The main differentiator is programmatic fills otherwise vacant inventory with audience/intent/etc placements and is not purchased through the publisher directly. To get to the definition you have to go back before ad networks existed. Companies owned a website, and you went to the 'ad sales' section of the website and negotiated packages with the company. You'd get ads placed for a limited amount of time and/or impressions, and the purchase was similar to what you'd do for a Newspaper or Print ad today. Then came ad networks. Publishers could add them in to give eyeballs to remanent inventory. Say they had 1 million visitors in a day, but only sold 500k impressions directly. The ad networks pick up the other 500k for the highest bidder (and the publisher makes more money). The networks started directly placing buys themselves, but quickly realized they could automate it to optimize performance for both advertisers and publishers - and thus multi-site and programmatic advertising was born. An advertisers could now say "get me as many impressions as you can for under $3 CPM" and the networks could go out across tens of thousands of sites, enter auctions, and deliver. After that, layering on third-party data, intent, etc. was just the natural evolution of ad network buys. So to that point, you can have a buy on the same site and one can be 'programmatic' and one cannot. I can buy direct from CNN.com for 1 million impressions. That's not a programmatic buy. I have selected exactly where I want the ads to serve and can negotiate if I want homepage, politics, etc. placement. I can also buy through an ad network, and when CNN has remnant inventory (inventory that has not been purchased direct) it will serve up in the auction, allowing it to get auctioned and placed by those various networks to the highest bidder. I can set preferences, whitelist placements, etc. but I'm not guaranteed to serve unless remnant inventory becomes available on those placements AND I want win the auction to get placed. The first is not a programmatic buy. The second is. Google search is not a programmatic buy because you are buying on a specific site (Google) with specific terms/phrases/etc. that you are directly negotiating with Google (within the platform). Google display is a programmatic buy because it runs on an ad network that fills remnant inventory across millions of publishers, but you are having no direct negotiations with said publishers. Youtube, purchased through Google ads platform, is not a programmatic buy because you have selected the broader site and are instead running on channels within it. If you run a digital video campaign through Trade Desk or another vendor, and YouTube is one of the channels available in the targeting set along with a hundred other OTT or streaming app networks, then it could be a programmatic buy. Basically programmatic refers to specifically how the inventory is getting placed (direct vs. through a network). The audience targeting, intent, etc. are all part of programmatic platforms but don't inform the definition. Answer from OddProjectsCo on reddit.com
2 weeks ago - The problem with this model of buying and selling ads is that it's cumbersome and challenging. In some cases, advertisers may not know the publisher that has both a suitable audience and available ad inventory. Programmatic advertising and the Google Display Network remove the bottlenecks and unnecessary effort associated with traditional marketing.
November 19, 2025 - Scope and Reach: Programmatic advertising offers access to a vast, open ecosystem of ad exchanges and publishers (including Connected TV and audio), while Google Ads operates primarily within its own "walled garden" (Search, YouTube, GDN).
Discussions
Confused by 'Programmatic' Digitla Advertising vs. 'Non-Programmatic' Digital Advertising?
The main differentiator is programmatic fills otherwise vacant inventory with audience/intent/etc placements and is not purchased through the publisher directly. To get to the definition you have to go back before ad networks existed. Companies owned a website, and you went to the 'ad sales' section of the website and negotiated packages with the company. You'd get ads placed for a limited amount of time and/or impressions, and the purchase was similar to what you'd do for a Newspaper or Print ad today. Then came ad networks. Publishers could add them in to give eyeballs to remanent inventory. Say they had 1 million visitors in a day, but only sold 500k impressions directly. The ad networks pick up the other 500k for the highest bidder (and the publisher makes more money). The networks started directly placing buys themselves, but quickly realized they could automate it to optimize performance for both advertisers and publishers - and thus multi-site and programmatic advertising was born. An advertisers could now say "get me as many impressions as you can for under $3 CPM" and the networks could go out across tens of thousands of sites, enter auctions, and deliver. After that, layering on third-party data, intent, etc. was just the natural evolution of ad network buys. So to that point, you can have a buy on the same site and one can be 'programmatic' and one cannot. I can buy direct from CNN.com for 1 million impressions. That's not a programmatic buy. I have selected exactly where I want the ads to serve and can negotiate if I want homepage, politics, etc. placement. I can also buy through an ad network, and when CNN has remnant inventory (inventory that has not been purchased direct) it will serve up in the auction, allowing it to get auctioned and placed by those various networks to the highest bidder. I can set preferences, whitelist placements, etc. but I'm not guaranteed to serve unless remnant inventory becomes available on those placements AND I want win the auction to get placed. The first is not a programmatic buy. The second is. Google search is not a programmatic buy because you are buying on a specific site (Google) with specific terms/phrases/etc. that you are directly negotiating with Google (within the platform). Google display is a programmatic buy because it runs on an ad network that fills remnant inventory across millions of publishers, but you are having no direct negotiations with said publishers. Youtube, purchased through Google ads platform, is not a programmatic buy because you have selected the broader site and are instead running on channels within it. If you run a digital video campaign through Trade Desk or another vendor, and YouTube is one of the channels available in the targeting set along with a hundred other OTT or streaming app networks, then it could be a programmatic buy. Basically programmatic refers to specifically how the inventory is getting placed (direct vs. through a network). The audience targeting, intent, etc. are all part of programmatic platforms but don't inform the definition. More on reddit.com
r/PPC
12
4
August 11, 2024
Google ads vs dv360
Depends how you want to explain programmatic to your intended audience. Technically Programmatic buying means automation of ad buying, so any platform that helps you automate the ad buying process falls into that definition; Google Ads, DV360, FB etc. But of course, the marketing world likes to take a spin and make their own categorisation as always 😄 So most agencies and places associate Programmatic to a DSP rather than the likes of Google Ads which essentially does the same but in it’s own network. I find it best to word it in the following manner for the agency/marketing folks: Programmatic Display = buying display ads from multiple network/inventory sources in 1 platform. Think of all the Google, Outbrain, Teads, Yahoo inventory all in 1 platform at a shared buying model (for better or worse). Versus (Normal) Display = buying display ads from networks separately. Managing 5 different IOs/vendors, separate processes and potentially different buying model/reporting for the same format buy. More on reddit.com
r/programmatic
4
5
July 1, 2021
Programmatic vs Google Ads Displaynetwork
Topics related to Pay-per-Click (PPC) & other digital ads such as Google Ads, Facebook Ads, Microsoft Advertising, Amazon Ads & other digital advertising platforms. ... at our agency we pay 15€ for 1000 contacts (CPM) for the programmatic campaigns. More on reddit.com
r/PPC
2
2
September 18, 2023
Difference between DV360 and Google Ads?
