Quo Vadis: Advertising Economic Forum Podcast

Tom Triscari

This podcast series is dedicated to one-to-one interviews with the speakers who take the stage at the AdTech Economic Forum.

  1. 10/06/2025

    Quo Vadis: Advertising Economic Forum Podcast with Mathieu Roche

    ๐Ÿ’ก Takeaways: ๐ŸŽฏ Targeting and Measurement are Inseparable: Advertising money flows to where it can be both accurately targeted to an audience and reliably measured for its impact on business outcomes, making identity the core enabler of both capabilities.๐Ÿง  Generative AI Rewards Quality Content: The impact of Generative AI on web traffic is nuanced: sites providing factual, transactional content may suffer declines, while legitimate, long-form, complex content providers may see traffic increases through AI-driven referrals, potentially "cleaning up" low-quality Made-For-Advertising (MFA) sites.๐Ÿ“บ CTV Programmatic is Maturing: While the technical capacity for targeted, user-level programmatic ad buying on CTV exists (with ID5 IDs on millions of TV sets), the broader market adoption is slower as business practices transition from traditional linear TV upfronts and annual budgets.๐Ÿ’ถ Identity as a Currency: Identity solutions must be treated as a commodity where widespread adoption, rather than simply technology, is the number one factor for value, operating like a currency that becomes more valuable the more people use it.๐Ÿ› ๏ธ European Founders Prioritize Frugality: European startup founders often operate with a more frugal and shrewd approach to money management due to less available capital than in the US, forcing them to be more disciplined and efficient with smaller seed rounds.๐Ÿ“š Chapters: 2:28 The Future of Websites in the Age of AI 5:21 Impact of AI on Website Traffic 8:03 The MFA Problem and Industry Changes 9:12 ID5's Identity Graph and CTV Applications 13:41 The State of CTV Advertising 16:31 Universal Identity Standards and ID5's Strategy 21:01 European vs. American Startup Approaches 25:52 French Ad Tech Success and Funding Environment 32:05 Remote Work Culture at ID5   ๐ŸŽ™ Guest: Mathieu Roche ๐ŸŽค Host: Tom Triscari ๐Ÿ“บ Sponsors: Yahoo! & DoubleVerify

    45 min
  2. 09/24/2025

    Quo Vadis: Advertising Economic Forum Podcast with Sim Blaustein

    ๐Ÿ’ก Takeaways: ๐Ÿค Importance of Relationships in Dealmaking: In a competitive investment environment, building strong, authentic relationships with founders can be crucial for securing an allocation in a desirable deal. ๐Ÿ’ฐ Limited Liquidity in the VC Market: The current venture capital market is characterized by a "drought of liquidity" due to fewer IPOs and M&A deals, which has limited the distributions that LPs (limited partners) receive from funds. ๐Ÿ’ก The "What to Make" Challenge: As AI makes content creation faster and more accessible, the strategic value is shifting from creation to decision-making. โš–๏ธ Flexibility in Investment Strategy: Smaller venture funds can be more flexible in their approach to leading versus co-investing in deals. ๐Ÿ‘” Evolution of Key Hires: The needs of a startup change as it grows, meaning the roles of key leaders like a sales head or CFO also evolve. ๐Ÿ“‰ Historical Aversion to Ad Tech: Historically, many VCs have shied away from investing in ad tech due to several factors, including the difficulty of competing with dominant players like Google, low barriers to entry leading to squeezed middlemen, and a shift in market valuations that favored SaaS revenue over advertising revenue.๐Ÿ“š Chapters: 3:33: Fund Formation and Structure 7:43: General Partner Commitments and Fund Structure 9:46: Fundraising Strategy and Investment Thesis 14:14: Investing in AdTech vs. Martech 20:25: Deal Flow: Inbound vs. Outbound 28:27: Leading Investments vs. Co-investing 36:11: Qualities of Successful Founders 42:52: AI's Impact on Industry Stacks   ๐ŸŽ™ Guest: Sim Blaustein ๐ŸŽค Host: Tom Triscari ๐Ÿ“บ Sponsors: Anonymised & Yahoo!

