Commerce Media: The Anatomy Of a Utility Publisher

Following on from last week’s MadTechSketch, Ciaran O’Kane dives a little bit deeper on the “utility publishers” category that is becoming a mainstay of commerce media.

Typically a utility publisher is a service not reliant on advertising as the primary revenue source. It has no specific content focus - just utility. They also have strong data signals that buyers want to leverage for their media buys. Examples of utility publishers include: Uber, Deliveroo, Zoopla and the likes of Network Rail.  

How do they work?

There are types of utility publishers: closed and open.  

Closed utility publishers are effectively walled garden solutions where data is kept within the platform, and campaigns are delivered through a proprietary platform and managed service solution. Uber is a good example.  

Open utility publishers generally have a mixed model. They will have some element of managed service but will also work with programmatic buyers, providing some sort of data signal like context or first party segments. They tend to use a traditional ad server like Google Ad Manager or the likes of Equativ. Zoopla would be a textbook example of an open utility publisher.

In the sketch this week, I outline a workflow for both open and closed.

What do you think of this solution? What are your thoughts on the rise of utility publishers and commerce media? Let us know on Twitter or LinkedIn.

Ciaran O'Kane: Ciaran O’Kane is the CEO of WireCorp, the publishing holding group focused on the digital advertising, retail technology and gaming sectors.  He has worked in digital advertising over the last twenty years as a developer, digital marketer, ad operations provider, media monetisation specialist and senior sales executive.  He continues to write editorial for ExchangeWire on advertising technology, marketing technology and programmatic  - and acts as an advisor to a number of leading digital media companies in Europe.
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