Friday, 19 June 2026

The Complete Digital Advertising Ecosystem 2026

 A single digital ad impression today can pass through DSPs, exchanges, SSPs, ad servers, identity graphs, CDPs, verification partners, attribution systems, clean rooms, and CDN infrastructure before it finally appears on a screen.

Mapped the complete digital advertising ecosystem end-to-end:
how ads are actually bought, auctioned, served, delivered, verified, measured, optimized, and attributed across the open internet, apps, CTV, retail media, walled gardens, audio, and programmatic environments.

The deeper you go into the ecosystem, the more obvious it becomes that modern advertising is really a massive real-time infrastructure system operating behind every campaign, impression, bid request, and conversion.




Thursday, 18 June 2026

The Web to App Growth System

 


Customer acquisition is becoming far more fragmented across web, app, CRM, analytics, retention, lifecycle messaging, and cross-platform behaviour.

That’s exactly why web-to-app strategies are becoming much bigger than just app installs.

This visual breaks down how performance teams are increasingly connecting:

→ traffic acquisition
→ web intent signals
→ app engagement
→ CRM & lifecycle
→ analytics & measurement
→ retention & LTV

into one connected growth system.

Especially in European markets where users often need more trust, comparison, validation, and repeated engagement before transitioning from web to app.

The interesting shift for me is that performance marketing is slowly moving away from isolated channel execution toward connected customer journey thinking.

And that shift is going to influence acquisition strategy, retention planning, lifecycle marketing, measurement, first-party data strategy, and growth operations much more than many brands currently realize.

Why Web-to-App Marketing Strategies Are Becoming More Important for Customer Acquisition & Retention

 



Most discussions around web-to-app marketing still focus only on:

  • app install campaigns
  • SKAN limitations
  • deep links
  • retargeting
  • MMP attribution
  • ROAS optimization

But the real shift happening inside mature performance teams is much bigger.

Web-to-app is evolving into a full operational growth system where:

  • media buying
  • audience intelligence
  • CRM
  • analytics
  • onboarding flows
  • creative sequencing
  • lifecycle automation
  • product signals
  • retention strategy
  • first-party data

…all work together as one connected ecosystem.

And honestly, this is where many brands in Europe are still underestimating the complexity.

Especially in DACH markets.

Because unlike hyper-aggressive US growth models, European users often require significantly more trust-building before transitioning from web engagement to app adoption.

That changes everything.

What Web-to-App Marketing Actually Means

Web-to-app marketing is the process of moving users from a mobile website, landing page, search result, ad click, content page, email, CRM touchpoint, or media exposure into an app environment where the business can drive:

  • deeper engagement
  • stronger retention
  • repeat usage
  • personalization
  • loyalty
  • higher lifetime value

It is not only about app installs.

That is the part many brands still get wrong.

Web-to-app is about using the web as the:

  • discovery layer
  • education layer
  • comparison layer
  • trust-building layer
  • intent-capture layer

…while using the app as the:

  • conversion layer
  • retention layer
  • personalization layer
  • lifecycle layer
  • loyalty layer

In simple terms:

→ Web builds intent
→ App captures behaviour
→ CRM nurtures the relationship
→ Analytics connects the journey
→ Media scales what works

This is exactly why web-to-app is becoming more important for modern performance teams.

The Biggest Mistake I Still See

Many advertisers still treat the website and the app as separate acquisition environments.

They optimize:

  • web campaigns separately
  • app campaigns separately
  • CRM separately
  • product analytics separately
  • attribution separately

The result?

Massive signal fragmentation.

Users move across:

  • desktop research
  • mobile web
  • app stores
  • apps
  • email
  • remarketing environments
  • retail marketplaces
  • connected TV
  • programmatic inventory

…while internal teams continue operating in silos.

The actual user journey is no longer linear.

And the attribution layer is getting weaker every year.

Which means operational alignment is becoming more important than platform-level optimization.

How Web-to-App Actually Works

A strong web-to-app system usually has five connected layers.

1. Traffic Acquisition

Paid and organic channels bring users into web environments where intent can be captured.

This can include:

  • Google Search
  • YouTube
  • Demand Gen
  • Meta
  • TikTok
  • DV360
  • Display
  • Programmatic
  • CTV
  • Retail Media
  • SEO
  • Affiliate
  • Influencer content
  • Email
  • CRM journeys
  • Mobile landing pages

At this stage, the goal is not forcing the install immediately.

