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The retail media landscape is booming. But it’s also messy, fragmented, and heavily dominated by just a few players. In this episode, I unpack the challenges that brands face when navigating hundreds of retail media networks and explore whether alliances and federations might hold the key to leveling the playing field.

From eerie parallels with the early days of digital advertising to emerging federations like Rippl, I take a closer look at why cooperation may be the only path forward for smaller players who want to compete with giants like Amazon and Walmart. This is the first episode in a four-part series where I’ll peel back the layers of what it really takes to build sustainable, effective retail media alliances.

This episode is sponsored by Connected Commerce at Acosta Group

Timeline

[00:00] – How Google’s ad dominance offers a cautionary tale for today’s retail media chaos
[00:57] – Amazon’s commanding market share and the growth gap facing other RMNs
[02:00] – The “doom loop” of retail media networks: revenue vs. investment catch-22
[03:00] – Why brands are frustrated: lack of standardization and the walled garden problem
[04:36] – The case for federations: how alliances could reshape retail media
[05:05] – Rippl: a national consortium offering advertisers scale across regional grocers
[07:03] – Preview of the 4-part series exploring the mechanics, history, and future of RMN alliances

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