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Home Mobile Marketing

Media Buying in the Age of AI: How Agencies Allocate Spend

Josh by Josh
May 20, 2026
in Mobile Marketing
0
Personalized Marketing: What It Is & How Top Brands Are Using It in 2026


Media buying used to live in spreadsheets and morning standups. A team would pull last week’s numbers, debate where to shift the budget, and push updates manually across each platform. By the time those decisions went live, the market had already moved.

That model is breaking down fast. According to the IAB 2026 Outlook Study, two-thirds of marketers now prioritize agentic AI for ad buying and campaign execution. U.S. ad spend is projected to grow 9.5% in 2026, with social media leading at 14.6% growth and connected TV close behind at 13.8%. The growth is not just about more dollars flowing in. It is about who, or what, is deciding where those dollars go.

This shift changes what a modern agency actually does. The mechanical work of bidding, pacing, and reallocating is being automated by algorithms. The strategic work of defining goals, judging quality, and protecting brand outcomes is becoming more valuable, not less.

What AI-Driven Media Buying Actually Means

AI-driven media buying uses machine learning to plan, purchase, and optimize ad placements in real time. Instead of a human setting fixed targeting rules, an AI system evaluates hundreds of campaign signals every minute and adjusts spend, bids, and audiences without waiting for someone to log in.

Programmatic vs. AI Media Buying

The distinction from older programmatic systems matters:

  • Programmatic platforms like Google DV360 or The Trade Desk execute the rules you give them. If you tell them to bid $8 CPM for users who visited your pricing page, they find matching impressions until you change the rule yourself.
  • AI media buyers rewrite the rules continuously based on what they observe. If conversion rates drop on Friday afternoons or a creative starts fatiguing after 10,000 impressions, the system shifts budget on its own.

This is what people now call agentic AI. The Interactive Advertising Bureau describes it as systems capable of independent decision-making and goal-oriented behavior without constant human input. In media buying, that means an agent can take a business objective, like cost per acquisition under $40, and chase it across platforms in real time.

AI-Powered Campaign Automation: The Future of Media Buying

Why Allocation Is the Hardest Problem AI Solves

Budget allocation has always been the messiest part of media buying. Channels do not behave the same way. Audiences shift. Attribution windows conflict. Meta credits a conversion using one model, Google uses another, and LinkedIn uses last-touch. When you are splitting a six-figure quarterly budget across all three, those mismatches can quietly cost you serious money.

The Cost of Misallocation

The waste is well-documented. According to the ANA 2025 Programmatic Transparency Benchmark, tens of billions of dollars in programmatic spend are classified as “unrealized media value” each year. That is money that bought impressions nobody saw, in environments that did not perform, or on inventory that never had a real chance to convert.

How AI Reduces the Waste

AI addresses this problem in two ways:

  1. Pre-bid filtering. Predictive models score the likelihood of engagement and filter out low-quality impressions before money is committed.
  2. Real-time reallocation. If a campaign is fatiguing on Meta and gaining traction on TikTok at 2 a.m., the system moves spend immediately. A human team cannot match that speed even on its best day.

Research from Google and BCG has shown that companies leading in AI-driven marketing report revenue growth around 60% higher than companies just starting to implement the essentials.

How Modern Agencies Are Structuring Allocation

Agencies that have leaned into AI are not handing everything to the machines. The most effective setups use a layered approach where automation handles tactical decisions and human strategists handle direction.

The 70-20-10 Baseline

A useful framework still starts with the split that media planners have used for years:

  • 70% to proven channels. Paid search, retargeting, and other reliable performers.
  • 20% to growth opportunities. New audience segments or emerging platforms.
  • 10% to bold experiments. Viral formats, untested ad types, or new placements.

AI does not replace this structure. It accelerates your ability to determine whether a channel belongs in the proven, growth, or experimental bucket.

The Three-Layer AI Stack

On top of the structural framework, modern agencies build allocation across three layers:

  1. Platform-native AI. Meta’s Advantage+ Campaign Budget, Google’s Performance Max, and Amazon’s Sponsored Products AI all distribute spend based on real-time performance. Meta’s system, in particular, can now pull up to 20% of budget from one ad set and shift it to another that is outperforming.
  2. Cross-platform AI. Tools like WPP’s Copilot, Improvado, Scope3, and Skai unify performance data across Meta, Google, LinkedIn, TikTok, and the open programmatic market.
  3. Human strategic oversight. People define the goals, set the guardrails, and decide what success means.

The cross-platform layer matters most because each walled garden optimizes within its own ecosystem and reports its own version of success. A cross-platform AI applies a unified attribution model and answers a question that the individual platforms cannot: which channel actually drove the incremental conversion?

The New Allocation Logic: Signals Over Channels

A meaningful shift in 2026 is that the smartest agencies have stopped allocating budget by channel and started allocating by buyer signal. Search Engine Journal calls this PPC budget rebalancing, built around intent, discovery, and trust signals rather than fixed channel splits. 

Instead of saying “we spend 40% on Google and 30% on Meta,” agencies group campaigns into three signal buckets:

  • Intent: Captures users who are already searching for a solution. Paid search and retargeting tend to dominate this bucket.
  • Discovery: Reaches people who fit the audience but have not started looking yet. Meta prospecting and YouTube anchor most discovery work.
  • Trust: Builds credibility through testimonials, reviews, and educational content. Video testimonials and influencer content live here.