The goal is understanding user intent first.

2. Intent Identification

The website or landing page helps qualify the user.

Signals can include:

  • page depth
  • repeat visits
  • product views
  • pricing page visits
  • category exploration
  • cart activity
  • login behaviour
  • trial interest
  • account creation
  • email engagement
  • previous purchases
  • CRM interaction
  • return frequency

This is where web becomes much more than a traffic destination.

It becomes a signal collection environment.

3. App Transition

Once enough intent exists, the user is encouraged to move into the app.

This can happen through:

  • smart banners
  • deferred deep links
  • QR codes
  • app install campaigns
  • post-purchase prompts
  • retargeting
  • loyalty messaging
  • email prompts
  • WhatsApp journeys
  • SMS workflows
  • personalized offers

The important part is this:

The app install should feel useful, not forced.

That difference matters massively in European markets.

4. App Onboarding & Activation

The app must then convert the install into an active user.

This requires:

  • frictionless onboarding
  • account continuity
  • clear value proposition
  • personalized experiences
  • saved preferences
  • seamless login flows
  • first-action completion
  • push notification strategy
  • app event tracking

An install without activation is just an expensive vanity metric.

5. Measurement & Optimization

The entire web-to-app journey must be measured across:

  • web
  • app
  • CRM
  • analytics
  • advertising platforms

This usually involves:

  • GA4
  • Firebase
  • MMPs
  • BigQuery
  • server-side tracking
  • consent-aware analytics
  • incrementality testing
  • LTV modelling
  • cohort analysis
  • predictive segmentation

The strongest teams do not optimize only for installs.

They optimize for:

  • activated users
  • retained users
  • repeat buyers
  • subscribers
  • revenue
  • contribution margin
  • retention economics
  • customer lifetime value

Why Web-to-App Is Becoming More Important in Europe

In DACH especially, users rarely install apps impulsively unless:

  • trust already exists
  • pricing is validated
  • reviews are strong
  • onboarding friction is low
  • payment confidence is high
  • product-market fit is obvious

This creates a very different acquisition model compared to US-style scale-first app growth.

What often works better in Europe:

  • educating first on web
  • validating intent signals
  • segmenting by engagement depth
  • using sequential remarketing
  • pushing app adoption later in the funnel
  • incentivizing app transition through operational convenience rather than discounts alone

That changes media planning significantly.

Because now:

  • search campaigns
  • YouTube
  • CTV
  • display
  • programmatic
  • CRM
  • app campaigns
  • GA4 audiences
  • BigQuery analysis
  • landing page UX
  • Firebase events

…all need to work together as one connected system.

When Web-to-App Makes Sense

Web-to-app is most effective when the app creates a stronger business outcome than the website alone.

It makes sense when:

  • repeat usage matters
  • retention matters
  • logged-in behaviour matters
  • loyalty matters
  • personalization improves conversion
  • app users have higher LTV
  • push notifications create engagement
  • the product requires frequent interaction
  • mobile convenience improves the experience
  • first-party data has strategic value

This is especially relevant for:

  • ecommerce
  • travel
  • fintech
  • banking
  • insurance
  • marketplaces
  • retail
  • mobility
  • subscription businesses
  • entertainment
  • loyalty-driven brands
  • health & fitness platforms
  • SaaS products with mobile usage

But forcing app installs without a clear value exchange usually creates friction instead of growth.

Where Web-to-App Fits Across the Funnel

At the upper funnel, the web experience is often responsible for:

  • awareness
  • credibility
  • education
  • product discovery
  • comparison behaviour
  • trust-building

At the mid funnel, the focus shifts toward:

  • product validation
  • pricing clarity
  • app-only convenience
  • personalization
  • loyalty access
  • account continuity
  • purchase intent

At the lower funnel, web-to-app becomes conversion-focused:

  • install and complete purchase
  • install and finish booking
  • install and activate account
  • install and claim rewards
  • install and continue checkout

At the retention stage, the app becomes the relationship layer.

The focus becomes:

  • push notifications
  • CRM journeys
  • repeat purchase
  • subscription renewal
  • personalized recommendations
  • win-back flows
  • upsell and cross-sell
  • lifecycle engagement

Which is why web-to-app should never sit only inside “app marketing.”

