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FTC Compliance in USA

The $1 Billion Wake-Up Call: FTC Compliance Risks in Affiliate Marketing Explained

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is one of the most important regulatory bodies in the U.S., playing a critical role in protecting consumers and preserving trust in the marketplace. For brands, it sets the standards for fair advertising, transparent communication, and ethical business practices, helping prevent deceptive marketing and unfair trade conduct.   Hence, non-compliance with FTC guidelines does not just slow growth, it directly impacts credibility, customer trust, and long-term business sustainability.  Amazon learned this firsthand, paying $1 billion in civil penalties for misleading customers. For brands running affiliate programs in the U.S., this is not a distant cautionary tale, FTC compliance is the current reality, one that has been playing out for years and shows no sign of slowing down. (Source)  FTC boundaries are clearly defined and crossing them, even unintentionally, carries serious financial and legal consequences. Affiliate partnerships remain a powerful growth lever, but their scale introduces complexity that is easy to underestimate.  Violations rarely announce themselves. They surface as subtle lapses when some partners mislead your organic traffic, avoid ad disclosures, and claim attribution for what was already headed to you. By the time a complaint is raised or enforcement begins, the damage is done.  In 2026, compliance cannot be an afterthought. It must be built into how affiliate marketing programs are managed, monitored and scaled from day one. In this blog, we break down:  Common FTC compliance risks in affiliate programs  Real-world cases of non-compliance  The direct business impact of FTC violations  How brands can stay compliant without disrupting affiliate-driven growth  Common FTC Compliance Risks in Affiliate Marketing FTC compliance requirements are strict, and when marketing practices fall under direct government regulation, violations can become costly. Below are some of the most common FTC compliance risks in affiliate programs that brands must avoid staying aligned with FTC guidelines- Missing or Unclear Disclosure of Affiliate Relationships One of the most common compliance issues in affiliate programs is the lack of disclosure of partner relationships. When influencers or partners promote a brand’s products, they receive an incentive for purchases made through their links. Hence, while promoting, they must clearly disclose this relationship so customers are aware that their purchase will monetarily benefit the partner or influencer. Such disclosures can be made by using #ad or similar tags placed at the beginning or before the fold.  Misleading Claims by Influencers & Publishers While promoting your brand, affiliates may make bold claims that don’t align with your brand messaging to drive conversions. For example, a partner might advertise heavy discounts that don’t actually exist, misleading users into visiting the site. In the process, they drop a cookie – so any future purchase by that user gets attributed to them. Similarly, claiming a product is “guaranteed” without any such promise from the brand can mislead customers. In both cases, the affiliate benefits, but the brand is left exposed to compliance violations and legal risk.  Unauthorized Bidding on Brand & Restricted Keywords FTC guidelines emphasize that affiliates must not promote a brand in a way that makes users believe they are interacting with the brand’s official website. However, some partners bid on branded keywords and rank above the official site in search results, redirecting organic traffic. This not only misleads users but also forces brands to pay twice for the same traffic, once to acquire it and again as affiliate commission. If left unchecked, it drives up marketing costs and creates clear compliance and brand protection risks.  Fake Reviews & Undisclosed Incentivised Ratings Fake reviews are widespread across social media and platforms like Google, often used to artificially build trust and influence purchase decisions. In many cases, these reviews are incentivized users are offered discounts, cashback, or freebies in exchange for posting positive feedback, without any disclosure. For example, a partner may run a campaign asking users to leave a 5-star review for a product in return for a coupon, creating a false perception of quality and popularity. To a potential customer, this appears as genuine validation, when in reality it is manipulated.  FTC guidelines strictly prohibit such practices. If affiliates or partners engage in creating or promoting fake or undisclosed incentivized reviews, the brand itself is held accountable, exposing it to regulatory action, financial penalties, and loss of consumer trust.  Inaccurate Pricing, Hidden Terms & Misleading Offer Pages Some affiliates promote exaggerated discounts or offers that do not actually exist. Others hide key conditions such as subscription commitments, additional fees, or eligibility restrictions in fine print. These practices create a misleading experience for consumers who click expecting one offer but encounter different terms later. The FTC considers such deceptive advertising practices a violation, especially when important details are not clearly disclosed upfront.  Impact of FTC Violations in Affiliate Programs on Brands The impact of non-compliance in affiliate programs is huge, causing brands both financial and reputational damage. Let’s have a look on the direct business impacts a brand faces due to FTC non-compliance –  Consumer refunds – Businesses can be required to compensate or refund customers affected by misleading or deceptive promotions.  Legal and investigation costs – FTC investigations often involve expensive legal proceedings, internal audits, and compliance reviews.  Mandatory compliance programs – Brands may be required to implement stricter monitoring, training, and reporting systems to prevent future violations.  Operational restrictions – Regulators may force changes to marketing practices, advertising claims, or affiliate partnerships.  Real-World Use Cases of Non-Compliance in FTC Following real-world cases of FTC non-compliance clearly demonstrate the seriousness and enforcement power of these regulations –   Amazon Prime Case The Federal Trade Commission imposed one of its largest penalties on Amazon for misleading customers about its Amazon Prime membership. The company agreed to pay $1 billion in civil penalties after it was found that some users were enrolled in Prime without clear consent and faced difficulties when trying to cancel their subscriptions. In addition to the penalty, about $1.5 billion was allocated for refunds to customers who were unintentionally signed up or discouraged from cancelling their memberships. (Source)  Fortnite / Epic Games Case The FTC also fined Epic Games, the creator of Fortnite, $520 million for violating children’s privacy and using design tactics that led players to make unintended in-game purchases. According to the FTC, the game’s interface made it easy for users, especially children, to accidentally spend money without clear consent. Along with the financial

