Marketers add human guardrails to AI ad buying
Marketers are implementing guardrails and increasing human oversight for AI agents used in programmatic ad buying due to concerns over accuracy and transparency. This development comes as the IAB Tech Lab launches a Programmatic Governance Council to address workflow, governance, and auction transparency in the evolving digital ad ecosystem. Companies like Kelly Scott Madison (KSM) Media and Bayer are deploying internal agents with specific rules, such as brand voice adherence and spend caps, while stressing the necessity of human supervision.
Key Takeaways
- Henry Webster of KSM Media said the firm is using a gatekeeper agent called “the librarian” to manage client brand voice and provide acronyms and campaign names.
- Bayer has set spend caps to stop bots from overusing legacy data partners and to protect testing with newer partners, according to Glenniss Richards.
- Richards said Bayer also applies guardrails around data anonymization and de-identification before activations.
- The IAB Tech Lab launched the Programmatic Governance Council in late April to address workflows, governance, and auction transparency.
- Initial council participants include WPP, Disney, Magnite, Yahoo, Amazon Ads, and The Trade Desk.
Why It Matters
AI agents are already being used in programmatic buying, but marketers are still requiring human oversight because a wrong CPM or runaway spend can create immediate budget risk. That keeps agentic buying in a controlled testing phase rather than a fully autonomous one. The IAB Tech Lab’s new Programmatic Governance Council suggests the industry is trying to define workflows and auction transparency before agent use spreads further. For streaming-adjacent buyers and sellers, the key signal is whether these guardrails become shared standards or remain company-specific controls.
Read full article at digiday.com
