Last updated: May 2026
Most programmatic display campaigns plateau at the same ceiling and it's almost never the budget that's holding them there. Advanced programmatic display advertising goes well past basic DSP setup; the strategies that separate high-performing campaigns from average ones include dynamic creative optimization (DCO), granular audience segmentation, contextual targeting, AI-assisted bidding, private marketplace deals, and rigorous cross-channel attribution. If your programmatic display ROI has stalled, the fix is almost always in one of those areas. This post walks through the strategies worth stealing — with real campaign results from Roller Rabbit and Seneca College.
The advanced programmatic display strategies that move the needle:
Programmatic display advertising has reshaped digital marketing — giving advertisers and publishers a faster, more measurable way to buy and sell ad inventory. But, being the brilliant marketer you are, you already know all of that. What you might not know is which advanced strategies actually move the bottom line in 2026.
Here, we'll cover the fundamentals worth recapping, the advanced strategies that separate strong programmatic campaigns from average ones, where AI fits in the workflow today, and a couple of real-world examples from our work at Major Tom.
What is programmatic display advertising? Programmatic advertising is the automated buying and selling of digital ad inventory using real-time bidding technology — letting advertisers target specific audiences efficiently. "Display" simply refers to the visual ad format. For the longer overview of how this fits in the wider paid landscape, our guide to the role of programmatic ads in modern digital advertising covers the ecosystem in depth.
Is Google Display programmatic? Yes — Google Display ads are a programmatic format, accessed primarily through the Google Display Network. Google is the largest player in the park, but it's not the only one. Xandr (now part of Microsoft Advertising), OpenX, and Magnite (formerly Rubicon) are all viable platforms for advertisers looking for inventory diversity.
Interested in adjacent formats? DOOH advertising is a strong companion channel — particularly when paired with programmatic display in an omnichannel plan.
Programmatic offers a time- and cost-efficient way to win the right ad impressions at the right price for your target audience. It's a win-win: publishers fill ad inventory automatically; advertisers buy precisely. Traditional media buying, by contrast, leans on manual negotiation that's slow, opaque, and difficult to scale. Programmatic differs from traditional digital media buying in a few core ways:
If you're a B2B brand running display, the targeting and creative approach diverge in meaningful ways. We've covered B2B-specific programmatic angles in a companion guide.
Yes — when they're set up and managed well. Programmatic display CPMs vary significantly by inventory type and quality tier. Recent 2025 benchmark data from Focus Digital shows Open Exchange CPMs typically running $1.24–$1.95, Curated Marketplaces around $2.78, and Premium Private Marketplaces near $4.85. The takeaway: cost-effectiveness depends on whether you're optimising for reach (open exchange) or quality (PMP).
Programmatic also wins on measurability. Detailed performance analytics let you see what's driving conversions and reallocate budget toward what's working. In our experience, that feedback loop is what makes programmatic an ROI engine rather than a black box — and you can lean into our paid media best practices alongside our six tips for stellar ROI on paid advertising campaigns to set up that feedback loop properly. For deeper budget guidance, see budgeting media buying costs for better ROI, and to track whether your programmatic spend is hitting the mark, the metrics that matter most for measurement.
To be the best of the best in programmatic, three things have to come together: a deep, varied understanding of your target audience, access to reliable data, and the ability to adapt to evolving technologies and advanced strategies.
This section is about the third. That said, a programmatic specialist (cough, cough — like Major Tom) can help you navigate platform complexity and the recurring challenges of programmatic platforms for optimal performance. Here's where the advanced work actually happens.
DCO is one of the most powerful tools in programmatic. It dynamically personalizes ad creative based on user data and behaviour in real time — rapidly producing iterations of an ad using the same base creative while customizing elements by audience, context, and past performance.
The result: ads built for a specific audience at a precise moment. A highly personalized experience, driven by automation, that consistently outperforms static creative when set up properly.
