Leveraging your omnichannel media mix with DOOH and CTV
Connecting with consumers in today’s landscape goes beyond reaching them through a single channel. With changing consumer habits and new privacy regulations affecting an already complex digital environment, it can be difficult for advertisers to successfully reach their audiences without developing a diverse media mix. Fortunately, today’s marketers have more tools at their disposal than ever before.
Two media channels continuing to grow rapidly are Connected TV (CTV) and digital out-of-home. CTV devices like Smart TVs, gaming consoles, Apple TV or Roku, allow viewers to access internet content over top of their traditional screens. Though CTV is hardly a new concept, the pandemic has played a part in fueling its growth as people stayed confined indoors. The OOH industry has also been experiencing significant growth that’s projected to continue throughout 2022 thanks to increased mobility and a certain level of digital fatigue that consumers are experiencing.
So what does this changing landscape mean for advertisers? For many, it highlights the importance of telling a brand’s story across multiple channels. Increasing marketing touchpoints to bridge the gap between building brand awareness and driving consumer action, as is the case with OOH and CTV, can help maximize campaign effectiveness as a whole.
But first, why are digital marketers buying CTV?
According to a 2021 study conducted by the Leichtman Research Group, over 80% of US TV households have at least one Connected TV device with this number expected to grow as more viewers cut the cord on traditional cable services. As a result, advertisers are turning to CTV to deliver impactful, highly targeted campaigns that reach intended audiences in their homes.
The rise of programmatic advertising capabilities is a key factor driving advertisers’ adoption of CTV. Programmatic CTV enables specific parameters to be established via DSPs, delivering effective, well-placed ads while improving the efficiency and agility of a campaign. These programmatic platforms also provide data-driven insights that allow brands to identify specific audience segments, further connecting with them by delivering ads that are relevant to their TV programming.
The ability to reach broader audiences is another reason why marketers are choosing to run CTV ad campaigns. Premium inventory, thanks to programmatic platforms, coupled with audience-based targeting capabilities ensure ads are reaching the intended audience in a contextual way.
Strengthening brand messaging with DOOH and CTV
We know the advantages of including CTV in a campaign, but where does DOOH fit in? According to a 2020 marketing automation report published by Omnisend Research, marketers are observing a growing performance gap between single-channel and omnichannel campaigns. The report also found that brands using 3 or more marketing channels have a 287% higher purchase rate compared to campaigns that focus on a single channel. The shift to full-funnel marketing is highlighting the importance of taking a holistic approach to marketing, dedicating media spend to both brand awareness and performance channels.
Brands using multiple marketing channels have a higher purchase rate than single-channel campaigns.
Extending the reach of a campaign to include both CTV and DOOH can ensure that audiences are continuously targeted as they once again frequent locations outside of their homes. An omnichannel mix of DOOH and CTV helps marketers maximize advertising impact and effectiveness with sequential messaging that creates a strong brand experience. Let’s take a look at a recent campaign from fashion and accessories brand Claire’s, for example. Targeted towards GenZ audiences, the retailer’s ‘Be the Most’ campaign features a full-funnel marketing plan that includes several media channels like eCommerce, OOH, and CTV. With a goal of increasing touchpoints to reach consumers wherever they are, Claire’s placed OOH ads in major cities with corresponding CTV ads displayed through streaming services like Hulu and Twitch.
With both channels known for their premium inventory that can’t be skipped or ignored, extending a campaign’s reach from CTV to DOOH (or vice versa) increases ad recall, brand recognition, and awareness. Data triggers like location data or mobile device proximity enable advertisers to identify which audiences were exposed to DOOH ads. These consumers can then be retargeted with ads via their connected TV devices, reinforcing the brand’s message both outside and inside the home.
The rise of programmatic omnichannel campaigns
The acceleration of programmatic advertising across DOOH and CTV is enabling advertisers to create seamless omnichannel experiences automatically. Thanks to these platforms, both DOOH and CTV ads can target specific audiences by following the same parameters set by DSPs. If a marketer wants to target an audience segment through DOOH, they can also look at the contextual signals in CTV programming to deliver ads that match the content of both the TV programming and the DOOH campaign. Advertisers can even repurpose the same video creatives for both channels, furthering the continuous messaging and increasing ad recall with consumers. By looking at contextual targeting data like CTV application type or show information, advertisers can tailor their strategy to reach the exact audiences they want to with their omnichannel campaigns.
