Home Technology This Ad Tech OG’s AI-Powered Analytics Startup Just Raised $9M In Series A Funding

This Ad Tech OG’s AI-Powered Analytics Startup Just Raised $9M In Series A Funding

SHARE:

Stop me if you’ve heard this one before: A new ad tech company wants to use AI to make advertising analytics quicker and more efficient. A little clichéd? Perhaps. But there’s nothing wrong with a little optimism.

That’s what Newton Research, which announced its $9 million Series A raise on Tuesday, is aiming to do.

The round brings Newton’s total funding to just over $14 million since 2023 and was led by Greycroft and Bessemer Venture Partners, with participation from S4S Ventures, Aperiam Ventures and LiveRamp Ventures.

Newton has history with LiveRamp. The startup’s CEO and co-founder, John Hoctor, spent nearly three years there as an advisor after selling his previous startup, TV analytics company Data Plus Math, to LiveRamp for $150 million in 2019.

Newton now partners with LiveRamp for access to its clean room tech.

Hoctor co-founded Newton in 2023 to address what he calls the “fundamental problem” in advertising workflows, which is that they’re too often “heavily siloed” and “overly reliant on manual execution.”

Going with the flow

Newton has a team of specialized AI agents built on top of OpenAI, Claude and Gemini that function as analysts of sorts, each with a specific area of expertise, to assist with media planning, buying and measurement.

The agents can get pretty specific in terms of what they can do, including designing incrementality tests and updating MMM. Clients engage with them through a combination of chat and graphics, said Matt Emans, Newton’s CTO and co-founder and Hoctor’s co-founder at Data Plus Math.

Agents can determine a company’s best optimization opportunities based on previous media deployment and analyze key KPIs. For instance, an agent can look at all of the various channels where a brand is deploying media, and based on what’s performing best, it can suggest updates to the budget allocation for the rest of the campaign.

Notably, Newton can run within whatever environment the data already lives in, like Snowflake or Databricks, rather than requiring clients to import their data into a new, external platform.

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

Get our editors’ roundup delivered to your inbox every weekday.

The tool also has different variations for different data storage platforms. For example, said Hoctor, “Newton might leverage a Gemini model with inference on Vertex in GCP while utilizing AWS Bedrock for inference with Claude in AWS.”

The capabilities are similar in each environment but tailored to the platform’s existing data and systems.

Oh, what fun(d)

While most of Newton’s early adopters have been agencies, it’s recently seen increased interest from publishers, brands and ad tech platforms.

Companies up and down the supply chain are struggling to get the “data science analytics talent” they need, said Hoctor, “and they’re all looking for ways to augment human intelligence with tools.”

And that’s why Newton went after more funding, to meet the uptick in demand and operate on a larger scale.

What does Newton plan to do with the funds from this round? The answer is somewhat unorthodox, especially for an AI-powered platform.

Hoctor said the money will mainly go toward hiring to account for the company’s rapid growth and the spike in sales. And not just hiring, he said, but “aggressively hiring” across the entire company, from customer success and engineering to sales and marketing.

Newton entered the ad tech scene at a serendipitous moment, when campaign insights were in high demand and probabilistic modeling – Newton’s framework – was gaining traction.

Due to the slow deprecation of third-party cookies and growing media fragmentation, it’s becoming increasingly difficult to find a truly “deterministic answer” to the question of how to allocate media spend and distribution, Emans said.

But, he added, that problem is “a perfect AI problem” for agencies, publishers and brands to address with probabilistic modeling.

Must Read

Magnite Targets CTV, SMBs And Google's SSP Market Share

The SSP is betting on the DOJ’s antitrust remedies, plus closer relationships with agencies, DSPs and mid-sized advertisers, to help it eat some of Google’s lunch.

Zillow Pilots Containerized RTB, As It Rethinks The Equation Of Quality And Cost

Zillow is the pilot brand advertiser to test a new programmatic buying strategy known as containerized RTB. The strategy embeds the DSP or ad-buying platform intelligence, in this case the startup Chalice Custom Algorithms, within the SSP, which is Index Exchange.

Shell Shutters Its Volta EV Charging And Media Division

Volta Media, which is owned by the gas station and energy giant Shell, will be shuttered by November and its network of more than 2,000 charging stations will be dismantled this year.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters
Comic: Traffic Jam

People Inc. Has A New Name, But It Still Faces The Same Old Google Search Traffic Drought

People Inc. – the former Dotdash Meredith – is fighting on multiple fronts to keep its business growing as Google Search declines precipitously as a source of referral traffic.

Monopoly Man looks on at the DOJ vs. Google ad tech antitrust trial (comic).

More Like No Yield: A New Book Explores How Google Soaked Up The Web’s Ad Profits

“I tried to write it so it’s not exclusively for ad tech nerds,” Ari Paparo told AdExchanger of his new book, about Google’s advertising dominance. “And I mean that affectionately.”

CleanTap Filters Out ‘Sorta CTV’ Placements Before Buyers Can Bid On Them

CleanTap, an ad tech startup launched by the founder of Method Media Intelligence, wants to separate the wheat from the chaff in CTV by serving as a curation layer between DSPs and SSPs.