A/B testing is nothing new, but the infrastructure around it keeps improving. Analyze your data to determine winning ad variations, then make data-driven decisions to optimize campaign performance. Test creative elements, messaging, and targeting separately — and resist the temptation to run too many variables simultaneously, which obscures which lever is moving the needle.
Programmatic direct lets advertisers buy inventory directly from publishers, bypassing open exchanges. Private marketplaces offer a controlled, invite-only auction environment. These channels give you more control, transparency, and exclusivity — and access to premium inventory that doesn't reach the open exchange.
The shift toward PMPs is one of the strongest trends in programmatic. Brand safety, measurement transparency, and protection from low-quality made-for-advertising (MFA) inventory have all driven the move. Most of the year-over-year growth in programmatic display is now happening in PMP and programmatic direct — not on the open exchange.
Contextual targeting reads the page rather than the user — matching ads to content topics, page categories, and sentiment. With third-party cookies persisting on Chrome (Google reversed deprecation in October 2025) but Apple ATT firmly in place on iOS, contextual remains a strong complement to behavioural targeting — not the replacement strategy some predicted, but a durable addition to the targeting stack.
Programmatic now runs across desktop, mobile, OOH/DOOH, social, connected TV, and digital audio — and the strongest campaigns orchestrate across all of them. The integration matters: cross-channel measurement, unified frequency capping, and consistent creative themes are what convert an omnichannel buy into an omnichannel campaign.
AI and machine learning are now baked into every major DSP. Predictive bidding identifies high-potential users with precision. AI-driven creative generation produces variants at scale. Anomaly detection flags fraud, bot traffic, and made-for-advertising sites before they consume budget. Where AI was a "future trend" in 2024, in 2026 it's table stakes — the question isn't whether to use it, but where in the stack to deploy it.
AI's impact on programmatic display has already arrived. It's actively enhancing targeting accuracy, automating personalization, refining audience segmentation, optimizing bids in real time, and detecting fraud — all in production, not in pilot. DCO benefits particularly from AI's pattern-recognition layer, which can match creative permutations to audience segments faster than any human team.
The areas where AI continues to push the boundary:
AI is getting granular on predicting user behaviour and ad performance — conversion probability scoring, lifetime value forecasting, and creative-fatigue prediction are all becoming standard inside major DSPs.
Algorithms now make split-second decisions on placements, bids, and creative variations to hit campaign goals. The decision speed has gone from milliseconds to sub-milliseconds — and the quality of those decisions has improved as the training data has scaled.
AI-driven programmatic increasingly integrates with adjacent channels to create seamless omnichannel campaigns. Budget allocation and messaging across mobile, social, CTV, and DOOH all benefit from the same underlying optimization layer.
Generative AI assists in ad creative generation — copy, visuals, and short-form video. The 2026 version of this work is meaningfully better than the 2024 version: format-aware, brand-tone-aware, and capable of producing variants tuned to specific audience segments. Human oversight on tone and message is still essential.
AI is improving attribution at the level of granularity advertisers actually need. Multi-touch attribution that accurately credits each touchpoint along the customer journey — and identifies which touchpoints are genuinely incremental vs. coincidental — is a real, working product category in 2026.
AI-driven programmatic is starting to extend into voice and conversational ad formats. Interactive units that respond to a user prompt, rather than just displaying creative, are the early end of this trend.
Want to go deeper on AI in marketing? Check out generative AI and marketing: the winning combination for success.
Over the years, Major Tom has worked with a long list of paid media clients — many under NDA. Below are two programmatic campaigns we're proud of, with results the clients are happy to share.
Roller Rabbit, a women's and children's clothing and accessories brand, has been a long-time Major Tom client. We're proud of the partnership and have been able to innovate on their behalf across paid media. One award-winning campaign was a 6-month flight from June to December, designed to capture new customers via CTV and programmatic display.
Over the campaign duration, Roller Rabbit saw strong results:
We also saw an increase in first-time customers vs. returning customers, telling us the lead-generation layer was working in full force alongside the programmatic display buy.
Seneca College, a leader in post-secondary education, is another long-time Major Tom partner. The paid media campaigns we build for Seneca focus on generating high-quality enrollment leads via programmatic display.
