Amazon adds dynamic TV ads to Prime Video inventory
Amazon held its 2026 Upfront event, showcasing new advertising capabilities like "Dynamic TV Creative" for interactive video ads on Prime Video, which personalizes ad elements based on viewer shopping behavior and journey stage. The event also highlighted Amazon's broad entertainment offerings, including live sports, new Amazon MGM Studios content, Twitch, and "The Oprah Podcast" joining the platform, all integrated with its authenticated audience graph for advertisers.
Key Takeaways
- Dynamic TV Creative is Amazon Ads' first capability to automatically personalize Interactive Video Ads on Prime Video series and films.
- Amazon says its authenticated graph reaches 90% of U.S. households and uses encrypted, pseudonymized signals from Amazon sign-ins, Fire TV registrations, and Prime Video viewing.
- The new format adjusts the interactivity format, call-to-action, headline, and product details at impression time based on shopping behavior and journey stage.
- Amazon says its interactive video ad formats drove 6x higher brand search, 4x more detail page views, 4x more add-to-cart actions, and 5x higher purchase rates in an internal study.
- The Upfront also highlighted sports, Twitch, and Amazon MGM Studios content, including The Oprah Podcast, Fourth Wing, The Greatest, and live NFL, NBA, WNBA, NASCAR, Masters, NWSL, and Duke basketball programming.
Why It Matters
Amazon is turning Prime Video inventory into a more targeted ad product by pairing interactive video formats with shopping and streaming signals it says are tied to 90% of U.S. households. That gives advertisers a tighter link between content exposure and commerce actions inside the same ecosystem. The rest of the Upfront reinforced that pitch: premium series, live sports, Twitch, and podcasts all feed the same authenticated audience graph. What to watch next is adoption of Dynamic TV Creative across Prime Video campaigns, especially whether Amazon reports more usage of its interactive and shoppable ad formats.
Read full article at advertising.amazon.com