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Brand Safety

If Your Brand Safety Strategy Is Global-Only, You’re Already Exposed in India

When a media team says, ‘we’re running a pan-India video campaign,’ they’re treating India as a single content environment. But it isn’t.  India is a diverse market. Millions of content pieces go live on various video platforms every day. Each operating in a different language, shaped by different cultural norms, with entirely different definitions of what is acceptable, sensitive, or harmful.   This is exactly where the risk begins.   As an advertiser running programmatic ad campaigns across video platforms, you assume your targeting and exclusions are doing their job. But even as you read this, your ads could be appearing next to content you would never consciously choose to appear beside.   A vashikaran tutorial. A graphic crime reconstruction video. Content in a language your brand safety tool cannot read.  And the most concerning part? Traditional brand safety tools and platform filters don’t show you this side of reality.  To help you identify this gap before it turns into a brand risk, this blog breaks down:  What unsafe ad placements actually look like in India’s content ecosystem   Why your current brand safety tools are missing them   What India-ready brand safety requires   What changes for your brand when you get it right  Let’s start with what’s actually happening to your ads.  What Content Ad Placements Are Your Ads Actually Running Next To?  You didn’t choose these ad placements. But your brand is on them.  When advertisers try to tap onto wider audiences through ad campaigns, they approve creatives, audiences, and budgets. They almost never see where their ads actually land.   Here are the placement categories that brands in India often appear next to, without knowing it.  Placement 1: Occult, Black Magic & Superstition Content  What is it? Channels dedicated to vashikaran rituals, black magic spells, tantric practices, and superstition-based content. These videos use occult imagery, ritual settings, and fear-based messaging to attract millions of views across regional markets.  Why it’s unsafe? These channels are algorithmically treated as general interest content. Platform classifiers read the title and tags, and often miss what the content actually depicts. A brand’s ad plays in the middle of a black magic ritual video, not because anything went wrong technically, but because nothing flagged it.  Brand Impact For FMCG, BFSI, or any brand built on consumer trust, appearing next to content that promotes supernatural harm, fear, and occult practice directly contradicts the brand’s credibility. Viewers in these markets don’t separate the ad from the content. If your brand appeared there, it’s perceived as endorsing it.  Placement 2: Made for Kids & Cartoon Content What is it? Children’s cartoon channels or animated content, that are classified by platforms as “Made for Kids.” These channels attract massive viewership across markets and are frequently part of broad run-of-network campaigns.  Why is it unsuitable? “Made for Kids” content limits ad personalization, meaning your ad is reaching an unintended, non-converting audience. More critically, a brand running campaign for financial products, or adult-oriented services appearing on children’s content creates an immediate brand suitability issue.   Brand Impact Every impression served on such content is a direct drain on campaign budget with zero return, no conversion intent, no brand recall, and no audience value. You end up paying for reach that does nothing for your brand.   Placement 3: Adult & Sexually Suggestive Content What is it? Adult fashion content or OTT platform trailers that appear as standard video inventory across platforms. These videos carry no explicit adult content warning but contain visually suggestive material such as nudity, intimate couple scenarios, and adult-oriented fashion that platforms routinely monetize as general content.  Why it’s unsafe? The problem here is a categorization gap. This content doesn’t meet the threshold for explicit adult content, so it doesn’t get flagged. But it is still considered under a brand-unsafe zone for most advertisers, particularly family-facing categories.   Brand Impact When a trusted brand ad appears mid-roll on adult suggestive content, the viewer’s perception shifts immediately. The brand is no longer seen as careful or credible. For brands that spend heavily on trust-building, the reputational cost of a single misplaced impression, when screenshotted and shared, far exceeds the media value of the placement.  Placement 4: Regional or Vernacular Content What is it? Regional language videos, in Bengali, Gujarati, and other vernacular languages, that depict weapons and armed violence in dramatized formats or normalize illegal gambling and Satta culture as regional entertainment.   Why is it unsafe? Such content never triggers standard brand safety filters. A Bengali crime thriller and a Gujarati Satta video look identical to a global classifier; both are regional language videos with no English tags to read. Traditional brand safety tools cannot identify the content category, the cultural context, or the risk the placement carries.   Brand Impact A brand appearing next to a video depicting a man pointing a gun at a woman, or next to content that normalizes illegal gambling, signals a complete lack of campaign oversight. For any brand associated with responsibility and trust, these placements directly undermine the credibility being built through every other brand touchpoint.  Why Traditional Brand Safety Tools Miss Seeing Irrelevant or Brand-Unsafe Ad Placements? Here are the reasons why basic brand safety platform filters and tools fail to identify brand unsafe ad placements:  Can’t read regional languages Most tools scan video titles and tags to check for unsafe content. If a vashikaran video is titled entirely in Hindi script with no English text, the tool finds nothing to read, marks it as safe, and your ad runs.  Loses accuracy in translation Some tools translate regional content into English before checking it. But slang, coded phrases, and culturally loaded words don’t translate accurately. By the time the tool reads it, harmful content looks completely harmless.  Moreover, some phrases or words that might appear to be safe in one region can be controversial or unsafe in another.  Relies only on metadata, titles, and tags for classification of content Tools that only read titles and descriptions miss what is actually inside the video. A video titled “family entertainment”

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Brand Safety & Suitability

Brand Safety & Suitability: You Might Be Unknowingly Showing Ads to Kids – Know How

Yes, you read it right. Your ads often get placed next to kids’ content. And the concerning part? Your brand safety filters don’t identify these placements as unsafe, because technically they aren’t. What they are, however, are brand-unsuitable placements. It is a systemic gap in how traditional brand safety tools classify content and demographic targeting that affects more campaigns than most advertisers realize. In this blog, we break down exactly how this happens through real examples, why your current filters and targeting settings may not be enough, and what it actually takes to ensure your ads are brand safe and brand suitable, in every sense of the word. Brand Safety & Brand Suitability: They Are Not The Same Thing Before we get into how this happens, it’s important to understand two terms that are often used interchangeably but mean very different. Brand Safety Brand safety is about making sure your ad doesn’t appear next to content that is harmful, offensive, or controversial — violence, hate speech, adult content, or extremist material. Most advertisers today are aware of brand safety and have some level of filtering in place for it. Brand Suitability This goes one level deeper. Brand suitability is not just about avoiding inappropriate placements. It’s about making sure the content environment your ad appears in actually fits in the environment, context, and sentiment of your brand, your product, and the audience you’re trying to reach. Here is a simple example. A children’s cartoon is not unsafe content. It carries no violence, no hate speech, nothing harmful. But if you are a premium financial brand targeting urban professionals between 30 and 50, running your ad before that cartoon is a suitability failure, not a safety failure. The content is perfectly fine. The contextual ad targeting is completely wrong. This is the gap most advertisers are not solving for. Why Do Basic Brand Safety Tools Fail to Identify the Brand Suitability Issues? Here are the two major reasons why your ads keep appearing besides irrelevant content ad placements. The Content Identification Problem Platforms and traditional brand safety tool do their classification work by reading what is written about a video – the title, the description, the tags, and other metadata. They do not actually watch the video. What’s written about a piece of content and what’s actually inside it can be two entirely different things. A video can be tagged as a cartoon and correctly land in a kids’ content category, but still carry themes, visuals, or emotional tones that are completely at odds with what that label suggests. The Audience Targeting Problem When an advertiser sets up a campaign targeting adults, say, 25 to 45 year olds, the platform uses data signals like age registered in Gmail accounts, browsing behavior, and declared gender to identifyand reach that profile. The platform then delivers the ad to that account. Technically, it has done exactly what it was asked to do. But here is what no one identifies; the platform has absolutely no way of knowing who is physically sitting in front of the screen at that moment. The account belongs to an adult; however, the viewer watching the screen at that moment could be a child. And this can only be prevented if the content is identified not just based on title and tags, but based on content, context, sentiment, as well as frame-level video analysis. How mFilterIt’s Brand Safety Solution Solves Brand Suitability Issues? mFilterIt’s brand suitability and brand safety solution, PACE, addresses both the content gap and the visibility gap that traditional tools leave behind. Here’s how it works and what it delivers for advertisers. Analyses videos frame by frame including visuals, audio, on-screen text, sentiment, and scene context to understand what a video actually contains, not just what it is labelled as. Classifies placements against GARM brand safety categories with risk levels as high, medium, and low, so exclusions are precise and not over-blocking safe inventory. Operates in real time, detecting and blocking unsuitable placements before your ad impression is served, not after the budget is already spent. Builds a curated whitelist of videos that are not just safe but genuinely suitable for your specific brand, audience, and campaign sentiment. Identifies regional and vernacular content with language-specific ML models built for the diverse market, where over a billion hours of regional content is consumed every month. The result: Your ad runs in the right context, in front of the right audience, every time. Conclusion Brand safety keeps your ad out of harmful environments. On the other hand, brand suitability makes sure it lands in the right one. Both matter. And right now, most advertisers are only solving either one or none. So, before you take another campaign live, ask this: Is the content my ad is running next to reinforcing my brand or quietly working against it? The brands that get this right aren’t just the ones with genuine results. They’re the ones who know, with precision and confidence, exactly where their ads are landing. To learn more about how we can help, get in touch with our experts today.