    50 min
  3. 09/21/2025

    Quo Vadis: Advertising Economic Forum Podcast with Andrew Casale

    ๐Ÿ’ก Takeaways: ๐Ÿ”„ Shifting Publisher Traffic Patterns: The open web is experiencing a "haves and have-nots" phenomenon, with some publishers seeing traffic decline by about 27% year-on-year due to generative AI tools, while others are experiencing growth.๐Ÿค Importance of Owning User Relationships: Publishers are gaining a renewed appreciation for owning their own distribution channels and relationships with users, rather than relying on external and volatile traffic sources like social media or search engines.๐Ÿ’ก AI as an Augmentation Tool: While generative AI presents challenges, Andrew Casale is "bullish long term" that these tools will become capabilities that "supercharge" the future of publishing by augmenting their work.๐Ÿ“‰ The "Cloud Tax" on Ad Tech: Ad tech businesses face a significant and growing "cloud tax," which are the high costs associated with running operations on public cloud platforms, especially with the increased electricity demands of AI.๐Ÿ›ฃ๏ธ Evolution of the Ad Tech Business Model: The ad tech industry needs to shift from a high-arbitrage, variable-pricing model like Uber to a high-scale, low-fee model like Visa to be more sustainable and predictable.๐Ÿค– Move Towards a "UI-less" Future: The future of ad tech may involve sophisticated customers interacting with platforms like Index Exchange through prompt-based interfaces and embedded workflows, rather than traditional dashboards.๐Ÿงฑ Competition with Walled Gardens: The primary competition for the open web is not among ad tech companies themselves, but against walled gardens like Google and Meta for a larger share of the $1 trillion advertising market.๐Ÿ“š Chapters Market Situation and Publisher Challenges โ€Ž 2:44 The Future of Publishers and AI โ€Ž 6:28 Efficiency and Performance in the Open Web โ€Ž 8:25 Competition with Walled Gardens โ€Ž 10:25 Publisher Operational Efficiency and AI Implementation โ€Ž 12:31 The Future of User Interfaces in Ad Tech โ€Ž 17:16 The "Hidden Cloud Tax" in Ad Tech โ€Ž 22:01 Business Models and Efficiency in Ad Tech โ€Ž 26:31 DOJ Google Search Case โ€Ž 29:38   ๐ŸŽ™ Guest: Andrew Casale ๐ŸŽค Host: Tom Triscari ๐Ÿ“บ Sponsors: Above Data & Anonymised

    35 min
  4. 09/18/2025

    Quo Vadis: Advertising Economic Forum Podcast with Brian Wieser

    ๐Ÿ’กTakeaways: โš–๏ธ The Open Web is Not Dead: The open web, or open internet, is not a rapidly growing business but remains surprisingly resilient and is not in decline, with a U.S. market value of around $50 billion.๐Ÿค Consolidation is Key: The lack of significant growth in the open web incentivizes companies to consolidate and merge to reduce costs and gain market share with better solutions.โš™๏ธ Go-to-Market Strategy Matters: The success of AdTech companies is not tied to a rising tide; instead, it is driven by effective go-to-market strategies, partnerships, and product elements.๐ŸŒฑ Growth Seeking vs. Loss Aversion: Companies, especially incumbents, often shift from growth-seeking to loss-aversion strategies, focusing on protecting what they have rather than pursuing new growth opportunities.๐Ÿค– AI's Role in Advertising: AI is a significant new factor in the market, particularly within the search business and with the rise of chatbots and generative AI.๐Ÿ“Š Financials Over Traffic: In the advertising world, the focus is on the financial economics of the market, as money is not necessarily directly related to traffic volume.๐Ÿ“ˆ The Power of Platforms: Walled gardens and other major platforms are expected to continue taking a meaningful share of media spend because marketers trust the identities they get from these platforms.๐Ÿ’ผ Agencies and Ad Tech are Alike: Core services in both agencies and ad tech are becoming commoditized, making continuous investment in people and processes essential for developing new offerings and staying competitive.๐Ÿ“šChapters: Discussion on the Open Web Advertising Market โ€Ž 2:32 Industry Consolidation and Company Performance โ€Ž 5:33 Advertiser Behavior Framework โ€Ž 8:59 The "Last Media Dollar" Game โ€Ž 14:16 Costco's Retail Media Network โ€Ž 18:53 Media Industry Consolidation News โ€Ž 25:05 S4 Capital and Final Thoughts โ€Ž 29:07   ๐ŸŽ™ Guest: Brian Wieser ๐ŸŽค Host: Tom Triscari ๐Ÿ“บ Sponsors:  Yahoo! &  DoubleVerify