As programmatic advertising becomes the norm, along with changing consumer patterns, we predict that more and more marketers will implement popular channels like DOOH and CTV. By extending reach both offline and online, advertisers can help bridge the gap between digital and real-world experiences in a measurable, agile way.
Click here to learn more about Broadsign’s 35+ omnichannel DSP partners.
Product News | October 11, 2021
Inside DPAA 2025: 5 digital out-of-home trends to watch
The 2025 DPAA Video Everywhere Summit brought together some of the brightest voices in digital out-of-home (DOOH) to discuss where the industry is heading and what’s driving its momentum. From the rise of automation and AI to the rapid evolution of retail media networks, speakers across the ecosystem agreed on one thing: OOH is moving faster, becoming smarter, and playing a more central role in omnichannel strategies than ever before.
In conversations recorded at the Broadsign Content Studio, industry leaders shared how data, creativity, and collaboration are reshaping the medium and why now is the time to lean in.
Automation is accelerating everything
Automation was a hot topic at this year’s DPAA. What once felt futuristic is now powering OOH forward, transforming how campaigns are planned, traded, and managed with greater ease and efficiency. Advertisers increasingly expect the same digital speed and flexibility they get from online channels, and automation is helping the medium deliver exactly that.
For Joy Hines, Director of Programmatic Operations at Broadsign, automation isn’t a single tool but an ecosystem shift that touches every stage of the workflow, from campaign briefing and planning to creative development and reporting. By streamlining the routine, teams are finally able to focus on innovation. “Automation isn’t the future anymore; it’s here, and it’s accelerating innovation across every part of the process,” she says.
Broadsign activated an automated, live campaign through Broadsign In-Advance on Intersection’s LinkNYC screens, targeting summit attendees around key hotspots.
As automation takes hold across the industry, it’s raising the bar for collaboration and accountability. Standardized processes and faster execution are closing the gap between planning and performance, allowing OOH to match the speed and precision of digital while preserving its creative strength. Forward-thinking media owners are already leaning in, viewing automation as the bridge that makes OOH accessible to omnichannel buyers seeking simplicity without sacrificing scale.
AI & data advancements are fueling smarter campaigns
AI has quickly evolved from buzzword to business driver, reshaping how campaigns are planned, optimized, and measured. Across conversations at the DPAA Summit, leaders agreed that the real power of AI lies in its ability to take on the repetitive, manual work so teams can focus on creativity and strategy.
From automating creative resizing to streamlining campaign workflows, AI is helping advertisers move faster while maintaining consistency and quality. It’s becoming the silent engine behind more efficient operations and freeing marketers to spend time where it matters most.
Premesh Purayil, Chief Technology Officer at OUTFRONT, also pointed to the potential of AI-driven agents that can handle transactions and optimize campaigns dynamically. These systems can analyze data in real time, predict outcomes, and automatically adjust targeting or messaging based on performance signals, a shift that’s bringing OOH closer to digital’s level of agility and precision.
“I think the rise of AI and agentic technology is really starting to solve some of the long-standing challenges in out-of-home. Traditionally, it’s been very RFP-based, very manual. Before agentic, the solution would’ve been to just build APIs and make transactions a bit easier. But this gives us a chance to leap past that stage and move toward something more advanced and forward-facing.”
Dynamic creative and personalization continue to drive impact
Creative and personalization have become key focus areas in DOOH, helping brands deliver timely, relevant messages that drive stronger results. Dynamic creative optimization (DCO) is unlocking new possibilities in OOH by tailoring messages to real-world contexts and environments. While many agencies and brands have yet to harness its potential fully, industry leaders expect adoption to accelerate in 2026 as more advertisers see its impact.
“Buyers can sometimes lean out of [DCO] because they’re afraid of what they don’t know. But DSPs, SSPs, and publishers have put in a lot of foundational work over the past several years to make it more possible and easier than ever. There’s so much untapped potential with it,” says Broadsign’s Joy Hines.