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Cookie Hijacking Fraud in USA

$14.8B at Stake: Will You Let Cookie Hijacking Slip Through?

The U.S. affiliate marketing industry is entering a new phase of scale. It is crossing the $10 billion mark for the first time, up from $9.1 billion in 2023, and projected to reach $14.8 billion by 2028. With giants like Amazon, Walmart, and Target running large, complex affiliate programs, the stakes have never been higher. But as the channel grows, so does the race to claim commissions (sometimes wrongfully) which can also look like this-imagine a shopper comes directly to your website, ready to buy but yet somehow, a third-party partner ends up taking creadit for that sale. Many brands are already trying to tackle it, but the growing sophistication of the tactic makes it increasingly difficult to control. In this blog, we dive into a sophisticated tactic known as cookie hijacking where affiliate cookies are secretly inserted into a user’s browser to claim credit for organic traffic, ultimately stealing conversions that rightfully belong to the brand. Behind the Scenes of Cookie Hijacking: 3 Tactics You Might Be Missing Here are three common ways affiliates cause cookie stealing to hijack organic traffic: Extensions Injecting Cookie Affiliates driving sales by influencing real customers is ideal but them stealing is not. One common way an affiliate program experiences this issue is through cookie hijacking. While analyzing a leading global e-commerce platform, we found that many users were directly visiting the site to make purchases. However, some had browser extensions installed (like coupon or deal tools) that silently triggered affiliate links in the background, without any click or user consent. As a result, when the purchase was completed, the system attributed it to an affiliate. Since most tracking follows a “last click wins” model, the affiliate whose cookie was dropped last received the credit, despite having no real influence on the sale. Auto-redirect with Affiliate Tag Another way of cookie hijacking that we noticed in the same brand’s use case was, the page as when users were redirected to brand’s website. If a user is browsing normally and visits a random page (this could be a shady site, popup, or even hidden script). The page quickly redirected them to brand’s site and in a split-second redirect, an affiliate cookie is dropped silently. When that user makes purchase, the credit is given to the affiliate as system sees the cookie. Forced cookie from an external site A user visits a completely unrelated website, not your brand’s. In the background, that site quietly drops an affiliate cookie without the user clicking anything or showing any intent. Sometimes, the user is even redirected to your website, making it look like a normal visit. Later, when they make a purchase, the affiliate gets credit, simply because their cookie was already placed earlier. How Can You Safeguard Your Brand From Cookie Hijacking Cookie manipulation is a growing risk for U.S. brands, especially those running large-scale affiliate programs. As partner ecosystems expand, having clearer visibility becomes essential to avoid affiliate fraud and protect genuine performance. Legacy, surface-level tools can highlight obvious issues, but the real question is whether they can keep up with increasingly sophisticated fraud tactics. In most cases, they fall short. And for U.S. brands running high-stakes affiliate programs , uncertainty isn’t something they can afford. With a more advanced, third-party approach like mFilterIt’s, renowned brand are already bringing more transparency to their affiliate marketing programs. Here’s how it empowers brands- Launch instantly, stay in control – No integrations needed, just immediate visibility into your affiliate ecosystem Gain complete transparency – Always-on scanning ensures you see every leakage, not just the obvious ones Expand your risk coverage – Protect your brand from both known partners and unknown bad actors Make decisions with confidence – Accurate, low-noise insights you can actually act on Hold the right partners accountable – Clear attribution helps you take precise, effective action Understand your true customer journey – See exactly how users reach and convert on your platform Protect revenue in real time – Identify and stop fraud before it impacts your bottom line Conclusion The key to a smooth affiliate program is visibility to understand real user journeys and know where attribution is coming from. Brands that focus on transparency and proactive monitoring through holistic ad fraud solution can prevent revenue leakage and build stronger, more reliable affiliate programs. FAQs What is cookie theft? Cookie theft is when someone steals a user’s cookie or places their own cookie in the user’s browser to wrongly take credit for a purchase they didn’t influence at the first place. How to prevent cookie hijacking? Monitor affiliate traffic and user journeys closely Block suspicious extensions, redirects, and unknown sources Validate partners and enforce strict program rules Use advanced tracking/monitoring tools for better visibility Why is cookie hijacking difficult to identify? Cookie hijacking is difficult to identify because it often happens silently in the background. Since the user still completes a genuine purchase, the fraud appears legitimate in standard attribution systems, making it harder for legacy tools to flag.