It requires:

  • media
  • CRM
  • analytics
  • product
  • UX
  • lifecycle
  • data infrastructure

…working together.

The Role of First-Party Data Is Becoming Critical

Third-party signal loss has fundamentally changed web-to-app measurement.

Now the strongest advertisers increasingly rely on:

  • CRM syncing
  • GA4 event architecture
  • Firebase
  • BigQuery pipelines
  • consent-aware analytics
  • predictive audience modelling
  • server-side tracking
  • incrementality testing
  • lifecycle segmentation

The interesting part is this:

The advantage is no longer coming only from media buying expertise.

It is increasingly coming from operational infrastructure.

The teams building cleaner data environments are often outperforming teams spending significantly larger budgets.

Creative Strategy Changes Completely in Web-to-App

Another area many companies still underestimate:

Creative sequencing.

The messaging needed to drive:

  • a website visit
    vs
  • an app install
    vs
  • app retention
    vs
  • repeat purchase

…is completely different.

Especially in Europe where users often require more reassurance before app adoption.

For example:

  • web creative may focus on credibility
  • app creative may focus on convenience
  • retention creative may focus on personalization
  • reactivation creative may focus on urgency or utility

This becomes even more important when combining:

  • Google Ads
  • Demand Gen
  • Meta
  • DV360
  • Retail Media
  • CRM journeys
  • App campaigns

Because:

  • messaging overlap
  • frequency management
  • creative fatigue
  • audience sequencing

…become major operational challenges.

Measurement Is Getting Messier, Not Cleaner

One thing performance marketers should probably accept:

Perfect attribution is not coming back.

Between:

  • privacy regulation
  • consent loss
  • browser restrictions
  • SKAN limitations
  • cross-device fragmentation
  • platform modelling

…measurement is becoming increasingly probabilistic.

Which means high-performing teams are shifting toward:

  • blended ROAS models
  • MMM
  • incrementality
  • cohort analysis
  • retention economics
  • LTV forecasting
  • business-level KPI alignment

Instead of obsessing over platform-reported conversions alone.

How High-Performing Teams Actually Use Web-to-App

The best teams do not push app installs immediately.

They build structured journeys.

They first identify which web behaviours suggest app readiness.

For example:

  • repeat product views
  • pricing page visits
  • cart activity
  • loyalty engagement
  • multiple sessions
  • logged-in mobile users
  • previous purchases
  • CRM engagement depth

Then they build audience segments around those signals.

For example:

  • new visitors
  • high-intent visitors
  • cart abandoners
  • existing customers without app
  • dormant app users
  • repeat buyers
  • loyalty members
  • high-value customers

Creative and messaging are then aligned to the user stage.

A new visitor may need:

  • trust
  • proof
  • product education

A returning visitor may need:

  • convenience
  • continuity
  • personalization

A cart abandoner may need:

  • friction reduction
  • checkout continuity
  • loyalty benefits

And existing customers may need:

  • retention
  • loyalty
  • exclusive features
  • repeat usage triggers

This is where web-to-app becomes much more than media buying.

It becomes customer journey engineering.

Why This Matters for Modern Performance Teams

The companies scaling efficiently today are usually not the ones running the “best campaigns.”

They are often the companies with:

  • better operational connectivity
  • stronger analytics infrastructure
  • cleaner first-party data systems
  • tighter CRM synchronization
  • faster experimentation loops
  • better lifecycle orchestration
  • stronger collaboration between media, product, analytics, and growth teams

Web-to-app growth is no longer just about buying installs.

It is increasingly about building connected acquisition ecosystems capable of handling fragmented user behaviour across:

  • multiple devices
  • platforms
  • channels
  • touchpoints
  • privacy environments

For me, this is exactly where web-to-app becomes interesting.

Because it sits at the intersection of:

  • performance marketing
  • media strategy
  • analytics infrastructure
  • customer journey design
  • CRM orchestration
  • lifecycle marketing
  • business growth

And honestly, I think this operational side of performance marketing will become one of the biggest competitive advantages over the next few years.

Especially in privacy-heavy markets like Europe.

 

Tuesday, 16 June 2026

Operational AI Could Become the Biggest Efficiency Shift in Digital Marketing & Advertising Since Programmatic

 



For the last couple of years, most AI conversations inside digital marketing and advertising have revolved around content generation.

AI-generated ad copy.
AI-generated creatives.
AI-generated campaign assets.
AI-generated landing pages.

