At A Glance
Curation is becoming the standard for programmatic buying because it connects trusted data, premium inventory, and supply-path optimization into performance-ready deals. In a privacy-first environment, curated private marketplaces (PMPs) give marketers more control, better efficiency, and clearer outcomes across channels.Curation is becoming the standard for programmatic buying because it improves transparency, cost efficiency, and measurable performance in privacy-first environments. It connects trusted data with premium supply paths, making scale more accountable and aligned to outcomes.
For years, success meant reaching as many impressions as possible at the lowest cost. That model delivered reach, but it didn’t always deliver results. As privacy standards tightened and signals fragmented, scale alone stopped translating into performance.
In 2026, programmatic buying looks different. Advertisers are moving toward better-defined paths to results. Curation, once a niche tactic, is now becoming central to a brand’s strategy shaping how media is planned, activated, and measured.
How is programmatic buying shifting from broad access to intentional activation?
Programmatic buying is shifting from broad, open exchange access to curated, performance-ready supply paths. Advertisers now prioritize quality, transparency, and data alignment over raw impression volume. Curation is reshaping programmatic into something more focused, efficient, and accountable.
Instead of relying on uncurated open exchange buying (the old “needle in a haystack” example), advertisers are curating both audiences and supply paths to better surface high-value opportunities at the right price. They’re combining high-quality inventory with trusted data, identity, and optimization to create premium private marketplace (PMP) deals designed for performance. In practice, this means the open exchange remains the source of scale, while curation determines how that scale is accessed and optimized.
In a privacy-first environment, curation brings identity, quality, and control together. It allows marketers to activate across connected TV (CTV), audio, in-app and the open web while reducing waste and improving transparency.
What’s the performance case for curation?
Curation drives measurable efficiency gains for both buyers and sellers. Experian’s identity foundation strengthens this alignment by ensuring audience consistency across curated supply paths, improving match quality, and cross-channel measurement. A growing share of programmatic spend now flows through curated private marketplaces because they improve cost control and outcomes.
The shift toward curated buying paths reflects how the open exchange itself is evolving.

2026 Digital trends and predictions report
Our 2026 Digital trends and predictions report is available now and reveals five trends that will define 2026. From curation becoming the standard in programmatic to AI moving from hype to implementation, each trend reflects a shift toward more connected, data-driven marketing. The interplay between them will define how marketers will lead in 2026.
More than 66% of open-exchange ad spend, representing over $100 billion annually, now flows through curated PMPs. Advertisers are seeing data cost savings of 36-81% compared to uncurated open exchange buying, while publishers benefit as well, with revenue lifts of up to 70% on mobile and 13% on CTV.
These gains come from alignment. Curated deals provide:
When data and supply are aligned at the deal level, performance becomes more predictable and measurable.
How are supply-side platforms accelerating curation?
Supply-side platforms (SSPs) are embedding curation directly into their infrastructure. This is making curated buying easier to execute at scale.
SSPs like Index Exchange, Magnite, and OpenX now embed curation tools directly into their platforms that enable:
- Real-time optimization
- Data enrichment
- Transparent buyer-to-publisher connections
Audigent’s collaboration with Index Exchange brings curated inventory directly into DV360 through Index Marketplaces. For marketers, this translates to faster activation, clearer insights, and more control across the supply path.
Curation is no longer a workaround layered on top of programmatic. It’s becoming part of the core transaction.
Why are agencies stepping into the curator role?
Agencies are building curated marketplaces to improve performance and differentiate their media strategies. Curation gives them more control over data costs, transparency, and client outcomes.
Holding company GroupM and independent agency Butler/Till are building their own curated marketplaces. These deals allow them to:
- Control data costs
- Maintain transparency
- Improve performance while reducing reliance on open-market bidding
For advertisers, agency-curated deals provide accuracy without added complexity. For agencies, curation strengthens their strategic power beyond buying power.
How does data collaboration expand curated activation?
Curation works best when data partners collaborate within the deal structure. Curated PMPs allow trusted audience segments to move closer to supply without additional friction.
Through Experian Curated Deals, high-performing audience segments are made available directly within curated PMPs. This includes PurpleLab’s HIPAA-compliant audiences, enabling privacy-conscious activation across verticals like B2B, CPG, health, retail, and travel.
Experian Curated Deals are live across major buying platforms, including:
Marketers can activate trusted data without added contracts or data fees, expanding reach while maintaining governance and control.
Experian’s identity foundation ensures audiences remain consistent across channels. Audigent’s supply-path intelligence strengthens efficiency and optimization. Together, we create a performance-focused buying environment.
How does real-time optimization keep curation flexible?
