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Marketers cut AI-driven ad platform budgets amid transparency concerns
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The artificial intelligence AdTech blues are setting in.

Media buyers are pushing back against AI-driven platforms like Google‘s Performance Max and Meta’s Advantage+, redirecting budgets due to concerns about transparency, control, and diminishing returns. This shift marks a significant moment in the advertising industry as marketers reassess their relationship with black-box AI solutions and seek greater visibility into where their ad dollars are actually going.

The big picture: Marketers are actively reducing spend on AI-driven advertising platforms, with some clients cutting Google Performance Max budgets by up to 50% and redirecting those funds to more transparent channels.

Why this matters: This pullback represents a growing crisis of confidence in automated media buying systems that promise efficiency but deliver opacity, potentially signaling a broader industry recalibration around AI’s role in advertising.

What they’re saying: “I have clients who’ve transitioned out of Performance Max completely, to a mix of Google ads, search campaigns and outside of the walled garden, open web campaigns,” said John Davis, director of audience development at Crowd Louder Media.

  • “I had one client where their Performance Max CPM was pretty much the same as their search CPM, so I cut their PMax spend in half,” explained Sara Kerr, associate media director at ZGM Modern Marketing Partners.
  • Kerr also mentioned an onboarding client with “horrifically large spend in Performance Max” that immediately raised concerns, noting “it’s going to be a tough conversation.”

Behind the numbers: The shift away from Performance Max often occurs when marketers hit diminishing returns, discovering that increasing investment no longer yields proportional results.

Key concerns: Transparency issues around ad placement, performance metrics, and return on investment have long troubled marketers using AI-driven platforms.

  • The lack of clear visibility into where ads are appearing and what’s actually working has evolved from a frustration to a dealbreaker for many brands.
  • At worst, marketers fear losing control over their entire media strategy by relying too heavily on these automated systems.

The bottom line: While AI will inevitably play a growing role in media buying, the current pushback suggests marketers are demanding solutions that provide both efficiency and transparency rather than being forced to choose between them.

Advertisers are starting to walk away from platforms’ AI solutions that once promised them everything

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