Did The Trade Desk Just “SLAAP” The Supply Side?

At this point it isn’t a secret that the programmatic ecosystem has done an abysmal job with brand safety and supply quality. It also is pretty clear that The Trade Desk is doing whatever it can to distance themselves from the DSP pack. While The Trade Desk is clearly a Tier 1 DSP it’s hard to take market share away from their competitors who all own and operate premium inventory and data.

 

The Trade Desk has invested a lot into Universal ID2 to put themselves at the forefront of the post-cookie audience targeting solutions. While it’s too soon to write off UID2 it seems pretty clear that it will not achieve the scale needed to make them the “go to” for post-cookie identity. Now, it appears they are taking another shot at differentiating themselves from their other Tier 1 DSP competitors. 

 

The new PR push is pretty straightforward. They want to brand themselves as the arbiters of “the premium open web.” The timing makes sense because brands and agencies are scrambling to figure out ways to ensure brand safety and supply quality in the wake of numerous reports highlighting how DV, IAS, and the like have been asleep at the wheeling certifying quality. The Trade Desk has released SP500+ (which seems to be an index of top, premium publishers) and more recently the Top 100 publishers. 

 

These lists are not any kind of innovation in themselves. In fact, many on adtech Twitter (or X) chided the move as a SLAAP (site list as a service) and I essentially agree. Any programmatic media buyer with a few years of experience probably could have put a nearly identical list together. That said, something bigger is likely going on. It appears the Top 100 publisher list is full of UID2 adopters. The Trade Desk could be trying to bully the open web into their ecosystem of UID2 or else be branded “non-premium” inventory. 

 

If this is the case I think it’s a dangerous path for The Trade Desk to take. Publishers are tired of being pushed around by monopolistic players on the buy side. Further, The Trade Desk has spent a lot of effort creating goodwill in the programmatic ecosystem around not being their competition. Attempting to use their clout in the industry to start pushing their view of the world on publishers and the rest of the programmatic ecosystem players could ultimately backfire. I don’t think the industry as a whole wants or needs a DSP to declare what is and is not the premium open internet.  

 

No matter what The Trade Desks true intentions are with these publisher lists one thing is certain. We will be very interested to see where they go with all of this.

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