Curation supports in-flight optimization tied directly to performance metrics. Curated deals evolve based on outcomes. Experian Curated Deals support in-flight optimization using metrics like conversions and returnon ad spend (ROAS). Audigent supports mid-flight campaign adjustments without sacrificing transparency or control.
How a pet brand beat audio campaign goals by 63% with Experian Curated Deals
In emerging channels, this flexibility is especially valuable. A national e-commerce pet brand partnered with Audigent to test audio advertising for the first time using Experian Curated Deals. With limited bandwidth and a need for fast results, the team saw immediate impact. Audio campaigns beat KPIs by 63%, drove stronger purchase intent than competing platforms, and earned ongoing budget and executive support.

Performance validation is why curation continues gaining momentum.
The takeaway: Curation is central to privacy-first addressability
Curation now anchors privacy-first addressability. It aligns data depth, identity, and supply-path optimization within a controlled marketplace structure. By combining Experian’s identity foundation with Audigent’s activation and optimization capabilities, Experian Curated Deals help marketers:
- Personalize messaging across channels
- Optimize campaigns in real-time
- Prove results across every channel
- Activate across preferred DSPs without operational friction
To explore this trend and the others shaping marketing in 2026, download our 2026 Digital trends and predictions report.
Connect with our team if you’re ready to get started with curation
About the author

Jake Abraham
Head of Strategic Partnerships, Experian
Jake Abraham is Head of Strategic Partnerships at Experian Marketing Services, where he leads efforts in publisher monetization, cloud solutions, and Experian’s data marketplace. Known for his ability to connect strategic vision with real-world execution, Jake brings deep expertise in AdTech and media innovation.
Prior to Experian, Jake was Chief Commercial Officer at Audigent (acquired by Experian in 2024) and spent five years at the Hearst Corporation, where he developed content strategy for its digital agency, iCrossing. He began his career as an award-winning film and television producer, a foundation that continues to inform his creative and strategic approach to the industry.
Programmatic curation FAQs
Programmatic curation packages high-quality inventory and trusted data into private marketplace deals designed for performance. Instead of buying broadly across the open exchange, marketers activate pre-aligned supply paths that improve transparency, efficiency, and outcomes.
Marketers are shifting budget into curated PMPs because curated deals improve cost control, transparency, and performance predictability. Curated supply paths reduce data waste, increase win rates, and align identity with premium inventory in a privacy-conscious structure.
Experian supports curated programmatic strategies by combining Experian’s identity foundation with Audigent’s curation and optimization technology. Experian’s data powers audience consistency across channels, and curated deals embed that data directly into supply paths for measurable performance.
Marketers should treat the open exchange as a source of scale and curated PMPs as a layer of control and performance alignment. The open exchange provides reach, and curated supply paths refine how that reach is accessed, measured, and optimized. Together, they create a more accountable and flexible buying strategy.
Curation improves performance in privacy-first environments by aligning deterministic and contextual data with premium inventory inside controlled deal structures. Experian’s identity capabilities support cross-channel consistency, and curated supply paths reduce reliance on fragmented legacy identifiers.
Latest posts
In our Ask the Expert series, we interview leaders from our partner organizations who are helping lead their brands to new heights in AdTech. Today’s interview is with Samantha Zhang, Senior Data Scientist, and Jim Meyer, General Manager of the DASH TV Universe Study at the Advertising Research Foundation (ARF). DASH is an annual tracking study conducted by the ARF to define and better understand TV audience behavior and household dynamics. What does DASH measure, and how does it help the industry understand TV consumption today? By capturing hundreds of individual- and household-level data points from each respondent in a rigorous and nationally projectable sample, DASH creates a comprehensive picture of U.S. consumer TV “infrastructure” – how America watches. Core elements in DASHElements that create context in DASHTV setsLocation | brand | smartness | service modes | sources DemographicsConnected devices Game consoles |video players | streaming devicesYesterday viewing Daypart | TV/device genre | Out-of-home viewingMobile devicesOwners | sharing usersShoppingOnline and in-store | Exposure to major RMNsInternet serviceModes | ISPs | connectivity by device Streaming audio Streaming TVSVOD/AVOD tiers and sharing | FAST Email accounts and apps Live TV Modes of access | including casting from devices Social media For example, DASH gathers: Data on every TV set, including brand, room location, age, “smartness,” and connection devices and modes Household connectivity and video service data, even in homes with no TV set Internet Service Providers (ISP) and TV service usage, including Multichannel Video Programming Distributors (MVPDs), virtual vMVPDs, streamers (ad-supported and premium), and Free Ad-Supported Television (FAST) channels Person-level ownership and usage of video-capable mobile devices, including smartphones, tablets, and laptops Measures of viewing and co-viewing across dayparts, devices, and services Additional modules covering