The digital ad market is shifting fast. In court, Google admitted the “open web is already in rapid decline,” contradicting its public claims, as AI Overviews erode publisher traffic. The Trade Desk’s stock plunged 12% after Netflix’s Amazon DSP deal, with Morgan Stanley citing CTV headwinds and higher fees. Meanwhile, Reddit is positioning itself as a publisher ally, rolling out Reddit Pro to help offset traffic losses from search. Together, these moves underscore a fractured open web ecosystem: Google under pressure, The Trade Desk undercut by Amazon, and Reddit stepping up as publishers seek new discovery sources.
Connected TV (CTV) is nearing a third of overall TV ad spending as audiences shift attention to streaming platforms, per Madison and Wall. Linear TV still accounts for around two-thirds of overall US TV ad spending, but CTV increased its share by three percentage points YoY (excluding political ads). The path forward for advertisers depends on balance, not an either-or approach. Audience attention will continue shifting to CTV, making it a critical touchpoint—but with ad reach still low on streaming, linear will remain relevant.
The Google Pixel could grow to lead the smartphone market as sales surge, highlighting a strong consumer shift toward devices that balance competitive pricing, cutting-edge AI features, and ecosystem flexibility. The Pixel saw a whopping 105% YoY increase in sales in H1 2025, per Counterpoint Research, while overall global premium smartphone sales grew 8% YoY. Pixel’s growth points to an industry pivot where software-driven intelligence, rather than hardware specs alone, lead consumer choice. The smartphone race could move away from who offers the most storage or fastest processors and toward who delivers the most useful tools for daily life.
OpenAI struck a landmark $300 billion deal with Oracle to build AI data centers across the US, cementing Oracle as a critical partner in the race to scale artificial intelligence. The agreement, part of Project Stargate, covers more than half of the computing infrastructure OpenAI says it will need over the next five years, per The New York Times. AI’s future rests on who can actually deliver compute at scale. Marketers should diversify cloud and AI partners, experiment early, and prepare to shift strategies quickly as winners and losers emerge in this infrastructure race.
In this podcast episode, we discuss retailers’ priorities this holiday period, how they can stand out from the crowd, and how to balance sharp pricing with creating an emotional connection that lasts beyond the season. Listen to the discussion with Vice President of Content and guest host, Suzy Davidkhanian, Principal Analyst, Sky Canaves, and Senior Analyst, Zak Stambor.
What CMOs say they expect to gain from AI: Efficiency and cost savings top the list of perks the industry hopes to gain from the disruptive tech.
China’s deflation shows no signs of going away. The consumer price index (CPI) fell 0.4% YoY in August, more than expected, as the country struggles through its third straight year of slumping prices. With US trade talks yet to yield definitive results, Beijing will have to move from lip service to direct action on the country’s economic problems. But in the meantime, retailers must gird themselves for drawn-out, costly price wars—and make sure they stay attuned to the changing needs, preferences, and desires of Chinese consumers.
US ad revenues grew 10.3% in Q2, excluding political advertising, continuing a trend of steady gains in 2025 despite tariff headwinds, per Madison & Wall. Digital advertising overall grew 15.8% and represented about a 70% share of ad spending. Ad growth is maintaining momentum, but the slowdown from 2024 indicates that advertisers are already becoming more cautious as tariffs and a recession could lead to a demand shock that affects advertising strategies.
Netflix and Amazon Ads have struck a global partnership to bring Netflix’s ad inventory to Amazon’s demand-side platform (DSP) across 12 markets, including the US, UK, France, Japan, and Brazil. The move expands Netflix’s programmatic footprint as it aims to nearly double US ad revenues this year and approach $3 billion globally by 2027. For Amazon, adding Netflix strengthens its DSP’s position; the deal underscores a shift toward centralized TV planning, where Amazon’s DSP increasingly serves as the central gateway for connected TV advertising.
Google and commerce media company Criteo announced an onsite retail media integration on Tuesday, marking the first of its kind for Google and opening opportunities for brands across digital commerce. Criteo and Google’s integration provides clear direction for advertisers struggling to capitalize on retail media’s potential, offering a seamless ecosystem that will connect brands with customers likely to take action.