    31 min
  5. 09/16/2025

    Quo Vadis: Advertising Economic Forum Podcast with Dan Salmon

    ๐Ÿ’กTakeaways: ๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ Walled Garden Advantages: The business models of walled gardens are considered superior due to their use of first-party data, simplified advertising solutions, and inherent advantages in user identity and consent.๐Ÿ“บ CTV's Strategic Importance: Connected TV (CTV) is a key strategic growth area for ad tech companies, with Trade Desk, for example, successfully shifting its focus to this sector over the last four to five years.๐Ÿค Partnerships over Exclusivity: The lines between the open web and walled gardens are blurring, as evidenced by partnerships like the Netflix-Amazon DSP collaboration, which suggests a growing trend toward interoperability over exclusivity in the DSP space.๐Ÿค– AI and Automation: Advertisers, especially smaller businesses, are increasingly drawn to the simplicity and efficiency of automated solutions like Google's Performance Max and Meta's Advantage+ suite, which are powered by AI.๐Ÿ›๏ธ Rise of "Hedge Gardens": Retail media networks are emerging as a new type of "hedge garden" that combines the benefits of both open web and walled gardens by leveraging logged-in users, commerce data, and strong conversion signals.๐Ÿ“ˆ The Durable Ad Network Model: The fundamental ad network model remains durable and continues to reinvent itself as user attention shifts to new platforms, such as AI chatbot applications.โš–๏ธ Antitrust's Influence: Ongoing legal and regulatory actions against companies like Google are shaping the AdTech landscape, influencing partnerships and highlighting the need for more interoperability and transparency.๐Ÿ“šBookmarks: Market Dynamics in AdTech 00:02:42  Trade Desk's Strategic Pivot to CTV 6:54  Challenges in CTV Advertising 10:11  Business Models: Open Web vs. Walled Gardens 15:44  Criteo and Google Partnership 19:12  Criteo's Assets and Positioning 25:20  Outbrain's Acquisition of Teeds 29:34  Magnite vs. PubMatic Performance 34:19  Perplexity's Ad Strategy Shift 42:06   ๐ŸŽ™ Guest: Dan Salmon ๐ŸŽค Host: Tom Triscari ๐Ÿ“บ Sponsors: DoubleVerify & Anonymised

    46 min
  6. 09/15/2025

    Quo Vadis: Advertising Economic Forum Podcast with Scott Ensign

    ๐Ÿ“š Chapters: Butler/Till's Employee Ownership Structure โ€Ž 2:20 How the ESOP Works โ€Ž 4:33 Growth and Employee Distribution โ€Ž 6:38 Office Culture and Remote Work โ€Ž 8:28 Remote Work vs. Remote Career โ€Ž 10:39 Management and Feedback in Modern Workplace โ€Ž 14:45 Independent Agencies vs. Holding Companies โ€Ž 17:46 Proprietary Technology Development โ€Ž 21:15 Industry Trends: AI in Video Advertising โ€Ž 29:31 Creative Destruction and Industry Acquisitions โ€Ž 31:39 ๐Ÿ’ก Takeaways: ๐Ÿข The value of in-person collaboration: Despite remote work trends, Butler/Till maintains a hybrid model because it values the in-person collaboration needed for building relationships and company culture.๐Ÿค Employee ownership as a competitive advantage: Butler/Till's 100% employee-owned structure through an ESOP positively impacts company culture, employee engagement, and retention.โš™๏ธ Proprietary technology development: Independent agencies can now build their own proprietary technology to solve client problems, rather than relying solely on third parties.๐Ÿ“Š Democratization of technology: Technology has leveled the playing field, allowing independent agencies to compete with larger holding companies by building their own tools and solutions.โšก Accelerated pace of creative destruction: The advertising industry is experiencing a new level of creative destruction, with recent acquisitions like Magnite buying Streamer AI and Minute Media acquiring generative AI video creation tools. .๐Ÿ“ˆ Strategic autonomy for independents: A key strength for independent agencies is their decision-making autonomy, as they are not beholden to Wall Street, private equity, or venture capital constraints.๐ŸŽ™ Guest: Scott Ensign ๐ŸŽค Host: Tom Triscari ๐Ÿ“บ Sponsors: DoubleVerify & Anonymised