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pricing intelligence

Data as a Service for OTAs: How Pricing Intelligence Helps Identify Competitor Pricing Gaps

Pricing in the travel industry moves faster than most teams can keep up with.   A difference of even ₹200 on a flight ticket is enough to lose a booking and send a potential customer straight to a competitor.   Pricing is a decision metric for customers, and pricing intelligence is what makes your platform compete with a strategy. If you don’t have a clear view of what your competitors are charging, you are losing potential bookings, burning discount budgets, and creating pricing gaps that directly impact margins.  This is what a major OTA platform was dealing with – limited visibility into competitor pricing across key routes. Continue reading to find out how we helped them identify the gaps using data as a service.   The Challenge: Limited Visibility into Competitor Pricing This major OTA platform had limited visibility into what their competitor platforms were pricing flights at, in real time.  Their pricing optimization, discount updates were delayed and inconsistent. Sometimes they were underpriced, giving away margins unnecessarily. Other times, they were overpriced due to demand surge or other factors (which hikes prices – research a bit), sending customers to a competitor with a better deal.  However, without consistent pricing analysis, their aim was to stay competitive and to be considered by customers at all times. The Fix: Proactive Data as a Service Using Pricing Intelligence to Map Exactly Where the Gaps Were To address this, they partnered with mFilterIt to gain better visibility into what their competitors were doing as part of their pricing strategy.   Using DaaS (Data as a Service) feed, the pricing intelligence tool provided a structure data pipeline built on ecommerce analytics principles that gave the OTA platform a clear, side-by-side view of its own pricing vs a key competitor’s pricing across 100+ mapped flight sectors. It also enabled an automated price gap detection system for quick discount recalibration. Whenever a pricing difference was mapped between the two platforms, the system flagged it automatically.  Here’s What the Data Actually Showed & Why It Matters for OTAs Once the data started flowing, the insights were immediate, and the findings were structured across three clear layers of pricing.  Finding 1: Clear MRP gaps, the competitor was already pricing cheaper, even before the discounts were applied The first data set compared base ticket prices (the price before any coupon or offer is applied) across 8 airlines on both platforms. For several airlines, the competitor’s base price was consistently lower than the OTA’s.  Why does this data & insights matter?  A higher base price puts you at a disadvantage before discounts are applied or even seen.  Without competitor mapping, a systematic undercut on key routes can go undetected for months.  Finding 2: The competitors were giving bigger discounts on the same route flights The second data set examined the coupon values (the discount amount each OTA was applying on top of the base price). This is where OTAs most actively compete, and the data showed the competitor was being significantly more aggressive with discounts on several airlines.  Why does this data & insights matter?  If you don’t know how aggressively the competitor is discounting, you either lose bookings by under-spending or lose margin by over-spending.  Platforms end up providing blanket discounts instead of targeted ones, which directly eats into margins.  Finding 3: The final price that customers saw were lower on the competitor’s platform The third data set showed the price a customer sees when they’re ready to book, after all discounts have been applied. This is the number that makes or breaks a booking decision. Why does this data & insights matter?  The final price is the only number the customer acts on; if it’s higher than the competitor’s, nothing else on your platform matters for that booking.  Route-by-route visibility into the final price gap gives the pricing team a clear, prioritized action list instead of broad, reactive fixes.  The same gaps exist across ecommerce too. Here’s what brands are missing.  The Outcome: How a Pricing Intelligence Tool Helps Identify Pricing Gaps With the right pricing intelligence tool in place, the OTA platform was able to get a clear view of where gaps existed to make smarter decisions in both directions – when to discount and equally important, when to not.   Here’s how a pricing intelligence tool helps: Discount updates became faster and more targeted instead of blanket coupon changes. The team could identify exactly which airlines and routes had a gap worth closing and act on them immediately. Margin leakage reduced on routes where the OTA’s final price was already lower than the competitors. The team pulled back on unnecessary discounts entirely. Every rupee saved on an over-discounted route goes straight back to margin. Strategic price increases became possible when demand spiked on a specific route and competitor data showed rivals were also priced high; the OTA could price upward with confidence rather than holding prices down out of habit. Knowing when the market will bear a higher price is just as valuable as knowing when to discount. Price rank awareness improved. Not every route needs to be the cheapest option. With real-time data, the team could make a deliberate call to hold at rank #2 with a healthier margin rather than defaulting to the lowest price out of uncertainty. Competitive positioning strengthened across 100+ mapped sectors. The OTA moved from reacting to pricing problems to anticipating them, closing gaps before bookings were lost and capturing margin where the market allowed it.  The OTA platform was now able to anticipate pricing gaps and address them before customers had a reason to leave. This is what separates a reactive pricing team from a strategic one, and it starts with the right ecommerce analytics solution powering every decision. Conclusion: Is Your Pricing Team Working with Complete Data? If you’re in travel, e-commerce, or any industry where competitor pricing directly drives customer decisions, the question isn’t whether you need pricing intelligence. It’s whether you can afford to operate without it.   Talk to us about how pricing intelligence can work for your business.

