Ask a marketer where their last ad ran and why, and they’ll probably shrug or send a spreadsheet that answers nothing.
Programmatic promised clarity: automation, efficiency and measurable outcomes. What we got instead is complexity dressed up as optimization: a stack of acronyms performing trust theater. DSPs, SSPs, exchanges, verifiers and data vendors now pile on top of each other in a tangled value chain, each promising to “optimize” the same impression, often at the brand’s expense.
The simple question we’ve been asked is why these layers aren’t preventing the verification issues that have run rampant this year. These issues aren’t new. But between the multiple Adalytics reports and Google’s impending ad tech breakup, there’s been a vibe shift. The cracks are becoming harder to ignore, and we’re finally getting a better look at what’s causing the rifts.
It’s time to stop patching the system and start asking tougher questions. It’s no longer controversial to ask: What exactly are we doing? A better question is: What should we be doing instead?
Rebuilding means rebuilding from the studs
Ad tech doesn’t need another patch. It needs a teardown.
We’ve been layering solutions onto an architecture that doesn’t support them. The foundation is cracked. We’ve optimized ourselves into a maze of handoffs and fees that marketers barely understand and consumers never see.
The next wave of progress won’t come from another verification layer. It’ll come from simplifying the entire system to make it clearer, more accountable and rooted in environments where advertisers actually want to show up. Not theoretically brand-safe. Actually brand-appropriate.
AI shouldn’t be a buzzword; it should be a rethink
AI is a loaded word, and it’s being thrown around in every pitch deck right now. Most of what we call AI in ad tech is just rule-based logic wearing a new label. We’ve been using 2010-level automation to solve 2025-level challenges.
Yes, AI can filter keywords and automate bid decisions. But truly useful AI should act less like a robot and more like a human reader. It should evaluate the tone, sentiment and structure of a page to understand it. It should determine whether a piece of content aligns with brand values, not just whether it contains a banned word.
That’s not a science experiment. That’s what advertisers should expect now.
Transparency shouldn’t be radical anymore
If you’re a brand, why wouldn’t you want to know where your ads are showing up? Not just who owned the page but which exact content, URL and ad slot?
Advertising on the open web shouldn’t feel like guesswork. Ironically, print, out-of-home and radio all offer specificity and certainty. Digital often doesn’t.
Transparency shouldn’t be a bold new idea. It should be the baseline.
Let’s stop selling shiny things that don’t work
Here’s an uncomfortable truth: Many advertisers were never deeply sold on programmatic. They cared about performance, placement and brand alignment, not the machinery underneath.
But ad tech has too often built for itself. We created metrics that impress our peers but mean little to the people we’re supposed to serve. We keep launching new tools and acronyms instead of fixing what’s broken.
That cycle has to end.
What comes next
The future of programmatic isn’t more stack. It’s less noise.
It’s time to move past Band-Aids, past the echo chamber and past the fantasy that complexity equals value. The future of digital advertising won’t be won by the company with the most acronyms or the flashiest dashboard. If we want digital advertising to live up to its promise, we have to deprogram the habits, incentives and assumptions that got us here.
That means rebuilding the ecosystem around outcomes, not intermediaries. Around trust, not opacity. Around context and understanding, not keywords.
That’s the only future worth building toward.
“Data-Driven Thinking” is written by members of the media community and contains fresh ideas on the digital revolution in media.
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