The 45 terms that come up most often in programmatic conversations, defined in one to three plain sentences each and alphabetized for quick lookup.
Programmatic advertising runs on shorthand. Deal types, standards files, measurement methods, and platform names all get compressed into acronyms, and most explanations assume you already know them.
This glossary defines 45 of the terms that matter most. The definitions are vendor-neutral, one to three sentences each, and written for marketers who are smart but new to the plumbing.
A demand-side platform (DSP) is the software an advertiser or agency uses to buy digital ad impressions across many exchanges and supply sources through real-time bidding, from a single interface. It applies the buyer's audience, budget, and bidding rules to each auction.
A DSP is the buyer's tool for bidding on impressions across many sources. An SSP, or supply-side platform, is the publisher's tool for offering inventory to those buyers and maximizing its yield. They sit on opposite sides of the same programmatic auction.
Made-for-advertising sites are low-quality pages built mainly to carry ads rather than to serve readers, often heavy with auto-refreshing units and cheap sourced traffic. They absorb budget while returning little real attention, which is why buyers screen and exclude them from clean supply paths.
Incrementality is the additional outcome a campaign causes above what would have happened anyway, isolated with a holdout or test-and-control design. It is a stricter standard than last-click attribution, which credits conversions that might have occurred without the ad.
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