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ad fraud

What 756+ Million OTT Ad Requests Revealed About Where Media Budget Really Goes

OTT advertising seems to be a safe bet right now. Brands are moving serious budgets here to reach a wider segment of audience at once.   In 2025, 28% of total digital ad spend in India was heavily driven towards OTT platforms and video content. (Source: Exchange4Media)  But what if we told you that the audience pool that you are reaching right now is limited? The numbers that you see on your dashboard are not always true.   This is exactly what came to light during a recent campaign analysis we conducted for a large automotive brand running video ads across two of India’s leading OTT platforms. We went beyond what the platform reported and validated what was actually happening at the delivery level. Over 756 million ad requests were reviewed across three months.  Here’s what the data revealed, and what it means for every marketer running branding campaigns on OTT today.  The Scale of the OTT Advertising Campaign & Why It Matters  The campaign ran across two major OTT platforms simultaneously, covering both CTV and mobile inventory. It covered multiple brand lines, from regional language campaigns tied to popular content properties, to national-market brand pushes. In total, over 756 million ad requests were reviewed during the assessment period.  Across Platform A, 1.18% of ad requests were blocked before delivery. However, the figure was significantly higher at 7.41% for Platform B.  This gap between the two platforms is not incidental. It reflects differences in inventory quality, frequency capping behavior, and bot traffic patterns.   Finding 1: Frequency Capping Violations – The Reach Problem Hiding in Plain Sight  A frequency cap exists for two reasons:   To protect the viewer from ad fatigue  To protect the advertiser from burning budget on an audience that has already been saturated.   When it is not enforced at the delivery level, both goals fail simultaneously.  In this campaign, frequency overshoot was the single largest driver of blocked impressions, particularly on one of the two platforms, where it ran as high as 8.32% in a single month.   At the device level, the problem was even more stark. A single CTV device was found to have accumulated 711 ad requests over a span of just 10 days, against a defined frequency cap threshold of 3 impressions per device. Multiple other devices on the same campaign showed repetition counts ranging from 245 to 510 requests across the same period.  Action Taken to Prevent Frequency Capping Breaches Every ad request was evaluated in real time against the predefined frequency capping before the impression was served. When a device had already crossed its exposure limit, the ad request was blocked automatically.   Impact  Impression delivery shifted from repeatedly exposed devices to a new audience base.   Budget was redirected toward incremental reach.   Reach distribution became more balanced across devices.  Every counted impression met the defined frequency and traffic quality thresholds  Finding 2: Brand Safety – What Content Were the Ads Actually Running Against? Brand safety on OTT is not a binary condition; it depends on what specific content a particular ad placement is running against, and whether anyone is actually checking.  During this campaign, content-level placement analysis was conducted using Video ID signals available from the platforms. It revealed that a portion of ad impressions were being served alongside content that no automotive brand would knowingly approve.  Specific placements were identified and blocked that fell into the brand unsafe content categories:  1. Obscenity & Profanity: Adult content classified under the GARM video safety framework  2. Crime & Harmful Acts: Films with depictions of violence and criminal activity  3. Arms & Ammunition: Content featuring weapons as a central theme  4. Illegal Drugs: Content involving drug-related imagery  These were not obscure placements on low-quality inventory. They were identifiable content URLs on mainstream OTT platforms, surfaced through systematic placement-level analysis.  Action Taken to Prevent Ad Placements Besides Unsafe Content Each placement was analyzed based on text, frame-by-frame classification, and GARM-aligned video-level analysis. Once categorized as brand-unsafe, impressions associated with those placements were blocked from delivery. This ensured that the   Impact  Brand ads appeared only against content that met its defined safety standards.  No brand-unsafe impressions were counted as delivered.  Brand’s media team received verifiable assurance, not just a platform-level declaration.  Brand integrity was protected at the most granular level possible  Finding 3: Invalid Traffic – The Bots That Looked Like Genuine Viewers Invalid traffic on OTT does not look like a flood of suspicious clicks. In this campaign, it showed up in three distinct forms.  1. Outdated OS signals: Devices running Android versions 5.0, 5.1, and 6.0 were generating ad requests in December 2025. These are operating system versions that are years past their support lifecycle. 2. Outdated browser signals: Smart TV devices were detected running browser versions from nearly a decade ago, like Chrome 53 and Chrome 68. In-use CTV devices do not carry browser fingerprints this outdated. These signals point clearly to spoofed or manipulated device identities.    3. Data Center IP activity: A subset of traffic was traced to IP addresses belonging to data centers and VPN infrastructure providers. These IPs were routing traffic to mimic genuine viewer behavior, appearing to originate from real residential locations while actually passing through commercial data center networks.  Action Taken to Reduce Bot Traffic Each signal was evaluated in real time as part of the VAST-level ad traffic validation process. Requests carrying bot traffic indicators were flagged and blocked before an impression was served.   Impact  On Platform A, invalid traffic stayed between 0.55% and 0.67% across the quarter.   On Platform B, despite higher inventory variability, IVT was actively contained through continuous real-time filtering.  Zero IVT-affected impressions were passed through as billable delivery across either platform, every impression that was counted was a genuine one.  As a result, once all three layers of validation were in place, the campaign delivered exactly what it was planned to. Viewability held above 92% throughout the quarter. Geographic delivery aligned closely with targeting intent; regional campaigns delivered impressions in their intended language markets. Moreover, CTV advertising accounted for nearly 99.9% of delivery across both platforms, confirming the campaign was genuinely reaching the living room screen it was built for.  Why is Ad Traffic Validation Non-Negotiable for OTT & CTV Campaigns? Frequency violations, unsafe placements, sophisticated invalid traffic – these patterns exist across OTT campaigns broadly. They go undetected simply because advertisers often don’t look at the right layer of data. Here’s what mFilterIt’s proactive ad traffic validation solution – Valid8 makes possible for brands:  Ensures your frequency cap is actually working, not just set Enforces frequency cap thresholds at the device level, so before the impression is served, overexposure is stopped before it costs you, not

What 756+ Million OTT Ad Requests Revealed About Where Media Budget Really Goes Read More »

Affiliate fraud USA

Are You Competing Against the Market or Against Your Own Affiliates?

Affiliate programs are a powerful revenue driver and bring undeniable scale and performance to the table. It’s no surprise that brands continue to increase their investment in the channel. Global affiliate marketing spend is expected to reach $17B in 2025 (up from $15.7B in 2024) and is projected to surge to $38.35B by 2030. (Source) But as investments rise, one question remains: how deeply is this performance really being evaluated? Nearly 22–30% of digital ad spend (Source) is lost to invalid traffic or fraudulent activity and affiliate campaigns are one of the easiest places for it to hide. The affiliate ecosystem is revenue-driven but complex with multiple partners involved and that makes it more vulnerable to performance leakages. When some partners take credit for users you already acquired organically, you unknowingly start competing with your own growth. You know your external competitors. What you don’t see is the partner within your own ecosystem quietly draining your ad budget. These bad partners not only impact you but also steal the credit of genuine partners, impeding their growth. Sounds like a big claim? Let’s uncover it. Steady Growth or Midnight Spikes? What Affiliate Data Is Telling You Your genuine affiliate partners will show a steady and explainable growth pattern. The installs and traffic driven by them will not be restricted to a specific time window or sudden spikes. Instead, you will see natural variations; some days higher, some lower based on seasonality, campaign activity, and normal user behaviour, making the performance look realistic and trustworthy. Whereas, in case of fraudulent affiliates, you will notice a sudden spike in the number of installs. The user journey will not be mapped, and apps can get installed on always-on basis especially during the times when no normal person will install your app (3-4 am). From a marketer’s perspective, sudden out performance without clear explanation often signals inflated or manipulated metrics, not real user acquisition. The graph below shows the exact odd-hours spike happening at peak night where y-axis highlights the install rate and x-axis, the time in hours. How is Wrong Affiliate Intervention Rewriting your Growth Story? You built a strong affiliate network but what if it is rewriting your growth story? Affiliates that do not bring valid traffic and yet win the attribution race are actually not contributing to your ROI. Here’s what the wrong affiliate intervention looks like – This data of 7 days indicates campaign performance of various affiliates. In just seven days of campaign data, the gap between clicks and installs shows major discrepancies. One partner alone generated 29.03 million clicks but delivered only 45,501 installs, an extremely low 0.16% click-to-install rate while others also failed to cross even the 1% install rate mark. On the surface, the program appears to be scaling through massive traffic, but in reality, the growth narrative is being shaped by inflated clicks rather than real users, distorting performance, budgets, and optimization decisions. From Attributed Performance to Real Incrementality: The Shift You Need This time, you are not required to increase the budget of affiliate programs, instead what you require is a comprehensive approach that provides right attribution to deserving partners, cutting noise of fraudulent affiliates. Here’s how mFilterit’s holistic ad fraud solution Valid8, empowers your brands with an added layer of attribution integrity – Eliminate odd-hour install spikes by closely monitoring the full user journey and identifying suspicious patterns at the source level before they drain your budget. Demand true source-level transparency to shift budgets toward partners delivering genuine installs and cut spend on hidden, low-quality traffic sources. Detect traffic quality issues and behavioural anomalies early to optimise campaigns toward high-intent users instead of inflated performance numbers. Automate blocking, protect payouts, and optimise partner performance to reduce wasted spend, safeguard ROI, and scale confidently with partners that truly drive results. How We Tracked Down IVT: Saved $1.3 Million in Just 3 Months ? For a major travel portal running performance campaigns to acquire new customers, the problem wasn’t the budget, it was the lack of visibility into where the traffic was actually coming from. Despite healthy spending, the brand could not clearly distinguish between genuine and low-quality affiliate sources. We stepped in and closely monitored affiliate performance across the program. By identifying the partners driving fraudulent and non-incremental activity and stopping payouts to them, the brand ensured that only genuine contributions were rewarded. As a result, it was able to save up to $1.3 million in just three months while bringing back control over its performance spend. Conclusion The last thing you must worry about while running an affiliate program is to fight against your own affiliates. Affiliate marketing program are not the problem; the real opportunity lies in making them work the way they are meant to. To unlock their true incremental value and eliminate dishonest contributions, brands need to evaluate the entire affiliate journey, not just the final attribution. Only then they can fight affiliate marketing fraud and reward genuine partners, stop performance leakages, and turn the channel into a reliable, growth-driving engine. Want to know how? Schedule a call! FAQs How Can You Tell If An Affiliate Is Driving Real Growth? Real affiliates show consistent, natural performance trends. Sudden install spikes, odd-hour conversions, or a big gap between clicks and installs are signs of non-incremental or low-quality traffic. Why Do Affiliate Programs Sometimes Waste Ad Budget? Because last-click attribution can reward partners who didn’t create real user intent, brands end up paying for users they would have acquired organically, leading to inflated metrics and lower ROI. How Can Brands Stop Affiliate Fraud And Protect Roi? By analysing the full user journey, identifying traffic sources, and rewarding only genuine incremental conversions while blocking invalid partners and payouts.

