Home Commerce Criteo Sets Its Sights On Brick-And-Mortar With Brandcrush Acquisition

Criteo Sets Its Sights On Brick-And-Mortar With Brandcrush Acquisition

SHARE:

Criteo took a step further into retail media – all the way into physical stores.

On Tuesday, Criteo acquired Brandcrush, a small Australian ad startup that manages physical retail campaigns, including in-store signage, coupon circulars, free sampling and miscellaneous inventory that surrounds a grocery store, like screens on gas pumps and car-charging stations.

Terms of the deal were not disclosed. Brandcrush adds about 20 new employees to the Criteo team.

The field of physical retail marketing “is really a green pasture for us,” said Sherry Smith, Criteo’s GM of global enterprise.

Brandcrush was already working on bringing offline shopper marketing budgets into the digital age, she said. Brands will now have a single sign-on where they can manage and analyze online campaigns with Criteo and in-store activations via Brandcrush.

Criteo and Brandcrush have already done some co-pitching together, Smith told AdExchanger.

Although marketing free samples and in-store cardboard displays aren’t purchased on a CPM basis, she said, these efforts can still be measured in a data-driven way. For example, Brandcrush incorporates stores that do and don’t do marketing as control groups to help attribute incremental new sales.

Increasingly, Criteo is also assigning credit to itself when online advertising leads to more in-store activity for a brand. Although a programmatic campaign and an in-store shopper marketing push can’t be purchased like-for-like, they can be measured together.

“And in-store activations with the brand and retailers continue to evolve,” Smith said.

But back to Smith’s point about Criteo seeing a “green pasture” in physical trade marketing. The opportunity goes beyond free samples and other activations that don’t lend themselves to programmatic buys. There are other placements being introduced in stores that can be sold on a real-time basis and in a reproducible format for online advertising.

In-store television setups, for example, are a retail media opportunity, Smith said. Stores are also cultivating streaming-type radio feeds that advertisers can buy their way into. Those video and audio placements can be a fit for IAB-standard units. And car-charging stations in parking lots are surfaces for digital out-of-home units that are being packaged for retail media and can also be transacted programmatically.

Criteo hasn’t purchased any of that shopper-adjacent media yet. “But,” Smith said, “this certainly gives us the opportunity to expand into that space.”

Must Read

The Trade Desk Reframes Its Open Internet Vision As ‘The Premium Internet’

The Trade Desk is focusing beyond the overall “open internet” and on what CEO Jeff Green calls the “premium internet.”

Comic: Welcome Aboard

Google Search’s Core Updates Are Crushing Sites And Reshaping The Web

Google Search, the web’s largest traffic and revenue generator for two decades, is in the midst of sweeping overhauls that have already altered how users are funneled around the internet.

Liquid I.V. Sponsors A Formula 1 Race As DTC Brands Compete For Sports Fans

Digital-native brands are racing to break free of their social media roots to reach a broader base of US customers. For many brands, this means betting big on sports.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters
Comic: Shopper Marketing Data

Criteo Splits Out Retail Media Revenue For The First Time

Criteo split out its retail media segment revenue for the first time during its earnings report on Thursday.

Comic: Welcome Aboard

Google’s Ad Network Biz Dips, But Search Brings Home The Bacon

By next year, Google will have three separate business lines – Search, YouTube and Cloud – with an annual run rate to generate at least $100 billion, CEO Sundar Pichai told investors.

Comic: The Last Third-Party Cookie

Cookie-Related Quips To Get You Through Google’s THIRD Third-Party Cookie Delay

If you’re looking for a think piece about what Google’s most recent third-party cookie deprecation delay means for the online ad industry – this isn’t it. 😅