Amazon Web Services Debuts Real-Time Bidding Service for Advertisers, Media - Evening Mag

Sport & ShowBiz Celebrities

Hot

Amazon Web Services Debuts Real-Time Bidding Service for Advertisers, Media

New Photo - Amazon Web Services Debuts Real-Time Bidding Service for Advertisers, Media

Amazon Web Services Debuts RealTime Bidding Service for Advertisers, Media Brian SteinbergOctober 23, 2025 at 3:00 AM 0 Getty Images for Amazon Web Serv Amazon continues to work to dominate the world of newtech advertising.

- - Amazon Web Services Debuts Real-Time Bidding Service for Advertisers, Media

Brian SteinbergOctober 23, 2025 at 3:00 AM

0

Getty Images for Amazon Web Serv

Amazon continues to work to dominate the world of new-tech advertising.

The company's Amazon Web Services will launch a real-time bidding service for ad buyers and sellers called AWS RTB Fabric, with a goal of helping marketers and media outlets buy and sell digital commercial inventory through split-second auctions. The debut spotlights the growing important of so-called "programmatic" advertising, or digital commercial inventory that is purchased via algorithms that help seek out particular consumers based on geographic region or potential interest in a particular product or service, among other factors.

More from Variety

Amazon Web Services Introduces Pay As You Go Cloud Rendering Service For Deadline-Sensitive VFX and CG Work (EXCLUSIVE)

Amazon's AWS Suffers Brief Internet Service Disruption

Right-Wing Social Network Parler Files New Lawsuit Against Amazon

Amazon Web Services expects to lure companies that might not have been able to afford the cost of running real-time bidding applications or the data processing required to make it happen.

The new AWS product will provide noticeable savings and fewer obstacles notes Stephanie Layser, global head of ad tech solutions at AWS.

Citing data, Amazon Web Services projects that the programmatic advertising market could reach $2.75 trillion by 2030, thanks to increased mobile and digital usage.

In recent months, many companies have struck alliances involving their demand-side platforms. Amazon has secured alliances with with Netflix, Disney and SiriusXM. The hope is that giving marketers the chance to buy a broader set of programmatic inventory from a single venue might reduce the number of commercials they show to the same consumer, and improve the effectiveness of commercials by distributing them with more precision.

Real-time bidding involves the use of split-second auctions that help process millions of requests for inventory from advertisers, and helps marketers put their messages in front of a better defined audience while not overexposing those consumers to the same commercials again and again — a challenge that has only grown as more people migrate to streaming.

Best of Variety

New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week

Oscar Predictions: A Top-Heavy Awards Season With Too Many Favorites and Not Enough Space in the Race

The Best Pop Culture Halloween Costumes for 2025: From 'One Battle After Another' to 'Life of a Showgirl'

Sign up for Variety's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL Entertainment"

Read More


Source: EVENING MAG

Full Article on Source: EVENING MAG

#LALifestyle #USCelebrities