Budget is then distributed across these buckets, and inside each bucket, the AI picks the best channel for that signal in real time. This logic matches how platform AI actually evaluates users. Higher-intent signals yield more efficient impressions because algorithms can recognize purchase intent. Allocating by signal aligns the agency’s strategy with the way the underlying machines already think.

Social Media

What Agencies Still Own

If algorithms are doing the allocation, what is the agency for? This is a fair question, and platform consolidation makes it sharper. J.P. Morgan analysts have noted that Amazon, Google, and Meta now automate targeting, creative optimization, and reporting to the point where advertisers with simple direct-response needs can sometimes bypass agencies entirely.

The agencies that are winning have reframed their value around four things AI cannot do alone:

  1. Strategy: AI optimizes against the goals you give it. Defining the right goals, setting the right guardrails, and connecting media outcomes to business outcomes is human work. An agency that can tie media spend to lifetime value, churn risk, and gross margin is doing something an Advantage+ campaign cannot.
  2. Creative quality: Algorithms can rotate creative variants and predict which will perform, but they cannot originate the message, the brand voice, or the cultural read. As buying becomes more automated, creative becomes a bigger competitive lever, not a smaller one.
  3. Governance: AI systems can scale mistakes as fast as they scale output. A creative that goes off-brand, a targeting decision that hits the wrong audience, or a budget shift that drains a campaign overnight can all happen before a human notices. Agencies that build governance frameworks, define where automation ends, and assign clear ownership of AI decisions are positioning themselves into long-term contracts. 
  4. Transparency: Walled garden tools deliver results but limit visibility into targeting decisions and inventory selection. Agencies that can run unified measurement, validate platform claims with independent attribution, and explain what the algorithm actually did are worth more than ever.

What This Means for Brands Choosing an Agency

If you are evaluating an agency in 2026, the questions to ask have changed. Media platform capability is now table stakes. What separates strong agencies from weak ones is how they handle the AI layer.

Key questions to ask:

  • Does the agency use platform-native AI, cross-platform AI, or both?
  • How do they handle attribution across Meta, Google, and the open programmatic market?
  • How do they define and protect against AI-related risks like brand safety failures and unexplained spend shifts?
  • What does their human oversight model look like, and what decisions do they keep out of the algorithm’s hands?

The agencies that answer these questions clearly are the ones building durable advantage. Those that wave at AI as a feature without explaining the workflow are usually behind.

Looking Ahead

Meta has publicly stated it aims to fully automate ad creation, targeting, and budget allocation by the end of 2026. Google and Amazon are following similar roadmaps. The direction is clear: more of the tactical work will keep moving to the machines.

That is not a threat to good agencies. It is a clarifying force. Strategy, creative, governance, and transparency are becoming the core of the agency offer. Allocation is becoming a feature of the system rather than a service line. For brands that want measurable growth in a market this fragmented, the question is not whether to use AI in media buying. It is which partner can run that AI well enough to keep up.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is AI-driven media buying?

AI-driven media buying uses machine learning to plan, buy, and optimize ad placements across digital channels in real time. Instead of humans setting fixed targeting and bidding rules, AI systems evaluate hundreds of campaign signals continuously and adjust spend, audiences, and creative automatically based on performance.

How is agentic AI different from regular programmatic advertising?

Programmatic advertising automates the transaction of buying ad inventory using preset rules. Agentic AI automates the strategy itself, making independent decisions about what to bid, which audiences to target, and how to reallocate budget without continuous human input. The system rewrites its own rules as it learns.

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How do modern agencies allocate ad spend across channels?

Most modern agencies start with a structural framework like 70-20-10, with the majority of budget on proven channels and smaller portions on growth and experimentation. They layer in platform-native AI tools like Meta Advantage+ and Google Performance Max, then add cross-platform AI to unify attribution and reallocate across the entire media mix in real time.

What percentage of media buying is now automated?

According to the IAB 2026 Outlook Study, two-thirds of marketers now prioritize agentic AI for ad buying and campaign execution. Industry estimates suggest AI handles roughly 60% to 70% of tactical work such as bid adjustments, audience expansion, and budget allocation, while humans retain control over strategy, creative, and governance.

Will AI replace media buying agencies?

No, though it is reshaping what agencies do. Platforms like Google, Meta, and Amazon automate enough of the tactical work that simple direct-response advertisers can sometimes go without an agency. Brands with complex goals, cross-channel needs, governance requirements, or premium creative needs still rely on agencies for strategy, oversight, and unified measurement.

What are the risks of AI-driven media buying?

The main risks are transparency, brand safety, and attribution conflicts. Walled garden AI tools often hide the logic behind their decisions, making it hard to know why budget moved. Around 40% of advertisers have reported having to pause campaigns due to AI-related issues. Strong governance, independent measurement, and clear human oversight reduce these risks.

How can I tell if my agency is using AI well?

Look for clarity on three points. First, whether they combine platform-native AI with cross-platform optimization. Second, how they handle attribution across Meta, Google, and the open web. Third, what their human oversight model looks like, including when they override the algorithm and why. Agencies that explain these clearly are usually ahead of those that just list AI as a capability.

Orad Eldar

Orad Eldar

Orad Eldar is VP Media at Moburst, where she leads high-impact campaign strategy and execution across top media platforms. With deep expertise in Google Ads, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and Apple Search Ads, Orad drives growth at scale for global brands. Her approach combines performance marketing precision with a sharp eye for creative that converts.

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