Procter & Gamble became the first brand to use Albertsons Media Collective's new branded entertainment product — a microdrama series written and produced using actual shopper purchase behavior pulled from the grocer's retail media network, according to Marketing Dive. The move marks a shift from retail media as pure ad placement to using point-of-sale data to shape the creative itself.
P&G used Albertsons' first-party transaction data to identify which product categories and purchase combinations its shoppers bought together, then built a scripted video series around those insights. The microdrama format — short episodic content designed for social platforms — featured storylines and product integrations informed by what Albertsons customers actually put in their carts. Albertsons Media Collective provided the anonymized shopping patterns; P&G and its agency used that to write the scripts and cast the brands.
The mechanism works because retail media networks sit on purchase-level data that most brand teams never see. A CPG marketer knows what ships to a retailer but rarely knows basket composition, repeat rate by SKU, or which products a shopper buys in the same trip. Albertsons has that visibility and is now productizing it as a content development input, not just an audience targeting layer. P&G gets a creative brief written by actual behavior; Albertsons gets a content asset it can distribute across owned channels and use to prove media performance tied to sales lift.
This is defensible because the content is built on proprietary shopper data the brand cannot access anywhere else. A competitor running the same creative without the data insight is guessing. P&G is scripting to observed behavior, which increases the odds the content resonates with the in-store audience and drives purchase intent for products shoppers already buy together.
The steal for a physical-product brand with a retail partner: request a basket analysis report from any retailer that carries your SKU and has a loyalty program. Ask for anonymized data showing what products your buyers purchase in the same transaction or within the same week. Most regional grocers, specialty retailers, and even Amazon Sellers can pull this if you frame it as a joint business planning request. Use that report to identify the top three product pairings. Then produce one piece of social content — a carousel post, a short video, a recipe card, a how-to — that features your product and the complementary item in a real use case. Tag both brands if the partner agrees. Run the content as an organic post and a small paid test targeting the retailer's geographic footprint. Track engagement and ask the retailer for a week-over-week sales read after the content runs. If the pairing data is strong, the content will feel immediately familiar to the shopper because it mirrors what they already do.
For a brand without a retail partnership, the manual version: survey 50 recent customers and ask what other products they bought in the same order or same day. Use a free tool like Typeform. Tally the top three pairings. Build content around the most common pairing and run it as a test. The data will be noisier than a retail feed, but the directional insight is the same.
The broader pattern is retail media networks moving upstream from media to creative development. Brands that treat RMN data as a content input, not just an audience segment, will produce work that converts better because it reflects observed behavior instead of assumed intent.