Holiday sales forecasts for 2025 show wide disparities, with Deloitte projecting slower growth at 2.9%–3.4%, Bain at 4%, and PwC warning of a 5% drop in average spending. Ecommerce is expected to grow, but at a more modest pace than recent years. A cooling labor market, persistent inflation, and weak consumer sentiment weigh heavily on outlooks, especially for lower- and middle-income households, whose spending power lags behind wealthier groups benefiting from wage growth and asset gains. Our view aligns with PwC’s caution, stressing that retailers should prioritize value-driven promotions, loyalty incentives, and strategic October campaigns to navigate an uneven season.
AI platforms are no longer a side note in discovery—they’re driving measurable web traffic. Previsible’s 2025 AI Traffic Report shows that sessions driven by large language models (LLMs) surged 527% in just five months, per Search Engine Land. AI’s rise is reshaping how users find brands and information as web traffic declines, demanding an immediate strategic response from marketers. Those who adapt now—by tracking AI sessions, restructuring content for conversational interfaces, and optimizing across multiple models—will own the next wave of discovery. Those who don’t risk watching competitors capture visibility while their own content fades from discovery altogether.
RaceTrac will acquire sandwich chain Potbelly in a $566 million cash deal expected to close in Q4, with both brands continuing to operate separately. The acquisition boosts RaceTrac’s foodservice offerings at a time when convenience-store meals are driving growth, accounting for nearly 28% of in-store sales in 2024. For Potbelly, going private could accelerate its ambitious plan to expand to 2,000 shops while avoiding public market pressures. The move is a strategic play in the convenience-store foodservice arms race, positioning RaceTrac against competitors like 7-Eleven and Wawa in the battle for meal-focused customers.
Novo Nordisk is cutting 9,000 jobs—11% of its workforce—as it aims to regain its lead in obesity drug sales against Eli Lilly and telehealth companies. The layoffs mark another shift for Novo in a turbulent year. CEO Mike Doustdar is only about a month into the role after the previous CEO stepped down amid plummeting stock prices and sales. Though Novo lost the GLP-1 market lead to Lilly, it can regain ground if its weight loss drug pill gains approval ahead of Lilly’s oral option and executes a strong launch. It should focus on reinvesting layoff savings into commercial efforts for what will be the first GLP-1 pill for weight loss.
President Trump signed a memorandum on Tuesday that instructs HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and the FDA to crack down on direct-to-consumer drug advertising on TV and online channels like social media. While concerning, it’s premature to claim that this is the end of D2C drug advertising. Pharma marketers may find that longer commercials with complete product disclosures are a better fit for digital channels, such as social media and CTV, where consumers are already spending more time. Big Pharma brands also have the budgets to buy lengthier TV spots if they choose. Or companies could work out deals with TV networks in which purchasing ad space becomes cheaper since both sides would be financially motivated to keep running drug commercials during highly-rated programming.
“We have a rule at Liquid Death that if you expect us to do it, we should not do it,” said the brand's chief media officer Benoit Vatere at EMARKETER’s Future of Digital Summit yesterday. Vatere outlined the brand’s paid social challenges, why it’s doubling down on connected TV (CTV), and how it plans to build standout creative as it expands into the crowded energy drink space. Here are a few takeaways from the session.
Major web publishers, including Reddit, Yahoo, Medium, and Quora, are joining forces to push for a new content licensing system for AI publishers. The group is backing Really Simple Licensing (RSL), an open standard that lets publishers dictate how AI bots scrape their content and includes payment and royalty requirements. If publishers’ collective action can successfully enforce licensing terms for content scraping, regulators may follow with broader mandates. Visibility inside generative engines could change, pushing marketers to further prioritize generative engine optimization (GEO) strategies and comprehension of how AI responses source, cite, and surface branded content.
Advertisers are missing opportunities to capitalize on strong connected TV (CTV) engagement from diverse audiences, per LG Ad Solutions’ “The Inclusive Screen 2025” series. Targeting ads to diverse audiences stands to benefit brands by tapping into consumers who are likely to take action when they feel represented—but a tailored strategy over a one-size-fits-all approach is critical.