logo
How programmatic curation is reshaping MENA's advertising challenges

How programmatic curation is reshaping MENA's advertising challenges

Campaign ME09-04-2025
MENA's digital advertising landscape has reached a pivotal moment. Marketers and buyers must navigate an ecosystem of platforms and channels while contending with evolving privacy regulations, heightened brand safety concerns, and demands for more precise audience engagement. As traditional programmatic approaches show their limitations, programmatic curation is emerging as a strategic solution.
One that aligns perfectly with regional regulatory developments like Saudi Arabia's Personal Data Protection Law (PDPL) and the region's rapidly expanding Connected TV (CTV) market.
Why programmatic curation has become essential in the MENA region
Programmatic curation is reshaping how advertisers in MENA manage their digital inventory, offering greater control over premium placements while seamlessly integrating audience data for more effective targeting.
As regional brands prioritise quality and brand safety, curation delivers the transparency and fraud protection essential for building consumer trust, complementing existing programmatic strategies through enhanced precision and relevance.
When combined with supply path optimisation and contextual targeting – particularly with emphasis on Arabic-language content and cultural sensitivity – programmatic curation creates a stronger foundation for digital advertising success in the MENA region.
Finally, curation is the most effective way to run a programmatic campaign across multiple countries, ensuring both quality and efficiency. For instance, tourism brands in MENA looking to target European and Asian markets can leverage curation to build high-quality, brand-safe marketplaces tailored to each region.
By selecting premium publishers, vetted inventory, and relevant audience segments, they can ensure their ads appear in the most impactful environments while maintaining control over transparency and performance.
Unlike open-market buying, which can be fragmented and riskier for a brand with stringent guidelines, curation allows them to streamline their strategy, access top-tier inventory with ease, and launch campaigns in new markets quickly maximising reach, relevance, and return on investment.
Enhancing addressability in a privacy-first world
Curation's most valuable contribution is how it enhances addressability in an increasingly privacy-conscious marketplace. While global markets have transitioned to first-party data strategies, many MENA publishers are still in the early stages of adoption.
Curation bridges this gap through collaborative partnerships where publishers and advertisers can create tailored audience segments within premium environments without relying on third-party identifiers.
This approach benefits both sides. Publishers see stronger revenue through fair CPMs and guaranteed deals, while advertisers gain access to high-quality inventory with precise targeting. In a multilingual market where audiences engage with content in Arabic, English, and increasingly South Asian languages, curation ensures advertisements maintain contextual relevance to target audiences.
The result is dynamic pricing models that reflect true audience value, building a more efficient ecosystem focused on quality rather than volume.
The potential of CTV in MENA
Curation solutions play a key role in CTV, which is rapidly emerging as the next frontier in programmatic advertising. While CTV offers unique inventory opportunities and access to rich audience segments, its diversity across multiple platforms and publishers adds a layer of complexity. Curation helps bring clarity to this fragmented space by refining inventory selection and ensuring precise audience targeting.
With centralised data activation and consistent measurement, curation streamlines cross-platform campaign execution, preserving inventory quality while enabling seamless scaling across markets. This ensures campaign effectiveness at every level of activation.
For example, a luxury automotive brand looking to engage high-net-worth consumers in MENA can leverage curation to access premium CTV inventory across different local Video on Demand services, focusing on drama and documentary genres where affluent, culturally engaged viewers are most active. This approach ensures ads appear in high-quality, brand-suitable environments that resonate with the target audience.
Maximising success through implementation
Successful curation strategies strike a balance between revenue optimisation and performance management. In MENA, where many premium publishers still rely heavily on direct deals, curation presents an opportunity to shift more revenue into programmatic without sacrificing pricing control.
Publishers can protect inventory value while driving optimal yield by layering curated marketplaces with high-CPM direct deals, PMPs, programmatic guaranteed campaigns, and strategic preferred deals backed by supply path optimisation (SPO).
With SPO gaining traction in MENA, advertisers are increasingly focused on cost efficiency and reducing unnecessary ad tech fees. Strategic sell-side technology integrations and secure data partnerships enhance programmatic capabilities, ensuring precise audience targeting at scale while maintaining control over media quality.
For buyers, tracking key performance metrics – such as viewability, brand safety, return on ad spend (ROAS), and cross-platform attribution – is essential to maximising curation's effectiveness.
These insights enable continuous optimisation, helping publishers refine their approach and unlock stronger results. A combination of strategic implementation and rigorous measurement ensures that curation delivers both performance and protection while preserving the value of premium inventory.
The future of programmatic curation in MENA
As programmatic advertising matures, curation provides the structure needed to navigate MENA's shifting regulatory landscape while adapting to new channels. With data privacy laws tightening across the region – though at different speeds in each market – curation offers a way to maintain targeting precision without compromising compliance.
Looking ahead, AI-driven optimisation, deeper integration with first-party data, and enhanced cross-channel capabilities will further elevate curation's role in programmatic strategy. As these innovations take shape, curation will remain essential for balancing performance with control, ensuring advertisers and publishers can drive meaningful outcomes in an evolving digital ecosystem.
For marketers navigating MENA's rapidly evolving digital landscape, the time to act is now. Curation aligns the interests of advertisers, publishers, and audiences by prioritising quality, relevance, and brand safety – critical factors in a region where premium inventory and audience trust are key.
Businesses that embrace curation's strategic potential will be better positioned to run privacy-compliant, highly targeted campaigns that drive meaningful engagement and measurable results in MENA.
By Amélie Grenier-Bolay, Country Manager, Italy and MENA, PubMatic
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tariffs bite into Europe as earnings season begins – which sectors will be hit hardest?
Tariffs bite into Europe as earnings season begins – which sectors will be hit hardest?