But to understand why this is happening, we have to look at the engine behind it.

We have to look at OpenAI’s Codex.

Codex is the foundational technology that allows AI to understand and write software code.

And it completely changed the game.

Because before Codex, AI could only write words.

After Codex, AI could write logic.

For performance marketers, this means AI isn't just a creative copywriter anymore.

It is a technical engine.

Instead of just writing a headline, Codex gives AI the power to:

• talk directly to ad platform APIs

• write custom scripts to pull platform data

• automate Excel and Google Sheets macros

• build data bridges between Meta, Google, and your CRM

• fix broken tracking codes without waiting on a developer

It is the exact technical bridge that allows AI to make the jump from writing ads to running operations.

 

But I think the bigger shift happening right now is operational.

Not content generation.

Operational execution.

The ability for AI systems to assist with workflows, monitor processes, validate outputs, interact with platforms, review reporting, and support recurring operational tasks across digital marketing ecosystems.

And honestly, I think many people are still underestimating how significant this shift could become.

Especially for:
• performance marketing teams
• media planners & buyers
• programmatic advertising teams
• ecommerce operations
• reporting teams
• retail media operations
• campaign execution environments

Because digital marketing has become operationally very fragmented.

The Real Problem Isn’t Campaign Launches Anymore

Launching campaigns is no longer the hard part.

Managing operational complexity is.

A typical advertising workflow today may involve:

• Google Ads
• Microsoft Ads
• DV360
• CM360
• Meta Ads
• LinkedIn Ads
• GA4
• BigQuery
• Looker Studio
• HubSpot
• Salesforce
• Slack
• Notion
• Excel/Sheets
• retail media platforms
• internal dashboards

Now multiply that across:
• multiple markets
• multiple agencies
• different reporting structures
• disconnected attribution models
• siloed teams
• inconsistent naming conventions
• manual reporting dependencies

The operational load becomes enormous very quickly.

And this is where I think operational AI becomes commercially very interesting.

Because the real opportunity may not be:
“Can AI generate better ads?”

The bigger question may become:
“Can AI help marketing teams operate more efficiently?”

A Huge Amount of Marketing Work Is Still Repetitive

Despite all the discussion around automation, a surprising amount of marketing work is still highly manual.

Typical repetitive workflows today:

• campaign QA
• pacing checks
• budget monitoring
• reporting consolidation
• invoice reconciliation
• UTM validation
• screenshot collection for reports
• broken URL checks
• search query reviews
• placement exclusions
• dashboard monitoring
• media plan formatting
• cross-platform data reconciliation

These tasks are necessary.

But they are also repetitive, time-consuming, and operationally draining.

In many organizations, highly skilled media buyers and strategists still spend large portions of their week managing recurring execution layers instead of focusing on:
• strategy
• planning
• optimization
• experimentation
• business growth

And honestly, this is where I think operational AI changes the conversation completely.

The Interesting Part Is Workflow Assistance

The interesting shift with AI workflow systems is that they move beyond simple content generation.

Instead of only producing outputs, AI systems can increasingly assist with recurring operational processes.

For example:

Imagine a workflow where AI:
• reviews campaign pacing every morning
• identifies CPC spikes
• flags unusual CPM increases
• checks conversion drops
• validates tracking inconsistencies
• reviews broken URLs
• compares spend across platforms
• prepares anomaly summaries for Slack or Teams

Or reporting workflows where AI:
• collects exported files
• validates discrepancies
• highlights inconsistencies
• prepares summaries before stakeholder meetings

Or campaign operations workflows involving:
• launch checklists
• naming convention validation
• creative approval monitoring
• PMP tracking
• retail media reporting normalization
• audience overlap analysis
• campaign delivery checks

This is where the conversation becomes far more interesting than:
“Write me 5 headlines.”

Why This Matters for Media Planning & Buying

Media planning and buying environments have become significantly more fragmented over the last few years.

Especially across:
• programmatic advertising
• retail media
• CTV
• DOOH
• omnichannel video
• privacy-focused measurement
• cross-device attribution workflows

A single campaign ecosystem may involve multiple operational layers interacting simultaneously.

For example:

Google Ads → GA4 → BigQuery → Looker Studio → CRM → reporting workflows

Or:

DV360 → CM360 → brand safety tools → finance reconciliation → client reporting

The challenge is no longer only about buying media efficiently.