Adam La Marca, Senior Manager, Head of Agency and Client Partnerships at Kinective Media by United Airlines, highlighted a clear shift in how brands approach creative, particularly in travel and experiential environments. “Creative development has really taken off,” he says. “Whether it’s brands exploring AI-driven concepts or investing more in the environments where their ads appear, we’re seeing a much deeper focus on creativity and context. Brands that lean into the traveller mindset and experience see strong results, from brand health and awareness to measurable outcomes. It’s become commerce everywhere, especially within OOH.”
In-store retail media is redefining the shopper experience
As retailers unlock new revenue streams and rethink the shopping experience, in-store retail media is becoming a powerful layer in the commerce journey. Retail spaces are evolving from static aisles into dynamic, data-driven environments where messaging adapts to shoppers in real time.
At the same time, many buyers still underestimate how much first-party retailer data can fuel smarter OOH targeting and measurement. Retail partners can now connect ad exposure to real purchase activity, proving that screens near stores and inside them directly drive outcomes — a major advantage as retail media budgets continue to grow across digital channels.
Alexander Papathomas, CEO at Smartstreet AI, describes the opportunity to turn aisles into digital, interactive experiences: “We can really take advantage of engaging with customers in new ways by layering in AI, data, and more sophisticated tools. It gives us a chance to create a much stronger experience, and that’s a real opportunity we’re excited about.”
This shift mirrors the sophistication of online retail media, with real-time targeting, frequency control, and conversion attribution now applied in-store, giving brands confidence that their spend is measurable.
“Retailers are realizing they’re sitting on a treasure of data, and they’re trying to monetize it,” says Hammad Benjelloun, CEO & Co-Founder of AiOO. “If we want DOOH, and especially retail media, to catch up on advertising spend, we need retailers and media buyers to adopt technologies that enable real-time audience targeting, campaign performance measurement, and conversion attribution.”
Looking ahead
As OOH heads into 2026, the focus is shifting from access to advancement. Programmatic has made buying easier; now it’s about using it smarter by combining data, automation, and creativity to drive real results. That progress depends on closer collaboration across teams and channels, with OOH becoming part of a connected storytelling ecosystem alongside programmatic and video.
This more integrated approach boosts creative impact and positions OOH as a performance-driven part of the digital mix. If 2025 showed that OOH can keep up with digital, 2026 will be the year it leads the way.
Looking to elevate your DOOH strategy in 2026? Contact us to get started.
Product News | October 11, 2021
Broadsign, StackAdapt, and Branded Cities Unlock Automated In-Advance DOOH Transactions in North America
Ledger Bennett executes first campaign to leverage the capability in the US and Canada for their client, reserving premium screens weeks ahead of activation
MONTREAL, November 12, 2025 – Out-of-home (OOH) adtech provider Broadsign announced a collaboration with marketing technology provider StackAdapt and OOH media owner Branded Cities that brings automated, in-advance digital OOH (DOOH) ad transactions to North American advertisers. The strategic alliance will enable StackAdapt buyers to reserve OOH inventory on the StackAdapt platform for omnichannel campaigns months in advance, starting with Branded Cities’ most popular large-format, high-impact displays. Global Marketing B2B Agency Ledger Bennett is StackAdapt’s first customer to leverage the deal type, having executed an automated, guaranteed campaign for one of its signature clients in July.
Through this collaboration, StackAdapt buyers can now easily reserve and book guaranteed Branded Cities inventory via programmatic pipes, eliminating the prolonged dialogue and manual setup typical of direct DOOH buys. Because the transactions happen within StackAdapt, buyers can apply the same advanced targeting tools and real-time triggers they use across other digital channels, and view unified DOOH analytics alongside the rest of their campaign reporting. The development builds on the European rollout of Broadsign In-Advance earlier this summer, expanding the Broadsign Supply-Side Platform’s (SSP) network of In-Advance demand and media owner partners.
“Booking our latest campaign in advance through StackAdapt made us realize how much more efficient we could be by cutting out the minutia we typically spend sourcing DOOH inventory directly,” explained Jenija Manandhar, Head of Media at Ledger Bennett. “We were able to easily find the Branded Cities inventory slots we wanted and secure them 4 weeks out in minutes versus days. At the end of the campaign, it was also easier to compare results across ad channels because all the reporting and analytics were available in one central platform; it’s the OOH technology we’ve been waiting for.”
