AiOO became the first platform where AI agents can autonomously purchase advertising in digital out-of-home and physical retail media spaces, according to The Globe and Mail. The real-time platform, developed with TeknaLab.ai, enables algorithmic systems to buy placement in physical environments — airport screens, grocery endcaps, transit stations — without human intervention.
The mechanism is programmatic media buying extended to physical retail infrastructure. An AI agent evaluates inventory, audience data, and pricing in real time, then executes the buy and confirms placement. The transaction runs like digital display advertising, but the screens and media surfaces exist in grocery aisles, gas stations, and shopping districts. AiOO provides the API layer; AI agents treat physical media as another programmatic channel.
This works because digital out-of-home inventory has standardized formats, real-time availability feeds, and measurable impressions. The infrastructure already existed for human planners using dashboards. AiOO removed the dashboard and let agents transact directly. The shift mirrors what happened when programmatic display replaced insertion orders: the medium stayed the same, but the buying path compressed from days to milliseconds.
For a small physical-product brand, the steal is treating retail media and DOOH as testable, algorithmic channels instead of upfront commitments. You do not need an AI agent today, but you can replicate the decisioning logic manually. Identify DOOH platforms that offer self-serve dashboards with real-time inventory — companies like Broadsign, Hivestack, and Vistar already sell programmatic DOOH to small advertisers. Set a daily budget of $50 to $200, depending on market. Choose hyperlocal placements near your retail distribution points: if your energy bars are in three grocery chains, buy screens within a mile of those stores. Run a two-week test with a single creative and a store-locator QR code. Measure lift in SKU movement at those locations against a control region with no DOOH spend. If attributed sales exceed media cost by 2x, scale the spend and add more geos. The advantage is speed: you test, read results, and adjust within a billing cycle, not a quarter.
If you operate an in-house growth team with budget, treat DOOH and retail media as performance channels with the same rigor as paid social. Build a media mix model that assigns conversions to physical touchpoints. Use platforms like Cooler Screens, Grocery TV, or Volta to access in-store and point-of-sale inventory programmatically. Set rules-based triggers: if online search volume for your category spikes in a metro, automatically increase DOOH spend in that DMA for 72 hours. If a retailer reports stock depletion at specific stores, suppress ad spend in those trade areas and reallocate to stores with inventory. Track cost per incremental unit sold, not cost per impression. The shift from campaign planning to real-time allocation is what AI agents will automate, but a skilled operator can run the logic manually with a spreadsheet and API access today.
The broader pattern is that physical media infrastructure is becoming addressable and transactional. Retail media networks at Walmart, Kroger, and Target already function as closed-loop ad platforms with attribution. DOOH providers are adding audience targeting and dynamic creative. The gap between digital and physical media buying is closing. Brands that learn to buy physical inventory with digital discipline — test budgets, tight attribution, rapid iteration — will move faster than competitors still negotiating annual upfront deals.
The takeaway
Physical media is now transactable like digital inventory; test DOOH with daily budgets and store-level attribution.
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