In 2026, Advertising Is Converging on the TV Screen - 5 Opportunities OTT Operators Should Be Watching | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Look closely at this year's ad market and one thing becomes clear: 2026 is one of the most significant structural turning points in the history of online advertising. Ads have started appearing inside ChatGPT, Google has embedded new ad formats into its AI search, and an era in which AI agents buy and sell advertising is becoming the standard. This piece comes in two parts. First, we'll walk through what changed in 2026 at the market level. Then we'll read those shifts through the lens of an operator who owns their own OTT inventory (with a North American focus) — and unpack the opportunities they create. Let me give you the conclusion up front. An operator who owns inventory holds two assets no one else can replicate: ① viewing data (first-party data) and ② the screen itself (format control). Neither ad-tech vendors nor agencies hold both at once. And every trend in 2026 is raising the value of exactly these two assets.
Part 1. What Changed in 2026The market is still growingLet's start with the big picture. The North American online advertising market is projected to grow from $108.58 billion in 2025 to $216.98 billion by 2033 — a CAGR of 9.04%. As of 2025, North America is the largest region in internet advertising, while Asia-Pacific is the fastest-growing. Global ad spend is expected to surpass $1 trillion for the first time in 2026. Growth continues — but the real story is that where the money flows and how advertising works are being fundamentally rewired.
The biggest event: ChatGPT now has adsThe most symbolic shift this year is OpenAI bringing advertising to ChatGPT. Because this was a platform that had been ad-free for years, the impact was substantial.
The essence here isn't simply "AI got ads." It's a shift toward agentic advertising — a structure where AI agents buy and sell ads, or even complete purchases on the consumer's behalf.
New ad formatsThe specific new formats that appeared this year make the direction unmistakable. On the ChatGPT side — three formats launched in March 2026: sponsored answer cards, product spotlight units, and contextual sidebar placements. What's notable is the targeting approach. Rather than demographics or third-party behavioral profiles, it's based on the topic and intent signals of the current conversation. On the Google side — at Google Marketing Live on May 20, 2026, Google announced four new AI search ad formats: Conversational Discovery ads, Highlighted Answers, AI-powered Shopping ads, and Business Agent for Leads. All are powered by Gemini and currently in testing within AI Mode, and ads inside AI-generated results are clearly labeled as ads. The backdrop: AI Mode has surpassed 1 billion monthly users, with queries doubling every quarter. Across the board, AI-driven targeting, expanding programmatic adoption, and the spread of immersive formats are leading the way.
Standards are being built: UCP and IAB's Agentic RoadmapFor agents to buy and sell ads, they need a common "language." In 2026, those standards came together quickly.
New faces: emerging companies and fundingIn the gaps opened by this change, new players are emerging fast.
And everything is converging on the TV screenSeparate from AI agents, there's one segment growing faster than any other: the convergence of retail media networks (RMNs) and CTV. US retail media ad spend is projected to reach $69.33 billion in 2026 — up about $10.53 billion from the prior year. But more than 89% of that increase is expected to be absorbed by Amazon and Walmart. Walmart Connect expanded CTV inventory access in April 2026 (with Vizio supplying premium inventory including Paramount and Warner Bros), and Comcast partnered with Amazon Ads to open up premium Prime Video inventory to local and small-to-medium-sized (SMB) advertisers for the first time. Which raises the key question: For an OTT operator who owns inventory — not Amazon or Walmart — what room is left?
Part 2. Five Opportunities for OTT Inventory OperatorsFrom here, we re-read the trends above through the lens of an operator who owns their own OTT/streaming inventory (North American market). Listed in order of execution priority.
Priority 1 — Wrap your inventory in "closed-loop" measurement via retailer data partnershipsThe most powerful short-term lever is to combine your own viewing data with a retailer's purchase data. CTV's long-standing weakness — proving that "people who saw the ad actually bought" — became standard in 2026. The Walmart-Vizio, Walmart-Roku, and Comcast-Amazon Ads partnerships all point in this direction. Why is this Priority 1? Because the operator already owns the inventory and the viewing data. You only need to fill in the one missing piece — purchase data — through a partnership. Retail media CTV ad spend is growing roughly 3x faster than retail media search, and retail accounts for about one-fifth of CTV spend, the largest share. In other words, demand is already pointed at your screen.
Priority 2 — Build shoppable / one-tap checkout formats into your own screenOwning inventory means you can design the format however you want — precisely the part vendors and agencies can't do. With UCP and in-ad one-tap checkout becoming standard, "see it on TV and buy it instantly" is now technically possible. Walmart-Roku has already enabled remote-control purchases, and Google demonstrated one-tap Google Pay checkout inside an ad.
Priority 3 — Self-serve + AI creative for SMB and local advertisersPremium CTV has traditionally been the domain of large brands. A major axis of new demand in 2026 is opening it up to the local and small-to-medium-sized (SMB) advertisers who couldn't buy in before — Comcast-Amazon opening Prime Video to SMBs being the prime example. Another CTV bottleneck is video creative production. With 41% of marketers saying it still takes three to four weeks to launch a campaign, AI creative is a clear remedy.
Priority 4 (a mid-term hedge) — Make your inventory "visible" to agentic buyingGoing forward, ad inventory will move toward a structure where AI buyer agents do the buying. The IAB Tech Lab Agentic Roadmap, Magnite embedding a seller agent directly into its SpringServe video ad server, and the MiQ Sigma trading agent are all signals. INMA's advice to mid-tier publishers lands exactly here — ask your current ad-tech partners when they'll support agentic workflows, and document your inventory's differentiators.
Opportunity Priorities at a Glance
Closing ThoughtsIf you had to sum up North American online advertising in 2026 in one line, it would be this: ads moving inside conversational AI, a market where agents do the buying and selling, and a CTV screen where everything converges. For an operator who owns their own OTT inventory, the two assets you hold — viewing data and format control — are best leveraged through the Priority 1 and 2 opportunities. Because ad-tech vendors and agencies can't hold both at once, that's exactly where your moat is. The three things worth doing first:
This article is based on news, newswire releases (GLOBE NEWSWIRE, PR Newswire, etc.), and industry analysis published between January and May 2026. Primary sources: ResearchAndMarkets, IAB Tech Lab, AdExchanger, Adweek, TechCrunch, Search Engine Land, Marketing Brew, PPC Land, MediaPost, EMARKETER, Tinuiti, and INMA. Market sizing figures vary by publisher in definition and scope, so caution is warranted in direct comparisons; revenue and spend figures for private startups are based on company disclosures. Tags: AI Advertising Ad Tech Ad Tech Standards Agentic Ads Agentic Advertising CTV Advertising ChatGPT Ads New Ad Formats North America Online Advertising Retail Media UCP Universal Commerce Protocol | ||||||||||||||||||||
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