Broadcast TV’s Inefficiency Has Been Lucrative. Will DAI Change That?
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Dynamic Ad Insertion in broadcast could be a threat to revenue or a path to growth.
At the NAB Show, I was speaking with the CEO of a broadcast company about bringing precision ad targeting and dynamic ad insertion (DAI) to local broadcast TV. They asked a simple but important question: Would this negatively impact revenues?
It’s a fair question and one I’ve heard repeatedly since mentioning DAI in a previous column. It’s worth taking a closer look.
For decades, broadcasters have benefited from a highly effective model: Sell mass reach, with limited inventory, at premium pricing. The same spot runs across a broad audience, supported by demographic targeting. That inefficiency reaching many viewers outside the intended target has been incredibly lucrative.
This model worked when television dominated audience share and advertisers had few viable alternatives. That world has changed. Today, there is an abundance of content, channels and platforms. Advertisers are increasingly shifting dollars toward environments where they can target specific audiences, measure outcomes and attribute performance. Much of that spend is flowing to streaming, digital and social platforms.
That said, I remain a strong believer in the power of linear TV. It still delivers scale in a way no other local medium can, and it continues to drive results for advertisers.
So, the question isn’t whether DAI disrupts the current model. It can. The real question is whether the risk of disruption outweighs the risk of doing nothing.
Let’s look at both sides.
The Benefits of Enabling DAI in Broadcast
1. Attracting New Advertisers — There are advertisers, particularly in larger DMAs, who avoid broadcast due to waste. A retailer in Tempe doesn’t necessarily want to pay for coverage across the entire Phoenix market. DAI enables geographic, demographic and behavioral targeting, opening the door to advertisers currently allocating budgets to CTV, digital and social.
2. Yield Optimization — DAI allows stations to extract greater value from lower-rated or lower-demand programming. Impression-based selling and audience targeting can improve monetization of inventory that might otherwise be discounted or filled with lower-value direct response ads.
3. Sales Flexibility — Broadcast’s strength is reach. DAI adds the ability to layer precision. Advertisers can choose between broad campaigns, targeted campaigns or a hybrid of both depending on their objectives.
4. Messaging Power — DAI enables sequential messaging at the household level, allowing advertisers to tell a story over time rather than relying on a single exposure.
5. Higher CPM Potential — Targeted inventory typically commands higher CPMs, assuming sufficient demand and fill rates.
6. Retargeting Capabilities — Retargeting is central to performance advertising. Bringing this capability into broadcast creates new relevance for advertisers focused on conversion.
7. Frequency Management — Advertisers gain better control over how often their message is seen, improving effectiveness and reducing waste.
8. Future-Proofing the Business — As advertising investment shifts toward performance and outcomes, DAI ensures broadcast remains competitive for retail media, performance budgets and data-driven campaigns.
9. Improved Measurement and Attribution — This is a critical addition. DAI creates the opportunity to align broadcast with impression-based measurement and attribution models that advertisers increasingly demand.
The Concerns
1. Loss of Scarcity and Stature — Broadcast risks becoming “just another impression,” potentially eroding the premium associated with broad reach.
2. Inventory Fragmentation — If a meaningful percentage of impressions are allocated to DAI, the value of broad-based program delivery could be diluted.
3. Fill Rate Risk — CTV has shown that more granular targeting can lead to lower fill rates in non-premium environments. Broadcasters must avoid creating unsold inventory through over-fragmentation.
4. Political Revenue Impact — This is significant. Broadcast’s inefficiency has been particularly lucrative in political advertising. DAI could allow campaigns to target only relevant zones or congressional districts, potentially reducing total spend.
5. Sales Resistance — Sales teams are compensated on total revenue. Selling broad market coverage is simpler and often more lucrative under current commission structures. Change will require sales leadership adoption and retraining.
6. Operational Complexity — DAI introduces new requirements data partnerships, identity resolution, privacy compliance, ad decisioning systems and workflow integration. This is not a plug-and-play transition.
From my view, the benefits far outweigh the concerns.
Broadcast’s inefficiency was valuable when it controlled scarcity. Today, advertisers have options. With CTV, they can reach audiences with precision, measure performance and optimize in real time across multiple platforms. As that becomes the standard, inefficiency becomes harder to defend.
The greater risk may not be revenue disruption from adopting DAI but revenue erosion from failing to compete.
A smarter path forward would likely be a hybrid model. The opportunity is not to replace broad reach with targeting. That would be a mistake. The opportunity is to combine them. Preserve premium inventory, news, sports, prime time and major tentpole events for reach-based selling. These remain uniquely valuable.
Then open portions of lower-demand inventory, daytime, latenight, weekends and select programming to DAI. Use this inventory for targeted direct sales and programmatic demand.
This balance will vary by market, network and station. Over time, AI-driven optimization can help manage yield dynamically, allocating inventory based on demand and pricing conditions to provide the best audience match for advertisers while managing rate integrity for broadcasters.
DAI, implemented thoughtfully, does not weaken broadcast. It expands by allowing broadcasters to move from a single-product model with mass reach to a multi-dimensional offering.
This offering then becomes the ultimate competitive advantage for broadcasters: broadcast reach + local trust + valued live content + precision targeting + measurable outcomes. No other media has this combination at the local level, and this will be a game changer for broadcast TV.












