DoorDash Ads launched interest targeting, retailer targeting, and category share insights, removing minimum spend requirements and opening performance-based advertising to CPG brands that previously couldn't afford the platform, according to the company's announcement. The move puts quick-commerce shelf space within reach of smaller brands that sell through DoorDash's retail partners.
The platform now allows brands to target customers by shopping interest—plant-based, organic, budget-conscious—and by specific retailer, meaning a protein bar brand can run ads only to shoppers browsing Whole Foods or CVS within DoorDash. Category Share Insights shows brands their share of purchases within a product category, updated weekly, giving them visibility into competitive position without requiring Nielsen or IRI subscriptions that cost thousands monthly.
This works because DoorDash controls the transaction feed. Unlike Meta or Google, which infer intent, DoorDash sees actual purchase behavior: a customer who buys almond milk, dark chocolate, and kombucha every week. Interest targeting routes ads to shoppers based on demonstrated purchase patterns. Retailer targeting ensures ad spend doesn't leak to stores that don't carry the product. The combination turns ads into a margin decision, not a brand-building gamble. A $50 test can show whether shoppers convert when they see the product, retailer-by-retailer.
The zero-entry threshold matters most for brands in the $500K-$5M revenue range. These companies typically have distribution in regional chains or independent grocers that deliver through DoorDash, but they lack budgets to compete on Amazon or run national campaigns. Previously, DoorDash required minimum spends that locked out brands below seven-figure ad budgets. Now a single-SKU brand can test whether its product moves at Sprouts versus Albertsons with a week of spend and a clear read on conversion.
The steal: Log into DoorDash Ads, select retailer targeting, choose the chain that carries your product, layer interest targeting to match your customer profile—search "organic" if you're in natural, "budget" if you're value—and set a $10 daily cap for five days. Run two ads: one with product image and price, one with a use case. Pull Category Share Insights at day seven to see if your share moved. If conversion rate exceeds 3%, double spend and expand to a second retailer. If it's under 1%, the product or price needs work before you scale ads. The platform shows attributed sales, so you know exact return. For brands in 50-200 DoorDash stores, this surfaces which retailer drives velocity without waiting for sell-through reports that arrive sixty days late.
This play scales vertically, not horizontally. Most small brands should stay single-retailer until conversion proves out, then add one chain at a time while watching share data. The insight isn't awareness—it's whether the product moves when a ready buyer sees it on a screen.
The takeaway
DoorDash's zero-minimum ad platform and retailer targeting let small CPG brands test conversion by chain for under $100.
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