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The
Future of Local Advertising Depends on Convergence, Not Channels
Mar 17, 2026| Keith Kazerman|
Locality’s
Keith Kazerman: The industry needs an audience-based strategy that reflects how
people watch, consume, search and buy in local markets.
As AI
reshapes the media landscape, local advertising is facing a moment of
opportunity, and a big one. On one hand, geotargeted video, behavioral data and
real-time optimization open powerful new possibilities. On the other hand,
advertisers face the growing challenge of aligning these capabilities across
multiple environments and platforms.
The problem
isn’t a lack of industry innovation; it’s a lack of foundational integration.
What is increasingly clear is that integration across identity, planning,
activation and measurement will be critical if local campaigns are to operate
as seamlessly as audiences consume media.
Understanding
The Viewer
Today’s
viewers shift seamlessly between platforms. A consumer might watch morning news
on broadcast, stream their favorite series on an app and browse clips on
mobile, all in a single day. But advertisers trying to reach that viewer must
navigate different datasets, vendors and planning tools, each with its own
rules, measurement reporting and blind spots.
The result?
Many local campaigns are still forced to operate in silos, planned separately,
delivered inefficiently and measured unevenly, despite the availability of
better data. This creates a missed opportunity. The technological systems
supporting local advertising were built for a different era.
The Case
for an Audience-First Infrastructure
To move
forward, we need more than incremental tools. It requires a shift in
orientation, from channel-based planning to an audience-based strategy that
reflects how people watch, consume, search and buy in local markets.
An
audience-first framework recognizes that broadcast, streaming, mobile and
digital platforms are not competing but interconnected touchpoints within a
broader consumer journey. It prioritizes consistent measurement, cross-platform
duplication and transparent reporting so that advertisers can understand beyond
the number of impressions that were delivered to how they contributed
collectively to campaign objectives.
This does
not diminish the value of any individual platform. Broadcast continues to
deliver scale, trust and deep community engagement in local markets. Streaming
and digital environments provide flexibility and targeting precision that
enhances relevance. Each plays a distinct and important role within the same
audience journey.
Greater
alignment across platforms and measurement standards will allow advertisers to
better understand how these environments work together and reflect how people
consume media.
Smarter
Local Activation
Local media
has always delivered deep relevance; it connects with communities in a way
national campaigns can’t replicate. But when that value is unlocked through
better audience understanding, local advertising becomes even more
powerful.
With more
integrated data, advertisers can build more complete strategies using broad
linear reach to drive awareness, then tailoring follow-up messages through
digital and streaming to drive consumers through the purchase funnel.
Regardless of channel, it’s about reaching the right people at the right time
with the right message.
This is not
simply a matter of coordination. As artificial intelligence and advanced data
modeling continue to mature, the industry has an opportunity to improve
frequency management, enhance attribution and create clearer visibility into
cross-platform performance at the local level.
Laying
The Groundwork for What’s Next
The future
of local advertising won’t be defined by individual channels. It will be driven
by technologies that serve the audience first, regardless of where they are.
The entire ecosystem — broadcast, streaming, mobile and digital — is
interconnected, requiring a shared data foundation, openness in measurement and
alignment across platforms.
Advertisers
who rethink how they approach local, starting with the consumer and data that
defines their behavior and not just the delivery channel to reach them, will be
best positioned to lead. As audience behavior continues to shift across
screens, success in local advertising will depend less on channel selection and
more on coordination.
When
planning and measurement frameworks reflect how people actually consume media,
advertisers gain a more complete view of performance. Convergence is an
evolution of consumer behavior, and if done right, it will drive greater ROI
and stronger long-term growth.
When local
strategies are built around audience behavior and actual consumers, rather than
platform distinctions, it’s no longer a question of broadcast or streaming but
how to unlock the full potential of both.





