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While useful for programmatic CTV, Demand-Side Platforms (DSPs) were not designed for the entire TV ecosystem. They can only access about 20% of total available TV inventory, excluding the other 80% which includes crucial linear TV opportunities like live sports and premium broadcasts.
Marketers often view advertising platforms through a mobile lens (iOS, Android). However, Roku is the third-largest operating system in the US overall and the #1 TV OS. This massive, often underestimated, scale provides advertisers with unparalleled reach and data for the living room screen.
When brands hit a point of diminishing returns on search and social media, TV becomes a critical next step. It provides incremental reach to new audiences, builds brand legitimacy, and can accelerate the path to purchase for customers discovered on other channels.
Tushy actively measures the cross-channel impact of its advertising, discovering that top-of-funnel channels like Linear TV drive a greater sales lift on Amazon than digital channels like Meta. This is attributed to the demographic overlap between Linear TV viewers and typical Amazon Prime shoppers.
Manscaped avoids siloed data by using a "convergent TV" approach that brings linear and streaming campaigns into a single measurement framework. This provides a complete view of performance, scale, and efficiency, which is impossible when buying and measuring these channels separately.
Historically, TV advertising required massive budgets and long commitments. Self-serve connected TV (CTV) platforms now offer low minimums, allowing DTC brands to test and iterate creative with the same agility and small budgets used for search and social channels.
Brands can purchase high-visibility, premium TV spots like college football at a discount by tapping into "fire sales" of remnant inventory. This requires an agile budget and quick communication with your media partner to capitalize on these last-minute deals.
The price disparity isn't about viewership. Legacy TV ad buys are often part of complex, negotiated packages that include talent access and integrations. This "engagement model" is different from YouTube's biddable, auction-based system, keeping TV prices high despite weaker analytics.
Focusing exclusively on programmatic buying for CTV is a critical error, as it represents only 7% of all ad-supported TV inventory. This siloed approach misses the vast scale of linear and direct-publisher streaming, while often incurring higher CPMs and limiting a campaign's total reach and efficiency.
Traditional linear TV still commands about half of all viewership and ad inventory. Crucially, major live cultural moments like the NBA playoffs are sold as linear buys, even when viewed on streaming services like Hulu Live. A streaming-only strategy forfeits this premium inventory.
The next major shift in ad tech is performance-based CTV. This merges the attention of linear TV with the accountability of digital media, allowing advertisers to tie ad spend directly to outcomes like sales—a revolutionary change from traditional television's limitations.