Year-over-year, Seneca's display campaigns have driven significant cost efficiencies. Programmatic algorithm refinement and ongoing optimization brought Q3 CPL down 38% YoY. The same campaigns drove cost-efficient traffic to the Seneca site — CPC was down 28% in Q3 vs. the prior year.
Excelling in programmatic marketing requires advanced strategies — DCO, sharp A/B testing infrastructure, programmatic direct and PMP deals, contextual targeting, and a genuine omnichannel approach. These aren't optional tactics; they're the differentiators between average results and great ones. And don't sleep on AI. It's already shaping every layer of programmatic, from targeting to creative to attribution — and the pace of change isn't slowing.
Integrate these strategies into your campaigns and the ROI follows. Or skip ahead and let Major Tom run your paid media strategy end-to-end. Either way, the goal is the same: find clarity in the chaos of programmatic complexity, and build campaigns that earn their budget back. Ready to take action? Start by deciding whether an in-house team or an agency should manage your paid media strategy — that decision shapes everything else.
Programmatic display advertising is the automated buying and selling of digital banner, native, and rich-media ad inventory using real-time bidding technology. Demand-side platforms (DSPs) match advertiser audiences to publisher inventory in milliseconds, replacing the manual negotiation of traditional media buying. The "display" half of the term refers to the visual format — distinguishing it from programmatic video, audio, or DOOH, which use the same underlying buying technology applied to different ad formats.
The most effective programmatic display strategies in 2026 are dynamic creative optimization (DCO) for real-time personalization, audience segmentation that blends first-party data with platform signals, contextual targeting as a durable complement to behavioural targeting, programmatic direct and private marketplace (PMP) deals for premium inventory access, and AI-assisted bidding and creative generation. The strongest campaigns layer several of these together rather than relying on any one in isolation.
Yes — in most cases. Programmatic display CPMs typically run $1.24–$1.95 on Open Exchange, around $2.78 on Curated Marketplaces, and near $4.85 on Premium Private Marketplaces, per 2025 Focus Digital benchmarks. Direct buys can match the CPM at the high end but rarely match the audience precision, the speed of buying, or the measurement transparency that programmatic offers. The cost-effectiveness ratio depends on how disciplined the campaign management is — automation is only as good as the strategy feeding it.
AI is now embedded across the programmatic stack. It powers predictive bidding inside major DSPs, automates creative generation through tools like DCO, refines audience segmentation in real time, and detects fraud and made-for-advertising inventory before budget is wasted on it. The 2026 version of programmatic is meaningfully different from the 2024 version because AI has moved from "emerging" to "default" — the question is no longer whether to use AI, but where in the stack to deploy it for the highest leverage.
Dynamic creative optimization (DCO) is a programmatic technique that personalizes ad creative in real time based on user data and behaviour. Using a base creative template, DCO automatically swaps elements — headlines, images, calls-to-action, product highlights — to match the audience segment, context, and historical performance signals. The result is a personalized ad experience served at scale, which consistently outperforms static creative when the underlying data and creative variants are well-structured.
Two Major Tom case studies illustrate programmatic display done well across very different verticals. Roller Rabbit, a women's and children's eCommerce brand, ran a 6-month CTV and programmatic display flight that produced a 30% YoY lift in direct traffic and a 345% increase in sales from direct traffic. Seneca College, a post-secondary institution, drove a 38% reduction in Q3 cost-per-lead and a 28% reduction in cost-per-click year-over-year through ongoing programmatic display optimization for student recruitment.
Programmatic display campaign success is measured through a combination of efficiency metrics (CPM, CPC, CTR), conversion metrics (CPA, ROAS, conversion rate), and quality metrics (viewability, brand safety scores, audience overlap). Multi-touch attribution that credits programmatic's role in the full customer journey is increasingly important — last-click reporting tends to undervalue display significantly. For a complete walkthrough of which metrics to prioritize, our PPC metrics guide covers the full hierarchy.