“Broadsign In-Advance gives StackAdapt buyers the best of both direct and programmatic buying,” said Nick Ortega, Director, DOOH & Emerging Channels at StackAdapt. “They can secure premium inventory around global or local events and reach audiences when it matters most. Our integration ensures guaranteed access to high-impact screens with the streamlined workflows, transparency, and real-time reporting today’s advertisers expect.”
“We are delighted to be the first North American media owner to offer our DOOH inventory via Broadsign’s in-advance transactions,” said Roger Wood, Director of Digital Growth/Programmatic, Branded Cities. “Internally, we’ve already been able to improve operational efficiency, attract new buyers, and optimize yield. Looking outward, our accomplishments represent a massive leap forward for the industry, illustrating how we can leverage automation to ensure a more level playing field for OOH in the omnichannel world.”
“There are few ad channels today that can command an audience’s attention and drive real-world engagement like OOH. Yet accessing this powerhouse isn’t always easy for omnichannel buyers, because direct OOH and programmatic omnichannel have been largely siloed until now,” shared Drew Thachuk, Head of Channel Partnerships, Broadsign. “Broadsign In-Advance is bringing the capabilities of direct OOH booking to the programmatic platforms omnichannel buyers live and breathe, but without a drawn-out, manual negotiation process. Our collaboration with StackAdapt and Branded Cities represents huge progress on this front, and is one of many more to come, as we work with the industry to make OOH more accessible.”
Broadsign’s in-advance DOOH transaction capabilities are available to Broadsign SSP customers and demand partners for early adoption today. Connect with a Broadsign representative to learn more. Media buyers who want to try or leverage automated, in-advance DOOH transactions powered by Broadsign should consult with demand partners to confirm support.
About Broadsign
Broadsign empowers media owners, agencies, and brands to harness the power and reach of out-of-home to connect with audiences in ways unlike any other advertising channel. More than 1.5 million static and digital signs along roadways and in airports, shopping malls, retailers, health clinics, transit systems, electric vehicle charging stations, and more run on Broadsign, reaching audiences at multiple touchpoints throughout the consumer journey. The Broadsign Platform helps media owners such as Outfront, Pattison Outdoor, Global, and Intersection streamline business operations and maximize revenue opportunities while enabling marketers and agencies to more easily plan and execute dynamic OOH campaigns that resonate with audiences. Brands spanning AB InBev, Disney, FanDuel, H&M, Honda, HP, Johnson & Johnson, KLM, Uber Eats, Sea-Doo, Samsonite, and many more have run successful programmatic DOOH campaigns enabled by Broadsign technology. https://broadsign.com
Product News | October 11, 2021
In-advance DOOH transactions for buyers: Your questions answered
Automation is a huge part of the conversation in the out-of-home (OOH) advertising space right now. While automation in OOH is typically associated with programmatic buying, that’s really just one piece of the puzzle. The bigger picture is how automation can streamline the entire process, from the initial planning all the way to campaign delivery.
With the release of Broadsign’s new automated, in-advance digital OOH (DOOH) transaction capability, we sat down with John Dolan, Vice-President, Global Head of Media Sales at Broadsign, to discuss what this means for media buyers and how it can unlock a more seamless and modern buying experience.
Booking OOH should be as easy as booking a flight. How does Broadsign In-Advance help make that vision a reality?
When you look at how OOH campaigns are bought today, programmatic campaigns can arguably be booked as easily as a flight. You log into a DSP, set your targeting, pick the days, data, venue types, and geographics you wish to execute. But the reality is that programmatic represents only 5% of total OOH ad spend, meaning that 95% of all OOH transactions are still managed manually.
The real friction remains in direct out-of-home buys, which require a heavier lift due to the back-and-forth with media owners. If you’re managing a diverse campaign that needs to run on the inventory of six different media owners, that’s six different sales conversations, six negotiations, six separate contracts, six creative deliveries, and six reports you have to aggregate to track performance.