Are You Competing Against the Market or Against Your Own Affiliates? Read More »

what is unified ad manager

What is a Unified Ad Manager & Why Should Agencies Care?

Agencies lose approximately 10-12 hours per week on manual campaign adjustments and another 8-15 hours on consolidating cross-platform data alone. (Source: AdsMCP)  Now multiply that across multiple clients running campaigns on marketplaces like Amazon, Flipkart, Myntra, Blinkit, and Zepto.  That’s a lot of time being wasted that could have been utilized on strategic plannings. You might be thinking ‘What other option do we have?’  Well, what if I told you otherwise? That all your dashboards can be controlled using a unified marketing platform. A platform where campaign creation, bid adjustments, budget changes, performance tracking, and reporting can all be done in one place.   Instead of navigating multiple marketplace interfaces at once, you operate from a single, structured system built to simplify execution.   That’s what we are going to cover in this blog.   What is a unified ad manager?  Why do agencies need a unified ad manager?  How does it help streamline the process for ecommerce brands and agencies?  Let’s dig in.  What is a Unified Ad Management?  A Unified Ad manager is a central platform that helps agencies manage and optimize advertising campaigns across multiple e-commerce marketplaces from one place. This way, instead of switching tabs and logging into separate ad managers every time,  the unified marketing platform brings all campaign controls together in a single dashboard.  From launching campaigns to adjusting bids, monitoring performance, applying rules, and reviewing results, all actions can be taken without switching between systems. It also helps analyze digital shelf insights like tracking keyword share of search, monitoring category visibility, and measuring competitor rankings, providing a consolidated view of ad campaign performances.  Why do Agencies Need a Unified Ad Manager? Agencies have several ecommerce clients, and each client runs ecommerce ads on multiple platforms. Which in turn, also comes with various operational challenges that make a unified ad manager a practical necessity. Here’s why:  Too many dashboards to manage Each platform has its own interface, layout, and workflow. Logging in and out of multiple platforms throughout the day slows teams down and makes it harder to maintain a clear overview of performance.  Everyday updates take too much time Campaigns need regular optimization. Bid adjustments, budget changes, keyword refinements, product pauses, and more. When these actions are repeated separately on each platform, advertisers end up spending much valuable time on execution instead of strategy.  Reports are scattered across platforms Consolidating performance insights from all platforms manually is time-consuming and makes cross-platform comparison more difficult.  Scaling becomes operationally heavy As agencies onboard more brands or expand into new marketplaces, manual processes multiply. What works for a few campaigns becomes harder to manage at scale.  Growth opportunities can be missed When teams are focused on managing routine tasks across platforms, less time remains to identify new keyword opportunities, optimize high-performing products, or experiment with strategic expansions. Operational load can limit strategic focus.  Higher risk of errors Frequent manual updates across multiple dashboards increase the chances of inconsistencies such as incorrect or guesswork bids, missed budget changes, or delayed campaign pauses.   Therefore, a unified ad manager helps bridge the gap between multiple platforms and campaign management, making the process more organized, scalable, and consistent.  How does mFilterIt’s Unified Ad Manager Help Streamline the Process for Agencies? A unified ad management brings structure to the workflows of advertisers in agencies and ecommerce brands. Here’s how that translates into real operational gains and benefits of using a unified ad manager:  Centralized Campaign Creation and Monitoring When agencies build any campaign for ecommerce brands, it needs to go live across platforms at the same time. Using a unified ad manager, instead of building campaigns separately for each marketplace, agencies can create and manage them from a single interface. Multi-platform integration allows campaigns to be structured using product, keyword, and budget inputs in one place.  Outcome:  Campaign setup becomes faster and more organized, reducing duplication of effort.  Seamless Campaign Modifications Ecommerce campaigns often require frequent updates like adjusting bids, refining keywords, reallocating budgets, or updating product codes. Instead of repeating this across platforms, agency campaign managers can apply all changes in one place. Bulk actions further simplify tasks like adjusting multiple campaign budgets or adding/removing keywords.  Outcome:  Campaign managers spend less time repeating the same task across platforms, lowering operational load and improving consistency.  Rule-Based Optimization and Objective Alignment A unified ad manager introduces a structured rule engine that allows agencies to define optimization logic once and apply it across campaigns. For instance, if a product is close to ranking higher on the digital shelf, the system automatically uses the defined logic to increase the bid by ₹10 every hour until the product reaches the #1 position. Once the target rank is achieved, the rule can stop the increase.  This removes the need for manual guesswork and constant monitoring. Instead of repeatedly checking rankings and adjusting bids themselves, campaign managers can rely on predefined rules to handle these changes.  Outcome:  Performance standards are applied consistently, helping campaigns stay aligned with brand goals without constant manual supervision, saving both time and budget.  Smarter Budget Management with Campaign Pacing Budget allocation is not only about how much to spend but also when to spend it. Campaign pacing tools help distribute budgets throughout the day and adjust bids based on traffic patterns strategically so that ads continue running during important traffic windows instead of stopping midway through the day.  Outcome:  Campaign budgets remain balanced across peak traffic periods. This improves campaign stability and reduces the need for manual efforts, saving time.  Unified Reporting and Activity Tracking With consolidated dashboards and drill-through capabilities, agencies can move from a high-level view to detailed performance insights within a few clicks. Activity logs track all changes made to campaigns.  Outcome:  Improved transparency supports clearer reporting, stronger accountability, and more informed decision-making.  Conclusion Success for agencies increasingly depends on how efficiently they can execute, optimize, and report on campaigns at scale.   The unified ad management provides agencies with the structure needed to manage that complexity. It helps make the shift from traditional advertising methods to structured and automated campaign creation. With insights collated into one system, it allows teams to operate with greater precision and improve ROAS for clients in a more consistent and scalable way.  If you want to simplify execution while driving stronger performance outcomes, now is the time you change how your ecommerce campaigns are managed.  Connect with our experts to learn how we can help. 

