Yahoo’s Commerce Media Strategy: Efficiency, Identity, and Scale
At Shoptalk 2025, Beth Nussbaum Gross, who leads global commerce media at Yahoo DSP, outlined a sharp vision for commerce media built on identity, efficiency, and control. From offsite activation with Lowe’s to real-time sales optimization, Yahoo DSP is quietly becoming a high-functioning engine behind some of retail’s most trusted RMNs.
Yahoo DSP’s commerce media approach isn’t limited to traditional retailers. It supports everything from Planet Fitness to financial partners like Afterpay Media Network in Australia. By pairing Yahoo’s consent-based 232M+ logged-in U.S. users with retailer’s CRM data, the platform enables privacy-centric audience expansion via the Yahoo DSP, offering targeting, personalization, and reach without requiring brands to manage dozens of siloed platforms.
Retailers like Lowe’s are already integrating this model to offer offsite activation for brand partners such as Sherwin-Williams and Metabo, driving performance during high-traffic campaigns like tentpole events.
Gross believes the future of commerce media lies in aggregation – not just of data, but of partner access.
Many of Yahoo DSP’s clients are trying to manage 10–20 different RMNs with limited internal bandwidth. In her words,
“you also have 20 teams doing the exact same thing – buying from different retailers, switching out a logo on the same creative.”
Yahoo DSP’s model helps consolidate that chaos through dynamic creative and omnichannel ad formats, all while maintaining retailer-specific nuances.
As a publisher-first platform, Yahoo has a long-standing, consent-based relationship with consumers across mail, finance, sports, shopping, and news. This backbone enables it to offer first-party identity, called Yahoo ConnectID that powers clean partner matches, audience extension, and privacy-first targeting for advertisers.
This is particularly appealing to clients navigating the post-cookie era, who want to activate first-party data across supply paths without sacrificing performance or privacy.
Gross pointed to Yahoo DSP’s In-Flight Sales Analysis tool as a major differentiator, offering real-time campaign optimization tied to both online and offline sales. The message to brands: stop waiting for post-campaign reports and start optimizing against actual Point Of Sale (POS) data mid-flight.
Measurement, she noted, only works if brands are aligned from the start. Too often, partners enter joint business planning without clarity on what success looks like – whether that’s new households, reactivation, or incrementality. Yahoo’s strength, she argued, is enabling flexibility on the “how” without confusion on the “why.”
Recent partnerships with Costco, Kroger Precision Marketing reflect Yahoo DSP’s efforts to support both brand engagement and transactional value.
Gross noted that the convergence of financial services and commerce is one of the most exciting developments on the horizon—with credit card companies, BNPL platforms, and retail loyalty systems all now part of the same ecosystem.
Yahoo DSP may not be new to media, but its evolving role in commerce is drawing attention for the right reasons: not because it’s flashy, but because it’s functional.
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