Omnicom launches cross-platform clean room to solve CTV frequency capping
Omnicom Media has updated its cross-platform clean room with new capabilities to measure ad reach, frequency, and performance across multiple CTV platforms and linear TV. Leveraging identity tech from Acxiom and telemetry from VideoAmp, the solution is designed to tackle the industry's persistent CTV ad-frequency capping issues by tracking Creative IDs across major publishers including Disney, NBCUniversal, and Paramount.
Key Takeaways
- Integrated Acxiom's Creative ID and Real ID signals to track ad repetition and household-level conversions within a Snowflake clean room.
- Solution covers major publishers including Disney, NBCUniversal, and Paramount, marking a shift in data-sharing policies for walled gardens.
- Incorporates VideoAmp's ACR and set-top-box data to deduplicate frequency across linear TV and connected TV environments.
- Addresses branding risks, with 51% of consumers attributing poor ad experiences to the brand rather than the platform.
Why It Matters
This marks a critical shift in the power dynamic between agencies and walled gardens, as major streamers allow granular creative tracking outside their proprietary ecosystems. By standardizing frequency measurement across disparate apps, Omnicom is attempting to eliminate "negative reach" and budget waste caused by repetitive ad creative. For the broader industry, this provides a blueprint for closed-loop attribution that ties streaming frequency directly to retail outcomes like sales data. Watch for whether rival holding companies successfully integrate similar cross-publisher data pipelines to challenge Omnicom’s scale following its $13.25 billion IPG acquisition.
Additional Context
The move to address frequency capping follows broader industrial reporting on the 'reach gap' in North America. Per Innovid in April 2025, the average CTV campaign frequency in 2024 stood at 7.09, but high-investment campaigns often saw repetition rates exceed 10 per household. This oversaturation has driven a push for content-level transparency. In April 2026, IAS launched Total TV to provide show and genre-level visibility across platforms like Disney and Prime Video, addressing the lack of granularity that has historically hampered programmatic CTV transactions compared to linear television. Technological standards are also shifting toward automated governance to manage these data-heavy environments. Per VideoWeek, June 2026, WPP Media recently spearheaded an 'Agentic Standards Initiative' alongside Disney, NBCUniversal, and Netflix to define how AI-powered buyer and seller agents communicate. This initiative aims to automate planning and measurement workflows that were previously manual. Simultaneously, Warner Bros. Discovery is rebuilding its internal ad tech to unify linear and digital planning by Q3 2026, signaling that major media owners are prepping for an AI-native decisioning environment that can ingest the kind of cross-platform signals Omnicom is now measuring.
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