“Broadsign In-Advance helps bring this vision closer to reality by taking the speed and automation that everyone loves about programmatic and combining it with the guaranteed aspect of direct-booked DOOH campaigns.”
John Dolan, Vice President, Global Head of Media Sales at Broadsign
How does this save time for media planners and buyers? Can you walk us through a before-and-after scenario?
When you receive a campaign brief, you’re looking for media targeting and setups that best match the client’s objectives. In a direct OOH campaign, that means:
Reaching out to a media owner, or multiple depending on the geographic and campaign objectives, to start the brief by looking at flight dates and venue types.
Assuming the media owner has the inventory available for your desired dates, you begin negotiating on pricing, terms of the deal and the parameters for holding the inventory.
Once you’ve reached a consensus, additional paperwork needs to be pushed back and forth before the contract is signed.
Once the deal is secured, the agency then needs to provide the creatives directly to the media owner, and if you’re dealing with multiple media owners, that means meeting their respective aspect ratios.
Finally, proof-of-play procedures are different for each media owner. So, how fast you get the reporting, in what format, and how fast you’re able to audit the reports and consolidate them on your own becomes a heavily nuanced, time-consuming process.
With Broadsign In-Advance, you’re able to book direct OOH campaigns in a similar way you would a programmatic one:
Through Broadsign’s DSP OutMoove, or your DSP of choice, you identify the inventory that best fits your campaign objectives and request its availability. A response comes instantly from our ad server, providing a simple yes or no.
If it’s available, you’re presented with a price and a simple terms box to select that inventory. If approved, the inventory is officially booked – no holds, no negotiations needed on pricing or terms.
When it’s time to launch the campaign, you upload your creative directly into the DSP, just as you have done hundreds of times before.
While the campaign is in flight, you’ll have access to real-time proof-of-play reporting that’s standardized across all media owners in one centralized, auditable place.
“With Broadsign In-Advance, it’s a journey that you can take on your own. Of course, there will be collaboration with media owners on matters that add value to all parties, like what creative works best for what screen, but it does cut away the vast majority of the back-and-forth between media owners and buyers, allowing for a more seamless activation.”
John Dolan, Vice President, Global Head of Media Sales at Broadsign
Why would a media buyer choose to use Broadsign In-Advance if they’re already using programmatic DOOH?
Broadsign In-Advance wasn’t designed to replace programmatic DOOH, but rather to complement your existing buying strategy and address a critical gap between traditional direct deals and pure programmatic transactions. As more media buyers and owners adopt the solution, we’ll continue to find brilliant new use cases for it, but here are a few ways we see it being used:
Secure premium inventory during key seasonal periods
During the holiday season or key travel periods, retail-focused venues and other premium screens become limited, driving up competition and programmatic prices. We often hear from buyers that they avoid OOH altogether because it sells out during key trading periods. Broadsign In-Advance solves that problem by allowing you to reserve key inventory months ahead of time.
“Think about major, fixed events like the 2026 World Cup. Those tentpole opportunities are going to sell out fast. Broadsign In-Advance allows a buyer to secure those specific screens and guarantees playout, providing a frictionless activation that traditional programmatic can’t promise.”
John Dolan, Vice President, Global Head of Media Sales at Broadsign
Mix and match your OOH buys to maximize reach
Broadsign In-Advance can also be used to strategically support your usual OOH buys. For instance, you might have a traditional static or programmatic digital OOH buy, but need a digital portion that needs to run at a specific time on specific screens. You can book a direct digital placement through In-Advance, guaranteeing your ad will be visible when you need it to, while complementing your other placements.
Leveraging consistent planning data
With the ability to plan your direct OOH campaigns and access the inventory of multiple media owners through one platform, Broadsign In-Advance would allow you to leverage a consistent data set when building your campaign. Rather than relying on audience data provided individually by each media owner, you can use a widespread data application for your planning, making your multi-network buys more coherent and easier to audit.
“Ultimately, it’s about giving buyers a guaranteed, automated pathway to securing high-value inventory. For media owners, it also means maximizing revenue from both direct and programmatic sales by allowing buyers to lock in demand early. It’s a win for certainty and speed on both sides.”
John Dolan, Vice President, Global Head of Media Sales at Broadsign
When should a media buyer choose this capability over a traditional or programmatic open exchange buy or a programmatic guaranteed buy?
