Home Social Media More Search Data On Facebook Exchange As Simpli.fi Enlists in Partner Army

More Search Data On Facebook Exchange As Simpli.fi Enlists in Partner Army

SHARE:

fbx-simplifi-usethisLast month we noted that search intent data had come to the Facebook Exchange, in the form of a partnership with search retargeter Chango. The deal represented something of an incursion by Facebook on terrain that’s long been lucrative for Google.

Now Facebook has done it again, adding search retargeting firm Simpli.fi to the FBX partner program. Simpli.fi will compete for Facebook RTB inventory alongside traditional DSPs (Turn, DataXu, etc), retargeters (Criteo, AdRoll), avowed social ad specialists (Optim.al, Triggit), and one agency trading desk (WPP’s Xaxis).

CEO Frost Prioleau says the company does not strictly focus on search retargeting, but also site retargeting and CRM database matching.

“The main thing that we bring that is unique to FBX is the ability to target at the element level, using unstructured data that has not been aggregated into opaque segments,” he said in an emailed statement to AdExchanger. “This gives us the ability to optimize targeted audiences on the fly, which drives far better performance against the fixed segments that we test.”

Simpli.fi will bring significant new demand to FBX, further driving up prices in its RTB auctions. The company is in the process of migrating 5000 already live campaigns to FBX. For those campaigns it provides full price transparency, disclosing “actual media, data, and platform costs” to clients. No arbitraging of media or data – strictly licensing fees.

Adding a second search retargeter is consistent with Facebook’s preferred approach of loosing a thousand arrows and hoping a few of them hit the target. The FBX program now stands at some 15 companies – though not all are yet listed on the PMD page. The company is clearly betting that by introducing as many new sources of demand as possible, ad prices ad bid activity on the exchange will rise.

The risk for advertisers and FBX partners is that the steady influx of vendors combined with rising prices will hinder the value proposition associated with FBX, which has until now been lauded for low price relative to performance (i.e. strong ROI). It would seem inevitable that the low hanging fruit on FBX will eventually move higher in the tree as multiple bidders try to stake a claim on each of its 7 billion-plus rumored daily impressions.

What comes after the gold rush? We may be about to find out.

Must Read

multiple sets of eyes

Amazon DSP Adds Adelaide’s Pre-Bid Attention Targeting

Advertisers can target high- and medium-attention ad inventory in Amazon DSP while filtering out low-attention placements and made-for-advertising sites.

Marketers Are Getting Used To AI In The Ad Stack

Marketers and media buyers are gradually getting more comfortable talking about ad campaigns they’re testing on large-language models like OpenAI’s ChatGPT.

For Video Publishers, Performance And AI Go Hand In Hand

In Connected TV Ad Land, proving performance is the priority for video advertisers. To drive more demonstrable reach and results, publishers are trying to expand their reach while wringing more data and AI features into their offerings. 

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

Independent Ad Tech Is Reframing Itself Around Cloud Hardware

Nowadays, programmatic vendors, and SSPs in particular, are carving new paths of differentiation based on their type of adoption of cloud infrastructure.

Ad Performance Hinges On Kicking Fragmentation’s Butt

As performance takes center-stage in more advertising discussions, demands to solve fragmentation and cruddy measurement are reaching a fever pitch.

AdExchanger's Big Story podcast with journalistic insights on advertising, marketing and ad tech

AI Off The Rails

A word of caution to digital advertising companies, as they go all in on AI algorithms: They need to build these solutions with ownership, governance and accountability from the start – or AI could sink them with a single mistake.