DoorDash launched interest-based targeting, retailer-level targeting, and category share insights for CPG brands on its advertising platform, according to a company announcement. The move lets brands bid against real-time category share data at the point of sale, shifting spend accountability from reach metrics to conversion at retail.
Brands can now target shoppers by purchase interest — coffee, baby products, snacks — and confine campaigns to specific retailers within the DoorDash marketplace. The category share insights dashboard shows a brand's percentage of sales within its category in real time, updated as orders close. A snack brand running a promoted placement can see its share of the salty-snack category climb from 8% to 12% during the campaign window, then adjust bids or creative mid-flight.
The mechanism works because DoorDash controls the transaction. Unlike display or social, where attribution requires probabilistic matching, DoorDash sees the cart, the checkout, and the SKU-level sale. When a shopper searches "coffee," DoorDash serves a sponsored brand, and when that shopper buys, the platform writes the sale to the brand's category share in the retailer's virtual aisle. The brand pays for placement, but measures outcome as category penetration, not click-through rate.
For a physical-product brand selling through retail partners, this collapses the attribution gap. Instead of buying display ads and hoping the retailer's sales lift, the brand buys placement on the retailer's DoorDash storefront and watches category share move. The retailer does not control the ad buy; the brand does. The brand sets the budget, picks the interest cohort, and sees whether the spend delivered share gain or not.
The steal for a small brand: identify the one DoorDash retailer where you already have distribution, launch a $500 interest-targeted campaign in your category, and measure category share daily. If you sell cold brew and you are in three stores on DoorDash, target "coffee" interest, set the campaign to those three stores, and bid for top placement in the coffee browse. Run it for two weeks. Pull category share data weekly. If share moves and the cost per incremental point of share is under your acquisition ceiling, scale the budget. If share does not move, test a different interest tag or a different retailer.
The budget scales with ambition. A $2,000 monthly spend can cover interest targeting across ten retailer storefronts. Add retailer-level performance data to your media mix model: if DoorDash drives 3 points of category share at Retailer A but 0.5 points at Retailer B for the same spend, reallocate budget to A and renegotiate terms with B. The platform gives you leverage in the retailer conversation because you control the proof.
The broader pattern is retail media moving from impression-based pricing to outcome-based pricing at the transaction layer. DoorDash does not sell a banner; it sells a bid on category position with real-time share feedback. Brands that adapt measurement to match will outspend competitors still buying reach.
The takeaway
DoorDash lets CPG brands bid on category share at point of sale, collapsing attribution and shifting spend to outcome, not impressions.
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