shopping and retail media networks, streaming audio, social media, email, and apps Broad coverage and granularity make DASH a uniquely robust source of truth for practitioners across the industry, including measurement experts and ad programming strategists. DASH also reports regularly (and publicly) on key industry dynamics. DASH identified a growing segment of device-only viewers – now nearly 9 million households that watch TV, but do not own a TV set – and highlighted the implications of that trend for traditional ratings systems based only on households with TV sets. Households (HHs – million)2025 HHs (M) U.S. penetrationChange vs. 2024 (M)Total US134.8100%+2.7Connected TV (CTV)114.685%+2.1TV (Set)124.292.2%+1.1Device-only8.86.6%+1.6TV-Accessible133.198.7%+2.7 DASH called out the rise in app-based pay TV and proposed a new connection framework that better represents the modern TV world, in which linear and streaming overlap. DASH also defines the universes of households reachable with advertising. This graphic, for example, shows how all ad-supported linear and streaming properties in aggregate define the true scale of TV advertising. While 35 million households (and growing) are reachable only with streaming ads and 13 million (and falling) only with linear ads, most households are reachable with both, underscoring the importance of understanding the “overlap.” Who uses DASH data, and what decisions does it help inform? There are three primary users of DASH, each with its own use cases: Measurement providers, including Nielsen, use DASH to calibrate viewership data, turn household data into persons data (and vice versa) and estimate potential reached audiences–what the providers call media-related universe estimate (MRUEs)–for the calculation of ratings. Not surprisingly, measurement companies were the first to see the value that an independent TV universe study could provide. Media companies, including major broadcasters and streamers, use DASH to add context and color to their ad sales presentations – and to track the measurement providers, whose ratings play a major role in valuing ad inventory. AdTech companies, including Experian, use DASH to create high-value audience segments for activation. The recent accreditation of DASH by the Media Rating Council (MRC) and adoption by Nielsen as an input to its TV ratings have generated interest from a broad range of companies. We are actively pursuing new licensees and partners to make DASH more useful within, and even outside, the TV ecosystem. What does MRC accreditation signify, and why is it meaningful for DASH? MRC accreditation means DASH passed a rigorous audit conducted by Ernst & Young over many months, which validated our methodology, controls, and data quality. MRC accreditation establishes that DASH is an industry-standard dataset. While the service provider normally announces its own accreditation, the MRC took the unusual step of issuing its own release on DASH, announcing the accreditation of DASH for TV universe estimation and endorsing the study for broader, cross-media use. How does Experian use DASH data to build audiences? The segments combine specific TV usage habits and behaviors from DASH with Experian data on demographics, spending, and other contextual inputs to create a fuller view of consumer viewing behavior. They are designed to be valuable to advertisers in many categories and planning contexts – and to be customizable to fit advertisers’ media targets. The segments can be used to: Apply or suppress audiences to improve target coverage across a campaign Better align media and creative Reach elusive but high-value viewers, such as Ad Avoiders Drive valuable consumer behavior Achieve specific advertising objectives What are some practical use cases for DASH-based audiences? Here are some practical use cases for four different kinds of DASH segments in five different advertiser categories. Travel Co-WatchersA couples-only resort uses TV Co-Watching Households without Children to strengthen target reach and ad memory recallA big theme park destination uses TV Co-Watching Households with Children to reach families in moments of togetherness Home Entertainment TV Owners and Brand LoyalistsA premium TV manufacturer uses the overlap of Multi Brand TV Owners and Single Brand TV Loyalist Households to market its newest TV model to its most loyal consumers. Fast Food Screen Size ViewersA fast food chain with a high-impact new brand campaign uses Large Screen TV Viewers to better align the media and creativeThat same fast food chain uses Small-Screen TV Viewers to drive store traffic by increasing exposure of its retail campaign among on-the-go viewers Financial Services Cord Cutters A personal cost management app and a cash-back credit card target Streaming-First Cord Cutter Households to reach young, tech-savvy, cost-conscious consumers Thanks for the interview. Where can readers learn more about DASH? We started work on DASH seven years ago, and it’s been fun to watch it “grow up.” Our partnership with Experian is a big step toward putting DASH to work for advertisers and agencies. To learn more, visit our site at https://theARF.org/DASH or contact us at DASH@theARF.org. Contact us About our experts Samantha Zhang, Senior Data Scientist at ARF Samantha Zhang is a Senior Data Scientist at the Advertising Research Foundation working on the DASH TV Universe Study, with additional research spanning areas including attention measurement, digital privacy, and artificial intelligence. Jim Meyer, General Manager, DASH, at ARF Jim Meyer is general manager and co-founder of the ARF DASH TV Universe Study and managing partner of Golden Square, LLC, which advises media and research technology companies on growth strategy and development. Latest posts
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