You’re dumping money into digital ads, but guess what? One dumb media placement and boom—your brand’s in trouble. Doesn’t matter if your campaign’s perfect. All it takes is one scandal. These days, a single screenshot can go viral for all the wrong reasons.
That nerves you out? Yeah, you’re not alone. Doesn’t matter if you’re hustling as a tiny startup or running a Fortune 500 empire. You need more than wishful thinking. A crusty old keyword blocklist won’t save you. Every ad impression could end up in the headlines. And look, people have no patience for brands who don’t track where their ads land. When someone calls you out, “Did you really mean to show up next to that crazy conspiracy theory?”—you want to say, “Nope, and here’s the data to prove it.”
That’s where new, souped-up DSP brand suitability settings step in. Forget the usual keyword blocklists or that silly check-the-box stuff. This is big—API controls, smart pre-bid checks, and easy plug-in partners kicking out the risky stuff before money even leaves your wallet.
If you run digital ads (especially through test runs like Adobe DSP open beta), this is for you. Your brand sounds like you want, ads work better, and hey, you might even sleep better. Stick around to see why brand suitability matters, how top platforms are stepping it up, and how you can get more control. It’s not just about avoiding drama. It’s about smarter spending, real trust, and leveling up your campaign skills.
Skip brand suitability, and you’re speeding in a Lambo with no insurance. Fun—until you crash.
Before, advertising was simple: show up where your customers hang out, and avoid the sketchy places. Safety meant one big no-go list—sites flagged for bad content, hate, or scammy clickbait. But times changed. Dodging trouble doesn’t win you trust anymore.
Sure, avoiding hate and clickbait is good. But what about tone? Or just the plain mood of a page? That’s where brand suitability beats old brand safety. Like, if you’re selling a fun soda, your ad shouldn’t sit next to sob stories about Wall Street. Nothing illegal there, but the vibe is all wrong. Suitability settings let you find your perfect spot and skip the off-brand stuff, not just monsters and messes.
Pratiti Raychoudhury, once Meta’s Head of Research, even joked, “Reputation takes years, but it can blow up in seconds.” Today’s risks aren’t just PR’s headache. Mess up, and your results tank. A 2023 GumGum survey said 68% of buyers lost trust if an ad landed on some sketchy or gross content. Trust equals cash, and a lousy placement can ruin your whole campaign’s payout.
It’s not just about blocking junk—it’s about showing up in places that suit you. Say you sell luxury vacations: that sunny beach banner doesn’t belong next to breaking news about a hurricane. Even if those news sites are “safe,” the mood’s all wrong. Today’s DSPs offer way more. They use AI to sniff out how content feels, the tone, the topic—so your ad is placed right, every time.
The best DSPs offer:
Call it next-level suitability.
Platforms like Adobe DSP and others in open beta are the wild sandbox for smart advertisers. You get:
Jumping into open betas means you help build what’s next. Like holding the blueprints to a new building, and pointing out where the doors should go. And your feedback drives the innovation. For example, Amazon DSP beta testers helped shape targeting tools that everyone uses now.
Plus, early testing lets you optimize for your brand right away—while others play catch-up months later.
If you’re hunting better DSP controls and clear reports, check out our DSP Services for pro help.
Third-party tech isn’t just “nice to have” now—it’s the safety net that keeps your ads out of the weird parts of the internet. DSPs link up with these watchful partners to keep an eye on where your ads hit.
Their Automatic Brand Suitability (ABS) segment IDs let you automate fast rules. Block fraud, bad news, angry rants, or whatever sets off alarms for you. Paste your code into your DSP—like Adobe DSP—and DoubleVerify’s system flags stuff way before it gets out of hand.
IAS and Comscore are your digital bouncers. They scan the content, block risks, and make sure your brand doesn’t hang with rivals or get dragged into bad vibes. Both use crazy-fast AI to spot risky stuff in a flash, before anyone sees your ad.
Peer39 brings “feels” to the table. Their AI can block adult or violent stuff—and can even filter based on mood. Maybe you don’t want your insurance ad by anxiety-heavy stories. Or your toy ad by sad global news.
“If you care about your ads’ homes, you need verification partners,” says Jim Spanarkel, SVP at DoubleVerify. “Controls are only as good as the data behind them.”
These tech partners update their models all the time, tracking news, viral trends, and sudden hot-button issues. DoubleVerify’s 2023 report showed a 20% jump in brands asking for custom controls to keep up. Clearly, it works—and brands are staying ahead.
Modern DSPs don’t just offer more control—they make it simple. Setup isn’t one-and-done anymore. Now it’s about real-time adjusting, one-campaign tweaks, and clear reporting on where your cash goes.
With newer DSP APIs, you control everything:
With API settings in Adobe or Amazon DSP, you don’t just “set and forget.” Turn knobs up or down all along the campaign, from first impression to retargeted users.
Today’s DSP reports spill the tea right away. See every spot your ad showed, what content you brushed against, and where you nearly tripped. Forget quarterly audits. Now you get live dashboards.
Reporting usually covers:
Amazon DSP, for example, gives really good suitability and delivery reports. Missed a misfit last week? Catch it before it messes up results next week. No more nasty end-of-month surprises.
Pro tip: If your blocklist isn’t updated four times a year (at least), you’re fighting blind. News and trends explode fast—so keep your rules fresh.
Jump into DSP beta tests early and you get better tools and better results. First-movers write the rulebook everyone follows next.
Your input matters. Test new stuff, give feedback, and you get a say in how platforms shape their controls for future risk and ad issues. For years, brands in open betas got:
“Open beta is how the best advertisers set the rules before they’re official,” says Maya Telpner, a top DSP product manager.
This isn’t just insurance. Done well, suitability spikes every important number.
No surprise—the brands crushing suitability are also the ones getting better conversions and more brand love, per WARC and IAB research.
What’s the difference between brand safety and suitability?
Brand safety blocks the obvious junk—fraud, hate, bots. Suitability blocks stuff that just isn’t on-brand, even if it’s technically safe.
How do API-based controls help?
APIs let you automate rules, adjust on the fly, and run changes at scale. No dashboard marathons or slow mistakes. Everything updates fast.
Can I use these tools everywhere?
For now, in the open beta, just on Twitch display and video ads. More spots are coming soon—check your platform for updates.
Do verification partners slow down my ads?
Nope. They check in milliseconds, before the auction, so your ads stay speedy.
How do I know it’s working?
Suitability and delivery reports (like from Amazon DSP) show every impression’s risk, so you know exactly what needs fixing. No weekly or live reports? Push your provider for more.
Is there any downside?
Too many filters can shrink your reach and raise costs. Start tight, then loosen up if you need. Tweak as you go. Flexibility wins.
The truth? The line between “brand sets new record!” and “brand ad next to mess, yikes!” is just a few strong settings apart.
Suitability is more than box-ticking now—it's a fast, high-value lever for results and brand safety. DSPs like Adobe and Amazon make it simple to get smarter and safer with your ads. If you’re not customizing settings, your rivals are—and they’re winning while you nap.
Want to see how the best brands win at suitability? Peek at our Case Studies for tips and playbooks that work.
Curious for more? Read how Amazon brand lift works, or see Amazon Attribution to connect your brand across channels.