 to low 20s dollars, expanding programmatic via in-house tech—now half its non-live ad revenue—and pushing joint business plans that double advertiser spends.[2] Meta eyes CTV via plug-ins amid AI-driven ad growth, with Q1 2026 revenue projected at 55.5 billion dollars, advertising up 22 percent year-over-year to 38 billion, fueled by tools boosting ROI 32 percent.[7][9]
Leaders adapt boldly: Dentsu bolsters Americas leadership for turnaround,[5] while AI inflates customer acquisition costs by hijacking search traffic, prompting shifts to OTT ads, links, and QR codes.[10] No major supply chain disruptions noted, but private label grocery and household penetration hits 26 percent of unit volume, signaling thriftier consumer behavior.[4]
Compared to last week's Meta Q4 2025 earnings—59.89 billion revenue, 24 percent growth—current projections exceed them, with AI offsetting capex pressures amid fierce TikTok rivalry.[7] Overall, innovation trumps headwinds in this dynamic landscape. (298 words)
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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Programmatic and CTV momentum surges with fresh partnerships: The Trade Desk inked its first DSP deal with DramaBox on April 26, tapping a projected 3 billion dollar short drama market in 2025 with 250 million monthly users; Teads expanded its LG Ad Solutions pact on April 27 for high-attention CTV in APAC and EU; Magnite deepened ties with Hearst and AMC for web, CTV, and programmatic TV.[3]
Netflix is reshaping streaming ads, dropping CPMs from 60 to low 20s dollars, expanding programmatic via in-house tech—now half its non-live ad revenue—and pushing joint business plans that double advertiser spends.[2] Meta eyes CTV via plug-ins amid AI-driven ad growth, with Q1 2026 revenue projected at 55.5 billion dollars, advertising up 22 percent year-over-year to 38 billion, fueled by tools boosting ROI 32 percent.[7][9]
Leaders adapt boldly: Dentsu bolsters Americas leadership for turnaround,[5] while AI inflates customer acquisition costs by hijacking search traffic, prompting shifts to OTT ads, links, and QR codes.[10] No major supply chain disruptions noted, but private label grocery and household penetration hits 26 percent of unit volume, signaling thriftier consumer behavior.[4]
Compared to last week's Meta Q4 2025 earnings—59.89 billion revenue, 24 percent growth—current projections exceed them, with AI offsetting capex pressures amid fierce TikTok rivalry.[7] Overall, innovation trumps headwinds in this dynamic landscape. (298 words)
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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