Prime Video Ads Aren’t Awareness Anymore—they’re Checkout
The article argues that Amazon DSP has structural advantages in programmatic advertising due to access to Amazon purchase and return data, and the use of Amazon Marketing Cloud predictive modeling for audience targeting. It highlights shoppable and interactive Prime Video ad formats that enable add-to-cart actions from the TV experience, citing reported ROAS and conversion-lift examples from advertisers. It also notes Amazon’s streaming ad inventory expansion via partnerships and includes third-party projections about Amazon’s share of US programmatic spend and potential ad-revenue growth relative to Meta.
Key Takeaways
- Amazon’s differentiator is commerce-grade signals (purchase + return + replenishment timing), not just browsing or social intent.
- Amazon Marketing Cloud is positioned as an “AI layer” that predicts near-term purchase likelihood and churn risk to drive targeting.
- Prime Video Interactive Video Ads and shoppable formats aim to turn CTV from upper-funnel into direct-response (add-to-cart via remote).
- Advertiser case studies cited include H&R Block (reported 144% conversion lift) and Aveeno (reported 20x ROAS) on Prime Video contexts.
- Amazon’s streaming ad reach is expanding via inventory partnerships (including mentions of Netflix, Disney’s services, and Roku), reinforcing its programmatic footprint.
Why It Matters
Streaming’s ad “meme” is shifting from GRPs to carts: the platform that closes the loop wins budget. If Amazon can consistently tie CTV impressions to purchase outcomes—using first-party retail data plus predictive modeling—then Prime Video becomes less like TV and more like an in-living-room storefront. That pressures every other streaming seller (Netflix, Disney, Roku) to prove incrementality, not just reach. For executives, the strategic question isn’t whether Amazon has more inventory—it’s whether commerce measurement becomes the default currency for CTV pricing and allocation.
Read full article at linkedin.com