Arabian Post

time9 hours ago

  • Arabian Post

Tariffs bite into Europe as earnings season begins – which sectors will be hit hardest?

A tide of tariffs is sweeping across Europe, and the damage is becoming visible just as earnings reports begin to drop. President Trump's trade decisions are no longer a future threat; they're now a present force reshaping European corporate performance. The timing is brutal. What was expected to be a modestly positive second quarter for European earnings has shifted into decline, with weakness now concentrated in a few critical sectors. ADVERTISEMENT Investors are bracing for confirmation that Europe's earnings engine has stalled. The continent's largest firms are being squeezed between softer demand and policy-driven pricing pressure. The hardest-hit? Energy, consumer-facing multinationals, and financial institutions—all of which are deeply entwined with global trade flows, dollar liquidity, and sentiment cycles. The latest data point to a shallow contraction in European earnings per share for the second quarter—just months after analysts were still forecasting robust growth. This kind of whiplash signals something deeper than seasonal volatility. It reflects the speed and scale at which expectations have been rewired in response to Trump's aggressive trade stance and the rising cost of doing business across borders. The energy sector has been among the swiftest to feel the impact. Oil prices, already under pressure through much of Q2, found no relief in tariff announcements. On the contrary, producers now face increased uncertainty around demand, pricing structures, and the stability of international supply chains. ADVERTISEMENT Crude has recovered somewhat since Trump's latest volley of trade threats, but that rebound masks the structural challenges beneath. Tariffs hit everything from upstream investment to downstream distribution. The big European energy names are not just contending with weak prices—they are navigating a much more unstable commercial environment than their US counterparts, who now benefit from friendlier domestic regulation and renewed geopolitical leverage. The consumer sector has its own set of problems, and they are compounding quickly. Currency pressure from a weakening dollar has lifted the euro to multi-month highs—bad news for exporters relying on US demand. But it's the tariff shock that has most dramatically reset the mood. European brands selling into the US market now face an awkward mix of falling margins and unclear guidance. From luxury icons to mass-market manufacturers, the story is turning sour. Investors are no longer looking for growth; they're looking for resilience. That's especially true for discretionary names with high exposure to the US consumer. As inflation softens stateside but tariffs rise, spending patterns are shifting in unpredictable ways. European brands reliant on price stability and repeat purchases may now struggle to justify forward earnings multiples. Some will hold the line. Others will crack. Commentary accompanying these results will be closely parsed for signs that demand has deteriorated faster than expected. Then there's the financial sector—until recently, the unshakable pillar of European earnings growth. That pillar is now wobbling. Bank profits have ridden high on rising rates, deal speculation, and net interest income. But tariffs, by design, depress cross-border investment. They cloud merger activity, discourage capital flow, and introduce costs that even the most efficient lenders can't hedge away. While forecasts still point to slight profit expansion this quarter, the momentum is clearly fading. The bigger concern for investors is whether this is the beginning of a trend. European banks are heavily exposed to global supply chains, especially those facilitating trade between the EU and the US. Tariff policy disrupts those flows. It also raises credit risks for firms caught in the middle—many of which are mid-sized manufacturers or logistics players dependent on transatlantic trade routes. The revaluation of these risks is already underway, and the sharp rally in European bank stocks earlier this year now looks increasingly out of step with the operating reality on the ground. Put simply: the Europe-versus-US divide is growing. While Trump's tariffs are raising costs in Europe, the US is simultaneously offering support to its domestic industries, including energy and digital assets. This divergence is altering the investment case for entire sectors. Europe is still the world's largest trading bloc—but trade is exactly what's under siege. It makes this earnings season less about individual company performance and more about policy drag. For long-term investors, this is a wake-up call. Valuations built on the assumption of stable, rules-based global commerce are being tested. In a world where tariffs can be imposed by tweet, diversification across regions isn't enough. Sector exposure, policy sensitivity, and forward guidance credibility all need to be reassessed. This reporting season will deliver more than financial updates. It will reveal which companies are best-positioned to survive the age of economic confrontation—and which are still clinging to a fading version of globalisation. Nigel Green is deVere CEO and Founder Also published on Medium. Notice an issue? Arabian Post strives to deliver the most accurate and reliable information to its readers. If you believe you have identified an error or inconsistency in this article, please don't hesitate to contact our editorial team at editor[at]thearabianpost[dot]com. We are committed to promptly addressing any concerns and ensuring the highest level of journalistic integrity.