What is a Unified Ad Manager & Why Should Agencies Care? Read More »

How to Know If Your Campaign is Affected by Ad Fraud

How to Know If Your Campaign is Affected by Ad Fraud: 5 Signs Marketers Often Miss

Bot traffic is taking up more than half of the internet traffic. Out of which, 37% of the traffic is driven by bad bots. (Source: Imperva) And this bot traffic is beyond just inflated activity.   Sophisticated ad fraud techniques penetrate the funnel, impacting not just analytics but end goals like sign-up, purchase, etc.   They can bypass basic ad fraud detection methods easily, mimicking human-like behaviour. It skews the data, further impacting decision-making, conversion rates, and retention across mobile and web campaigns.   That is why it is important for advertisers to know about not just surface-level signs of ad fraud but also the sophisticated indicators.   In this article, we’ll break down some of the signs of ad fraud that we have observed in the campaign analyzed. Let’s dig in.  What Differentiates Sophisticated Ad Fraud Techniques from Basic Bot Traffic?  Basic bot traffic is easier to detect. It often creates visible spikes like traffic coming from locations outside the targeted region, same devices, unrealistic click volumes, or abnormal engagement patterns.  On the other hand, sophisticated ad fraud is different. Instead of obvious anomalies, it mimics human-like behaviour. The manipulation happens inside patterns that are harder to identify and detect: OS distributions, CTIT inconsistencies, imperceptible ad placements, IP clustering, or traffic coming from incent fraud.  Basic bots inflate numbers. Sophisticated fraud impacts performance intelligence. That is what makes it more dangerous.  It does not just waste budget. It influences optimization decisions, attribution models, and scaling strategies, without triggering immediate suspicion. Therefore, understanding this difference is the first step toward detecting it.  Now, let’s have a look at some of the sophisticated ad fraud signals.  Sign 1: Heavy install coming from older Android OS versions  Fraudulent affiliates using bots and emulators running on older Android OS versions to generate fake app installs.   After comparing OS version install distribution across different traffic sources:  Google installs were spread across multiple OS versions (10-16), reflecting a healthy and natural user base. However, two affiliate partner sources revealed a very different pattern.  Partner A and Partner B showed a heavy concentration of installs on OS 12, 13, and 14  While the benchmark (Google) traffic was distributed more broadly across OS 10–16  The mismatch clearly indicated emulator-based or bot-driven installs.   Sign 2: Google Play installs happened before the user clicked on an ad  Click-to-install time (CTIT) measures how long it took a user to install an app after clicking on an ad.     Naturally, an app install takes up to minimum 20-30 seconds. However, in one of the campaigns we noticed app installs taking place even before the users clicked on an ad, resulting in negative CTIT. This is a clear indicator of mobile ad fraud.   Therefore, extremely short or negative click-to-install time indicates click injection.  If your CTIT distribution doesn’t resemble a natural curve, it’s worth investigating further. Know how.  Sign 3: Inflated Installs Coming From Incent App  In one of the campaigns, we observed that a telecom provider was unknowingly running ads on an incent app.  Users were redirected through a shared link, asked to install the app, and complete specific steps to earn rewards. This resulted in a high number of installs, but the actual engagement remained low.  The majority of users completed the required action only to earn coins and did not return. This clearly indicated incentive-driven traffic rather than genuine user acquisition.  Read this to know about incent apps and low-quality traffic in detail and how advertisers can protect their mobile app campaigns.   Sign 4: Invalid Traffic Coming From Imperceptible Window   In one of the web campaigns, 99% of traffic was coming from an imperceptible window (also known as pixel stuffing ) through a specific publisher source.  This means the ad was technically loaded in 0x0 iFrames, but not actually visible to users.   Although impressions and traffic volumes appeared normal, user engagement metrics clearly indicated non-human behavior. Analysis revealed:  Repetitive browser agent across sessions Over 70% of data originating from a single IP cluster Zero scroll activity and no sales generated This means advertisers must check not just if the ad was delivered but also if the ad was actually viewable.  We have broken down how to move beyond the viewability myth. Check it out here.  Sign 5: Repeated Ip Traffic From The Same Subnet (Invalid Traffic Pattern)  In genuine campaigns, IP addresses are typically distributed across diverse networks. But what we observed was different.  At first, the traffic appeared strong. But on deeper evaluation of IP-level data, we found that a large portion of clicks and visits were traced back to a single IP subnet.  Each IP was generating more than 70+ clicks, consistently inflating traffic. The concentration of activity within a contiguous subnet suggested coordinated or automated behavior rather than random user traffic.  If a significant share of your traffic is coming from closely grouped IP ranges. especially those flagged under VPN or proxy networks, it requires immediate audit.  Volume alone does not indicate performance. Source diversity does.  How Can Advertisers Identify Sophisticated Bot Traffic?   Detecting sophisticated ad fraud requires moving beyond surface-level indicators. Here are key actions advertisers should take:  Analyze Deeper Behavioral Patterns  Validating only surface-level signals like clicks and installs is not enough. You need to monitor click-to-install timing distributions, engagement depth beyond first interaction, repeat device and IP behaviour, etc. These patterns uncover anomalies that standard filters miss.  Benchmark Across Trusted Sources  Compare partner traffic against known clean channels, ecosystem adoption trends, and natural engagement ranges. Discrepancies from benchmarks often reveal non-genuine or invalid traffic behaviour.  Validate Before Scaling Budgets  Campaign scaling should never happen without ad traffic validation. High volume doesn’t mean high value. Invest in tools that provide real-time ad fraud detection, cross-source transparency and analysis, alerts for sophisticated patterns with proofs and in-depth understanding of new emerging patterns as well. At mFilterIt, our ad fraud detection tool – Valid8, helps detect ad fraud signals that ad platforms and MMPs often overlook. They also allow you to:  Understand true user intent Exclude invalid traffic before optimization