It’s important to look at this against all the different types of buys because we are not asking buyers to simply swap one method for another. Broadsign In-Advance is the tool you choose when you need the speed of digital buying paired with the certainty of a direct OOH deal.
Today, Programmatic Guaranteed (PG) is largely set up on a priority basis. That priority is based on a programmatic slot that a media owner has made available. Broadsign In-Advance takes this concept a step further by allowing buyers to reserve inventory that is being booked into a direct slot of the media owner’s inventory. It also gives buyers access to additional buy types for their DOOH campaigns, including Share of Voice (SOV), Budget or Play Goal, and Takeovers.
“With Broadsign In-Advance, your DOOH campaign isn’t privy to any sort of priority. It won’t be bumped. It gives buyers the confidence that the delivery of their goals for their customers won’t be interrupted, and I think that is what differentiates it from Programmatic Guaranteed buys.”
John Dolan, Vice President, Global Head of Media Sales at Broadsign
Can a buyer still leverage data and targeting with an in-advance transaction, similar to how they do with programmatic buys?
The short answer is absolutely. The advantage of Broadsign In-Advance is that it combines the data-rich planning experience of programmatic with the guaranteed delivery of a direct buy. As soon as media owners have selected the inventory they want to make available for in-advance transactions, that inventory is surfaced in the platform the same way that programmatic inventory is.
The data that exists there is still indexed against those screens. This means that all the various data partners available in your DSP can still be selected, utilized, and executed for planning. This gives you a consistent planning framework time and time again, ensuring you’re reaching the same audience with the same methodology across a myriad of place-based and outdoor media types.
Does this integrate with the DSPs I already use?
Yes. It is currently available through Broadsign’s DSP OutMoove, and we are actively working with a host of demand partners today to make this technology available through their platforms. It’s not our goal to guard this capability from the market. We hope it’s a framework that’s adopted across the ecosystem, and we’re happy to explore and have those conversations with our global partners – many of which we’re already integrated with from a supply perspective today.
What level of flexibility do in-advance transactions offer? Can a campaign be adjusted or optimized after it has been booked?
In the vast majority of cases, when we think about flexibility, it typically involves cancellation periods or shifting budgets for optimization purposes. Any cancellation would have to fall under the existing contractual terms of the media owner with whom the transaction was agreed upon.
In an in-advance transaction, there shouldn’t be a need to adjust the campaign in-flight. If you’ve selected the correct allocation and the creatives have been uploaded properly, you can be assured that it will be delivered. Buyers do, however, have the ability to manage creatives dynamically. As long as the media owner approves the content, different creatives can be used for each play.
That being said, Broadsign In-Advance DOOH campaigns enjoy the same automated ad delivery optimizations as traditional direct DOOH campaigns. Since the inventory is booked as a direct slot in the media owner’s inventory, In-Advance campaigns benefit from our rebalancing tool, which automatically adjusts pacing to ensure that ad delivery stays on track throughout the campaign’s duration.
What’s next for Broadsign In-Advance?
The future for In-Advance is about two things: broadening its reach and deepening its utility. We’ve laid the foundation, and now we’re aggressively driving demand and developing new features that our partners need. The earliest enhancement will be to make static OOH available for in-advance transactions in 2026. Looking a bit further ahead, we’ll be focused on:
Driving global demand and adoption
We’re in constant discussions with agencies, media owners, and demand partners across the world to increase adoption. We see Broadsign In-Advance as a foundational buying framework for the entire ecosystem, and these discussions are critical to understanding how it fits into everyone’s workflows.
Evolving buying metrics
We’re focused on making sure the way you book In-Advance campaigns aligns with the way OOH is traditionally measured and planned. This means actively having discussions around different buying frameworks:
Does it need to work on an impression framework?
Can we look at Share of Voice or Share of Time?
How do we ensure we’re providing the critical metrics that standard OOH buyers are looking for, whether that’s reliable reach and frequency or other established measurements?
Expanding availability to the full ecosystem
It would be naive to think we can drive this fundamental change all on our own. So, we are currently building technology that allows media owners – regardless of their backend software or whether they are a full-stack Broadsign client – to be able to connect, activate, and execute in this manner. It’s about broadening our scope from a technology perspective and making this standard practice industry-wide.