    36 min
  7. 09/10/2025

    Quo Vadis: Advertising Economic Forum Podcast with Mattia Fosci

    ๐Ÿ’กTakeaways: ๐Ÿ”‘ Over-reliance on IDs for targeting and measurement is failing, as approximately 60% of open internet impressions lack a matched ID, reducing the available supply of targetable inventory.๐Ÿฐ The open web is losing ground to walled gardens like Google and Meta, which thrive by offering stable identifiers and a streamlined, easy-to-use experience for advertisers.๐Ÿ“‰ Legacy ad metrics like click-through rate are outdated and don't correlate to real business outcomes, yet the industry remains resistant to adopting better measurement frameworks.๐Ÿ“ˆ Incremental reach is the new frontier, demonstrating value by measuring net-new conversions and audiences that traditional ID-based methods cannot reach.๐Ÿค Fragmentation and internal conflicts within the open web ecosystem hinder its ability to compete against the unified force of the walled gardens.๐Ÿ”ฎ The future of publishing belongs to quality and community-driven content, as the open web undergoes a "severe weight loss program" that culls low-value sites.๐Ÿ“บ The focus is shifting toward non-ID environments like Safari and Connected TV (CTV), which represent a significant opportunity for expanding reach and proving campaign effectiveness.  ๐Ÿ“šChapters: Mattia's Background and Career Journey โ€Ž 3:52 Transition to Data Privacy and Advertising โ€Ž 6:16 The Problem of Over-Reliance on IDs โ€Ž 12:25 Open Web vs. Walled Gardens โ€Ž 15:20 Targeting Without Measurement is Meaningless โ€Ž 18:45 The Challenge of Measuring Marketing Impact โ€Ž 21:39 Incremental Reach and Conversions โ€Ž 28:54 Transaction ID and Industry Fragmentation โ€Ž 37:18 Future of the Open Web โ€Ž 40:24   ๐ŸŽ™ Guest: Mattia Fosci ๐ŸŽค Host: Tom Triscari ๐Ÿ“บ Sponsors: Yahoo! &  DoubleVerify

    43 min
  8. 09/10/2025

    Quo Vadis: AdTech Economic Forum Podcast Episode #1 with Brian Wieser

    Welcome to the Quo Vadis podcast series dedicated to one-to-one interviews with the speakers who took the stage at the AdTech Economic Forum. In this pod series, we get to know what our esteemed speakers are up to touching on their career journeys and hearing their unique perspectives across the many facets shaping the AdTech scene. Takeaways: ๐Ÿ“ˆ Ad Market Outlook: The US advertising market currently looks positive, but carries significant risks, particularly following the recent election.   US Political Uncertainty: Potential policy changes like tariffs, especially impacting cross-border advertising from China, and new regulations (e.g., around pharmaceutical or high-fat/sugar food advertising) could significantly affect ad spend.   ๐Ÿ“Š Unsustainable Growth?: Current high single-digit or low double-digit growth rates in advertising are historically elevated and likely won't last long-term; mid-single-digit growth is more realistic baseline.   ๐Ÿ’ฐ Valuation vs. Reality: There's often a disconnect between high stock valuations (like The Trade Desk's) and fundamental business analysis, reminding us that investor sentiment doesn't always perfectly reflect a company's underlying business.   ๐Ÿค– AI & Agency Jobs: AI isn't expected to eliminate agency jobs wholesale; rather, it will shift the required skills. Professionals who know how to use AI will likely replace those who don't.   ๐Ÿ’ก Agency Adaptation: For agencies to stay relevant through technological shifts like AI, continuous investment in new skills, people, and products is crucial, rather than just returning cash to shareholders.   ๐Ÿค Ad Tech M&A: While M&A activity has been somewhat quiet, potentially due to regulatory caution, there's an expectation it might pick up, especially with dry powder available from private equity.   ๐Ÿ” The Transparency Trade-Off: While marketers say they want transparency, many will accept less transparency if it means achieving better outcomes for the same or lower budget. True transparency is arguably an illusion anyway.

    37 min

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This podcast series is dedicated to one-to-one interviews with the speakers who take the stage at the AdTech Economic Forum.