Global stock markets nosediveas Trump tariff threats heat up
Global stock markets nosediveas Trump tariff threats heat up

Gulf Today

time10 hours ago

  • Gulf Today

Global stock markets nosediveas Trump tariff threats heat up

US futures pointed towards a lower Wall Street open on Monday as the latest salvo of threats in the US tariff wars kept investors on edge, although there were some hopes this would prove to be mostly bluster by President Donald Trump. S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures both eased 0.3%. Earnings season kicks off this week with the major banks leading the pack on Tuesday. S&P companies are expected to have increased profits by 5.8% from the year-earlier period, down from an expectation of a 10.2% gain on April 1, according to LSEG IBES. MSCI's broadest index of world shares dipped 0.1% with the pan-European STOXX 600 index last down 0.4%. Other regional indexes also declined, barring the UK's FTSE 100 .FTSE, which was up 0.4%. Trump on Saturday said he would impose a 30% tariff on most imports from the European Union and Mexico from August 1, even as they are locked in long negotiations. The EU said it would extend a suspension of countermeasures to US tariffs until early August and continue to press for a negotiated settlement, though Germany's finance minister called for firm action if the levies went ahead. German 10-year government bond yields briefly hit their highest since early April on Monday after settling back to 4.60%. Yields move inversely to price. "To use the biggest cliché in the book, it continues to be a rollercoaster ride for all of us following the trade story, even if the market has increasingly overcome its queasiness and ensured it has been well stocked up on motion sickness tablets," said Deutsche Bank strategist Jim Reid in a note to clients. A rise in Japanese government bond yields also added to upward pressure on borrowing costs elsewhere, said Jens Peter Soerensen, chief analyst at Danske Bank. JGB yields surged as concerns grew that an upcoming election could pave the way for increased fiscal spending. Chinese blue chips closed 0.1% higher as data showed annual export growth topped forecasts at 5.8% in June, even as exports to the US fell almost 10%. Retail sales figures, industrial output and gross domestic product are due Tuesday. In bond markets, Treasuries got a very marginal safety bid and 10-year yields held at 4.41%. Futures for the Federal Reserve funds rate edged higher as markets priced in a little more policy easing for next year. While Fed Chair Jerome Powell has signalled a patient outlook on cuts, Trump is piling up political pressure for more aggressive easing. White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett over the weekend warned Trump might have grounds to fire Powell because of renovation cost overruns at the Fed's Washington headquarters. Trump said on Sunday that it would be a great thing if Powell stepped down. US consumer prices data for June are due on Tuesday and could finally start to show early upward pressure from tariffs, though retailers still have pre-levy inventory to draw on and some companies are absorbing the costs into margins. The impact on supply chain costs could show in producer price and import price figures this week, while a reading on retail sales will indicate how consumers are faring. Among currencies, the euro steadied to $1.1694, edging away from its recent four-year top of $1.1830. The dollar lost 0.2% on the yen to 147.19 while the dollar index was little changed at around 97.83. The dollar rose 0.27% against the Mexican peso to around 18.67, with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum confident a trade deal could be reached before the August deadline. Bitcoin crossed the $120,000 level for the first time to reach a top around $123,153. In commodity markets, gold picked up a modest safe-haven bid and rose 0.5% to $3,371 an ounce. Oil prices rose over 1.4% on speculation Trump could announce stiffer sanctions on Russia later on Monday, including levies on major customers buying Russian oil. Any move from Trump wishing to arm Ukrainians more vigorously will find enthusiastic support in Congress, said Christopher Smart, founder and a managing partner of consultancy firm, Arbroath Group. "In a famously divided legislature, there is overwhelming bipartisan support for a bill that will deliver its own sharp escalation to the conflict," said a research note by Smart sent Monday. The legislation threatens 500% tariffs on countries that buy Russian oil, gas, uranium