“We are committed to being humble, listening to feedback, and taking direction to ensure media owners feel comfortable about this change and for buyers to truly understand where Broadsign In-Advance fits best into their overall media mix.”
John Dolan, Vice President, Global Head of Media Sales at Broadsign
Product News | October 11, 2021
Broadsign and Audience360 team up to revolutionize how brands target audiences through DOOH advertising in Australia
Digital billboards are getting smarter. Much smarter. Thanks to a new partnership between DOOH technology leader Broadsign and Australia’s premier data specialist Audience360, advertisers can now reach consumers with precision right when they’re ready to make major purchasing decisions.
Beyond basic billboard targeting
Traditional digital out-of-home advertising has relied on basic location data, like showing car ads near dealerships or coffee promotions during morning commutes. But this collaboration takes targeting to a different level by tapping into exclusive behavioural data.
Audience360 enables direct access to first-party data from premium publishers, including Webjet, Carsales, Mozo, AFL, View, and TechRadar. This data offers insight into real people actively researching big life decisions like buying a car, home, vacation, or financial product.
“We’re capturing audiences at the exact moment they’re making significant lifestyle decisions,” explains the collaboration’s impact on advertiser capabilities, commented Shurneek Prasad, Head of Product, Audience360.
The science behind smarter targeting
Instead of guessing where potential customers might be, Audience360’s proprietary technology analyzes customer journey behaviour to identify high-intent audience segments. Their system then maps these insights to physical locations using an advanced indexation framework that goes far beyond traditional point-of-interest targeting.
The result? Advertisers can now identify and target specific geographic areas where their ideal customers are most likely to be present, creating location-based campaigns that complement and amplify their existing marketing efforts.
Premium data meets advanced technology
What makes this partnership particularly powerful is the quality and transparency of the data involved. Unlike third-party data sources that can sometimes lack transparency, every piece of information comes directly from verified, premium Australian publisher websites. This approach ensures complete privacy compliance while delivering daily data refreshes for maximum relevancy.
“Broadsign’s extensive reach, local market expertise, and advanced technology made them the ideal DOOH partner to amplify the impact of high-value, premium data,” said Shruneek Prasad, Head of Product at Audience360. “By combining their platform with Audience360’s exclusive high-end data sets, this collaboration is set to take audience targeting in DOOH to the next level.”
Real-world impact for advertisers
The partnership delivers several game-changing advantages:
Verified Purchase Intent: Reach consumers who are actively researching and making major purchasing decisions across automotive, travel, finance, and real estate sectors.
Complete Data Transparency: Advertisers have full visibility into exactly where their audience data originates.
Australian Market Focus: Confirmed local market data ensures precise geographic targeting for brands focused on the Australian consumer market.
Real-Time Relevancy: Daily data updates mean campaigns can reach audiences at optimal decision-making moments.Brand Safety Assurance: 100% privacy-compliant data collection and usage protects both consumers and advertisers.
Rather than casting a wide net and hoping for the best, advertisers can now deploy sophisticated audience segmentation based on verified behavioural data and actual purchase intent signals.
The initial phase focuses on delivering a broad audience taxonomy, but the vision extends to highly customized segmentation, promising even greater campaign performance. As Prasad notes, “Together, Broadsign and Audience360 are unlocking new potential for clients, creating smarter, more impactful campaigns.”
Looking ahead
The collaboration signals a broader evolution in the digital advertising landscape, where first-party data and advanced targeting capabilities are becoming essential competitive advantages. For advertisers seeking to reach consumers who are actually ready to buy—not just browsing—this partnership offers a compelling new approach to out-of-home advertising.
As the digital advertising ecosystem continues to prioritize privacy compliance and data transparency, partnerships like this one between Broadsign and Audience360 may well represent the future of targeted advertising: premium data sources combined with advanced technology platforms to deliver measurable results while respecting consumer privacy.
For more information about Audience360’s data solutions and publisher partnerships, or to learn about Broadsign’s DOOH technology platform, contact their respective teams for detailed campaign planning and implementation support.