How to Know If Your Campaign is Affected by Ad Fraud: 5 Signs Marketers Often Miss Read More »

Frequency capping breach

15% of Ad Impressions were Exceeding Frequency Capping: Here’s How We Fixed It in a CTV Campaign

Your ads are getting delivered, but to a limited audience pool.   This is what we recently saw in one of the campaigns running on CTV platforms.   While impression delivery appeared strong for this Indonesian brand, engagement metrics did not align proportionately with campaign spend. On deeper analysis, it was observed that ad impressions were being served repeatedly to a limited set of devices instead of expanding to new viewers.   This indicated a potential frequency capping breach, where ads were being delivered beyond the defined exposure threshold.  Impact? Poor campaign efficiency and ad fatigue.  So, if you are an advertiser running OTT & CTV advertising campaigns, or your audience is experiencing something similar, this is must-read.  Deep-Down to Identify the Problem   Throughout the campaign, 6.02 million ad requests were evaluated through VAST-level validation signals.  What the Data Revealed About Frequency Capping Breach  The evaluation uncovered that:  15.86% of impressions were exceeding the defined frequency cap  A total of 16.47% delivery was prevented, combining frequency capping breach and invalid traffic filtration  Over 950,000 impressions were blocked due to frequency violations alone. Certain Smart TV device IDs generated thousands of repeated ad requests within short time windows  In one instance, a single device triggered over 7,600 ad requests in a single day, clearly indicating abnormal repetition behavior.  Additionally, a small portion of traffic (0.61%) was linked to data center and VPN-based IP activity, pointing toward advanced traffic manipulation patterns.  The Action Taken  To address this, real-time frequency validation was implemented at the VAST integration level. Every ad request was evaluated against the predefined frequency threshold before delivery.  If a device had already crossed the limit, a no-ad response was triggered, preventing further exposure. Repeated device patterns and abnormal request spikes were filtered out without impacting legitimate delivery. This ensured that exposure remained controlled and aligned with the campaign’s intended frequency settings.  The Measurable Impact  After filtration and enforcement:  691,691 impressions were validated and served cleanly.  Video engagement remained strong.    These results demonstrated that once frequency capping was enforced and invalid traffic was removed, genuine viewer engagement remained stable and healthy. More importantly, reach distribution improved, budget wastage was reduced, and exposure became more balanced across devices.  What This Means for OTT & CTV Advertisers  To prevent frequency capping breaches, simply setting up a frequency cap is not enough. What matters is whether that cap is actively enforced at the moment of ad delivery or not. mFilterIt ensures that ad exposure remains controlled, balanced, and performance-driven through real-time frequency governance. Here’s how advertisers can benefit:  Ensures Proactive Enforcement Of Frequency Caps  By validating ad requests before they are served, exposure thresholds are actively monitored and enforced. This prevents ad impressions from exceeding defined limits and ensures campaigns remain compliant throughout their lifecycle.  Prevents Impression Wastage On Limited Devices  Device identities are analyzed to monitor how frequently a specific device has been exposed to an ad. By tracking repetitions at the device level, advertisers can clearly identify when impressions are being served within a limited audience pool and take corrective actions accordingly.  Maintains Clean Reach By Combining Frequency & Traffic Quality  Ad frequency overshoot can sometimes overlap with invalid traffic signals. By evaluating both exposure limits and traffic quality together, mFilterIt ensures campaigns maintain clean reach without inflating ad impressions through excessive or abnormal delivery.  Protects Viewer Experience With Balanced Exposure  By maintaining balanced exposure levels, advertisers can ensure that audiences are not overwhelmed by repeated messaging. This helps create a more relevant and engaging viewing experience while preserving brand perception across OTT and CTV environments.  Enables Smarter Campaign Optimization  Insights from frequency analysis allow advertisers to refine targeting strategies, adjust exposure thresholds where necessary, and improve distribution efficiency. This ultimately supports stronger reach expansion and better use of media investment.  Conclusion  OTT and CTV advertising is built to deliver premium, high-impact brand moments. But without proactive validation, campaigns generate ad impressions within a limited device pool, restricting reach and draining budget on repetitive exposure.   Advanced frequency capping using ad traffic validation solution is a performance safeguard. With this approach, brands can protect reach, maintain engagement quality, and ensure that budget is directed toward incremental audience expansion, not overserving the same devices.  If you want your branding campaigns to deliver genuine impressions, balanced reach, and measurable ad viewability across OTT and CTV advertising, it’s time to move beyond settings and into enforcement.  Connect with our experts to know more! FAQs What Is Frequency Capping?   Frequency capping refers to the maximum number of times an advertisement should be shown to a user or device within a defined time frame. For example, a brand may decide that a viewer should not see the same ad more than three times per day to maintain optimal exposure without causing ad fatigue.   What Is Frequency Capping Breach?   A frequency capping breach occurs when an ad is shown to the same user beyond the predefined limit. Moreover, this can happen even when you’ve set a frequency cap in your ad manager, due to platform-level inconsistencies, device-level repetition, or synchronization gaps across systems.   How Are Frequency Caps Configured?  Frequency caps are typically configured based on:   Campaign   Publisher   Geography   Time duration (daily, weekly, monthly)  Why Does Frequency Capping Matter?   Effective frequency capping ensures that users aren’t served the same ad too many times within a short period. This enhances ad campaign performance, effectiveness, prevents irritation, and maintains a positive viewing experience. However, finding the right balance requires data-driven decision-making, continuous testing, and collaboration with advertising platforms. 

15% of Ad Impressions were Exceeding Frequency Capping: Here’s How We Fixed It in a CTV Campaign Read More »

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