Kevel's Retail Media Cloud won Retail Media Infrastructure/Platform of the Year at The Drum Awards for delivering real-time activation and measurable outcomes on API-native architecture, according to The Drum. The award recognized infrastructure that scaled retail media revenue without forcing brands to compromise between speed and control.
The platform is built on an API-native foundation, meaning every media activation function—ad placement, targeting, bidding, measurement—runs through programmable interfaces instead of closed software suites. Brands and retailers connect their existing systems directly to Kevel's infrastructure via API calls, activating retail media campaigns in real time without migrating data or rebuilding tech stacks. The architecture separates media logic from frontend presentation, so a grocery chain can run the same retail media engine across web, app, and in-store screens without custom integrations.
The win matters because retail media infrastructure typically forces a trade: either fast activation with limited control (plug-and-play platforms) or full customization with slow deployment (build-it-yourself stacks). API-native architecture collapses that choice. A brand pushes a product launch to its e-commerce system, and the retail media layer activates matching sponsored placements within minutes because the API reads inventory and bidding rules in real time. No manual campaign setup. No lag between merchandising and media. The infrastructure treats media activation as a data flow problem, not a campaign management problem.
The mechanism driving results is decoupling. Traditional retail media platforms bundle ad serving, targeting, and analytics into monolithic software. Any change—new ad format, different attribution model—requires the platform vendor to build and deploy it. API-native infrastructure hands those functions to the brand's or retailer's own systems. A retailer wanting to activate sponsored product ads based on real-time inventory levels writes that logic once, calls Kevel's API, and the media execution happens automatically. The retailer owns the targeting rules. Kevel owns the infrastructure that scales them.
The steal for a small physical-product brand is simpler than it sounds. You do not need Kevel's platform. You need the principle: separate your media activation from your media presentation. If you sell through a marketplace or a retail partner that offers sponsored placements, treat those placements as API calls, not campaign tasks. Set up automated rules in your e-commerce or inventory system that trigger media activation when conditions hit—low stock that needs clearance, new SKU launch, regional shipping delay. Most retail media platforms and Amazon Advertising support rule-based triggers or API access. You write the business logic once (if inventory for SKU X drops below 50 units, increase sponsored bid by 20 percent for 48 hours). The API executes it without you logging into a dashboard. Cost: your time writing the rules, zero incremental media spend. The result is media that activates in sync with your supply chain and product launches, not your campaign calendar.
For a small brand without API access, the manual version still works. Build a spreadsheet that tracks your activation triggers—product launch dates, inventory thresholds, seasonal peaks. Each week, check the triggers and adjust your sponsored placements or retail media bids accordingly. It is slower than API-native, but the discipline is the same: media follows product reality, not the other way around.
The broader pattern is infrastructure arbitrage. Retail media is consolidating into two camps: closed platforms that bundle everything, and API-native systems that let brands and retailers build their own logic on shared infrastructure. The API-native approach won the award because it scales outcomes without scaling headcount. That same principle applies to any brand managing physical product distribution: automate the connection between your product operations and your media activation, and you eliminate the lag that kills margin.
The takeaway
API-native infrastructure separates media logic from execution, letting brands activate campaigns in real time as product conditions change.
Two hundred brands. Eight months on the desk. $0.003 an impression.
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$0.003per impression · vs ~$0.007 digital CPM
8 monthson the desk · vs 0.8s for a digital ad
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9 deskspublishing daily · since 1997
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