The challenge is also about:
• operational speed
• reporting consistency
• workflow visibility
• execution scalability
• process accuracy

And I think this is where operational AI could create major efficiency gains for agencies and in-house teams over the next few years.

Browser-Level Workflow Assistance Could Become Very Important

One area that deserves far more attention is browser-assisted workflow execution.

A large amount of marketing operations still happens inside:
• legacy systems
• slow internal dashboards
• disconnected reporting environments
• highly manual interfaces

Many operational processes still require repetitive clicks, manual exports, spreadsheet manipulation, dashboard navigation, and repetitive validation work.

This becomes especially painful inside large campaign environments operating across multiple regions and reporting layers.

AI-assisted browser workflows could eventually reduce significant amounts of repetitive operational effort across:
• campaign operations
• reporting teams
• ecommerce workflows
• procurement workflows
• finance reconciliation
• retail media ecosystems

And honestly, I think many organizations are only beginning to understand how important this could become operationally.

Agencies & Marketing Teams May Start Operating Differently

I also think this shift could gradually change how agencies and internal marketing teams operate structurally.

Historically, scaling operations often meant:
→ more coordinators
→ more reporting layers
→ more manual workflows
→ more operational bottlenecks

But operational AI could gradually shift that structure.

Future teams may become:
• operationally leaner
• faster in execution
• more workflow-oriented
• more automation-assisted
• more strategically focused

And interestingly, the people who become most valuable may not necessarily be the people writing the best prompts.

They may be the people who understand:
• media ecosystems
• workflow architecture
• campaign operations
• reporting dependencies
• operational bottlenecks
• cross-platform execution systems

Because operational understanding is becoming increasingly valuable inside digital marketing and advertising environments.

Governance Will Matter More Than Hype

One thing often missing from AI discussions is operational governance.

Marketing teams work with:
• campaign budgets
• customer data
• CRM systems
• reporting environments
• financial workflows
• internal documents
• campaign assets

So operational control becomes critical.

Especially inside enterprise and multinational environments.

The organizations that benefit most from operational AI will probably not be the ones blindly automating everything.

They will be the organizations building:
• structured workflows
• approval systems
• operational safeguards
• scalable reporting processes
• controlled automation environments

Because efficiency without governance eventually creates operational risk.

Final Thoughts

I do not think the future of AI in digital marketing and advertising is only about generating more content faster.

I think the much bigger shift is operational.

The ability to build faster, smarter, and more connected workflows across:
• planning
• buying
• reporting
• optimization
• validation
• operations

And honestly, this could become one of the biggest efficiency shifts in digital marketing and advertising since programmatic media buying transformed campaign execution.

Because over time, the difference between agencies and marketing teams may not only come down to:
• creative quality
• targeting capabilities
• media budgets

It may increasingly come down to which teams operate with the fastest, smartest, and most operationally efficient systems.

 

DACH vs USA

 




Working across media planning, media buying and campaign strategy in both DACH and international markets taught me very quickly that advertising performance is heavily shaped by regional buyer behaviour.

What works in the USA often does NOT work in DACH. Not because the platforms are different.

Google Ads is still Google Ads.
DV360 is still DV360.
LinkedIn Ads is still LinkedIn Ads.

But buyer psychology, trust expectations, privacy sensitivity, landing page behaviour, creative response patterns and conversion journeys are completely different.

In DACH markets, I’ve consistently seen stronger performance from:

→ trust-first messaging
→ structured communication
→ deeper product explanations
→ controlled scaling strategies
→ higher emphasis on credibility and validation

While US-focused campaign environments often reward:

→ faster optimization cycles
→ aggressive creative testing
→ emotional persuasion
→ rapid audience expansion
→ conversion velocity and scale

I’ve seen campaigns perform exceptionally well in one region and underperform in another until the entire media planning, audience strategy, messaging framework, creative structure and buying approach were adapted properly.

This becomes even more important in:
→ Programmatic Advertising
→ LinkedIn Ads
→ B2B Lead Generation
→ Display & Video
→ Ecommerce
→ High-consideration products and services

Localization is not translation. It’s strategic adaptation.

I created this visual to summarize some of the biggest differences I’ve personally observed while planning and buying campaigns across DACH and international digital advertising ecosystems.

Curious to hear from others managing international campaigns as well:
What major DACH vs US advertising differences have you experienced?