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What is retail media and how does it work?

A practical explanation of retail media: where it appears, what data it uses, how it supports conversion, and how results can be measured.

Changes in media consumption and the digitization of shopping have made retail media one of the most important tools in modern marketing strategies. It is not only about ad space in online stores or mobile apps, but also about the data used to target and measure campaigns.

What is retail media?

Retail media is one of the key trends in digital advertising. It allows brands to promote products in places directly connected with the shopping process: online stores, marketplaces, retailer environments, and shopping apps.

The classic definition focuses on ad inventory in e-commerce and marketplaces. In practice, the ecosystem now also includes shopping-planning apps, where users build lists, compare products, browse offers, and make early purchase decisions.

The biggest advantage is timing. Retail media reaches consumers when they plan a purchase, look for inspiration, or choose a product. That moment significantly increases the chance of conversion.

Where retail media can appear

  • In e-commerce: search ads, product-list placements, recommendation areas, banners, and dedicated promotional pages.
  • In shopping apps: sponsored products on shopping lists, dynamic banners, product suggestions, and full-screen placements in promotional brochures.
  • Off-site: campaigns outside owned environments that use retailer or shopper data for targeting.

Retail media can also support omnichannel planning. A shopper may see a product in an app, later encounter it in an online store or another digital channel, and finally buy it offline. This strengthens the ROPO effect: research online, purchase offline.

Why retail media is effective

Retail media combines precise targeting with performance marketing. Ads are matched to shopping preferences and appear when the user is already close to a purchase decision.

Compared with classic point-of-sale exposure, retail media reaches the shopper earlier: at the planning stage, before the store visit. It is available 24/7 and lets advertisers:

  • reach real purchase decision-makers,
  • target campaigns with first-party shopping signals,
  • use budgets more efficiently,
  • increase purchase intent before the shopper reaches the shelf.

How results are measured

Retail media relies on first-party data, which makes campaign measurement more concrete. Standard measurement can include impressions, clicks, engagement, add-to-cart, purchase, add-to-list, and shopping-path analysis.

Teams often look at ROAS, conversion, brand performance, share of basket, and other indicators that connect media activity with shopping behavior.

Challenges

Retail media also has challenges. Not every platform offers the same level of measurement, inventory can be more expensive than standard display, and planned-purchase data is not the same as transaction data. That is why brands should always discuss methodology, data sources, and reporting standards before the campaign starts.

The future of retail media

Retail media is resilient to cookie-related changes because it is based on first-party shopping data rather than third-party tracking. It helps marketers target campaigns using real shopping signals, combine awareness and sales activity, and measure outcomes with more business context than clicks alone.

Summary

Retail media is a data-driven advertising channel close to the purchase decision. It helps brands reach shoppers when they plan, compare, and choose. For FMCG and grocery retail, that makes it a practical bridge between media, shopper marketing, and sales performance.

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