or other exports, said the letter. Brent and US crude jumped just over a dollar to $71.40 and $69.48 respectively per barrel. Copper prices fell on Monday after a jump in available inventories in London Metal Exchange-approved warehouses and a firmer dollar triggered selling while above-consensus loan data from top consumer China provided some support. Benchmark copper on the LME traded 0.7% lower at $9,595 a metric tone in official rings. Strong technical support exists around $9,565, the 100-day moving average. At 109,625 tonnes, headline copper stocks in LME warehouses are only up 900 tonnes . However, traders are looking at inventories that were cancelled or earmarked for delivery but were then re-warranted. More than 26,000 tonnes of copper that was due to leave the LME system in Asia was re-warranted, meaning those volumes can again be traded on the exchange. President Donald Trump last week announced a 50% copper tariff effective August 1. Traders said the cancelled inventories had likely been intended for shipment to the United States ahead of import tariffs, which the industry had expected would be announced in November. Logistics sources said the three weeks between the announcement and the August 1 deadline did not allow enough time to ship metal from Asia. Higher availability on the LME has widened the discount for the cash copper contract against the three-month forward contract to $50 a tone, the highest since April 23. Elsewhere, improving Chinese loan data suggested stimulus measures boosted credit demand during the U.S.-China trade truce. Particularly encouraging was total social financing, used by analysts as a gauge of industrial metals demand, rising to 8.9% last month from 8.7% in May. "Apart from tariffs, the other discussion is about Chinese stimulus," said Bank of America analyst Michael Widmer. "There's a possibility they are taking a closer look at overcapacity in some industries. It may mean they try to support the housing market." Clues to Chinese demand are expected to come this week from China's housing price, industrial production and GDP data. Overall, a firmer US currency is weighing on industrial metals. Aluminium was down 0.7% at $2,584, zinc slipped 0.7% to $2,720, lead fell 0.8% to $2,005, tin was flat at $33,650 and nickel retreated 0.7% to $15,095 a tone. Agencies

Five EU states to test age-check app to protect children online
Five EU states to test age-check app to protect children online

Al Etihad

time11 hours ago

  • Al Etihad

Five EU states to test age-check app to protect children online

14 July 2025 19:28 BRUSSELS (AFP)Five EU countries including France will test an app aimed at preventing children from accessing harmful content online by checking users' ages, the European Commission said European nations have ramped up the pressure on the bloc to better protect minors online through more stringent measures, with some going as far as to advocate banning social media for Monday, the commission unveiled the prototype of an age-verification app that Denmark, France, Greece, Italy, and Spain will customise to launch national versions within several months."It will allow users to easily prove they are over 18 years old, protecting children from inappropriate content," EU tech chief Henna Virkkunen told aim is for each member state to develop their own app since they have different rules and may wish to tailor age limits for different example, France has set a minimum age of 15 to use social media, greater than the 13 set by the platforms themselves -- though it is still waiting for an EU green light for those rules to come into 27-country European Union has some of the world's strictest digital rules to bring Big Tech to heel, with several investigations ongoing into how platforms protect children -- or fail to do the app is available, users would be able to download it from an online store and then use it to verify that they are above the age to access a website or Monday, the EU also published recommendations to online platforms to ensure the safety of children and prevent their exposure to dangerous include removing "addictive" features such as "read receipts" which tell users when an individual has seen their message, making it easier for minors to block or mute users and preventing accounts from downloading or taking screenshots of content. The EU also recommended platforms turn off notifications by default, especially during sleeping hours, limit apps' access to photos, or turn off the camera by default.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store