Tldr version: Google Ads uses Google Display Network for programmatic display ads. It's limited and you cannot buy certain kinds of executions. DV360 (and other DSPs) use hundreds of ad exchanges to allow you to buy ads on sites and do native, digital out of home, high impacts, etc More on reddit.com
Programmatic advertising is the technology marketers use to run display ads or native ads across the majority of the internet. Programmatic ad buying offers increased distribution and scale for ads at a higher budget.
April 27, 2024 -Programmatic advertising is an automated ad-buying model powered by artificial intelligence and machine learning. And GDN (Google Display Network) allows advertisers to reach target audiences who use Google’s products and features.
2 weeks ago -Google Ads excels at capturing high-intent audiences who are actively searching for products or services like yours. It’s ideal for driving direct conversions and is highly accessible for businesses of all sizes.
Hi all, I am having a hard time understanding what 'programmatic' digital advertising actually is, and how it is different from non-programmatic digital advertising?
My ad stack is 6sense display ads, Youtube video, Google paid search, and FB and LI ads.
Every single one of the above ad channels runs ads dynamically based on the target audience, their level of intent, and where they are currently in the marketing funnel.
Given the dynamic nature of pretty much all ad platforms in 2024, I am really confused what the definition of 'programmatic' advertising is.
I see online 1 definition of programmatic advertising is "Programmatic advertising refers to the practice of automating media buying and creating digital ads with the use of marketing technology"
Since all ad platforms I use automate media buying, is the only difference between programmatic if the ads are created dynamically using these platforms, vs non programmatic would be using static ads?
October 25, 2022 -Programmatic is based on data-driven audience targeting and ad space is won through bidding. It’s the most efficient way to buy highly relevant digital audiences at scale and get your ads live in the current advertising landscape.
July 17, 2025 - Google Ads: You bid on keywords or placements and set budgets manually. Campaign setup is straightforward, but optimization is often reactive. Programmatic advertising uses DSPs (demand-side platforms) that automate buying decisions in milliseconds.
October 12, 2023 - You feed it data about your campaign, audience, and goals, and the programmatic advertising platform uses automated technology to manage and optimize your ad spend. Why should you consider programmatic advertising? Isn’t your Google Ads program enough?
October 20, 2024 - Google Ads provides extensive options ... While offering less customization, programmatic advertising can deliver dynamic and personalized ads based on user data and preferences....
March 28, 2024 - Because GDN is part of Google, the audience targeting capability is limited to what Google has access to. However, programmatic advertising vendors tend to have their own audiences that they have built, or the ability to plug into a Data Management Platform (DMP) to find the right audience for your brand. In addition, to ensure that your ads are served to real people and not bots, brands can implement brand safety on programmatic advertising campaigns.
January 14, 2024 - Advertisers bid on them, either ... to beat the next advertiser. Just like the Google Display Network (GDN), programmatic ads are automatic....
September 2, 2022 - GDN functions as an interface between you (the advertiser) and the publisher. Marketers use this platform to choose their target audiences based on interest, domain, demographic, and other essential information. You’ll have complete control over ad placements and scheduling using GDN. If you don’t have a significant budget, GDN might be the better option for you. Because it’s more manual, you’re not paying for the AI learning and algorithms with programmatic ads.
July 15, 2025 -It is more efficient, scalable, and targeted. It also allows advertisers to reach a wider audience and publishers to earn more revenue from their ad space. The Google Display Network is similar to programmatic advertising in several ways.
September 20, 2024 - It often involves direct negotiations between advertisers and Google for specific inventory. In contrast, programmatic advertising represents a broader and more automated approach.
October 29, 2025 - Winner: Programmatic advertising offers greater creative flexibility and format variety for multi-channel campaigns. Winner: Tie. Both platforms offer strong automation, but programmatic is more “set it and optimize,” while Google Ads requires more active management for best results.
March 30, 2023 - On the other hand, Google Ads only uses its network. DSP is a system that gives advertisers power to manage their accounts using multiple ad exchanges.
Answer: Programmatic advertising is a way of buying ad space on websites through a third-party ad buying platform. With programmatic advertising, the buyer can purchase ad space in real time as users browse websites.