After The Trade Desk’s audit row, rivals rush to pitch features and transparency chops

Every time a transparency crisis rattles programmatic, the same reflex kicks in: rivals circle, sales decks get dusted off and emails go out, it is one of ad tech’s more reliable habits, and one of its more reliably ineffective ones.

The Trade Deal’s falling out with Publicis is the latest to trigger it. Competitors have been working phones and LinkedIn ad budgets, pitching transparency and the implicit suggestion that now might be the moment to rethink the roster. Buyers, for the most part, aren’t buying it. The holdco war is fundamentally about margin and control — concerns that matter enormously to the big six and considerably less to everyone else.

RTBHouse, or rather the DSP side of it, has fielded client questions about the fracas in recent weeks, though the volume was low and the tone more curious than urgent — the kind of checking-in that tends to follow media coverage than genuine alarm. Roy Geva Olmert, svp of client services, cut through it simply: “Transparency is a means to an end. CMOs don’t really care about how you go about running your business. What they do care about is that you do right by them.” 

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