ShopLiftr's off-site activation engine renders live, localized brand promotions across display advertising, digital out-of-home, and connected TV at the same time, according to TMCnet. Instead of running separate campaigns in each channel — one banner buy, one DOOH vendor, one CTV flight — the platform follows the shopper with the same deal across every screen they encounter. The promotion updates in real time, so a Friday flash sale appears on a highway billboard, a mobile banner, and a Roku pre-roll within the same hour.
The move matters because most brands still silo promotions by channel. Display gets one agency, out-of-home gets another, CTV runs through a third. Each channel pulls from different creative assets, different promotion calendars, often different discount codes. The shopper sees three versions of the same brand in one afternoon, none of them aligned. Frequency caps break. Spend overlaps. The brand pays twice to reach the same person and never knows which touchpoint closed the sale. ShopLiftr collapses that stack into a single feed: one promotion calendar, one creative system, one attribution loop.
The mechanism is orchestration at the data layer. ShopLiftr ingests the brand's promotion schedule and retail availability, then renders the offer in real time across every connected channel. The platform writes the banner creative, the DOOH slot, and the CTV card from the same source file. If a product sells out or a deal expires, every channel updates at once. The brand no longer manages three campaigns. It manages one promotion that lives in three formats. The shopper sees consistency. The brand sees unified reporting — one dashboard for impressions, clicks, and conversions across all three surfaces.
A small physical-product brand can steal this play without enterprise software. Build your promotion calendar in a shared spreadsheet. Write one paragraph of copy for each deal — the offer, the deadline, the call-to-action — and store it in a Google Doc. When you buy display ads through a self-serve platform like AdRoll or Google Display Network, use dynamic insertion to pull that copy into the banner. When you book DOOH through Blip or AdQuick, give the vendor the same text and deadline. If you run CTV on Roku or Tubi, hand them the same creative brief. Keep one master calendar. Update it once. Brief every vendor from that single source. You will not get real-time sync, but you will get message alignment, and you will stop paying two agencies to say different things to the same person on the same day. Track every channel in one dashboard. If your budget is under $2,000 monthly, stick to display and DOOH. Add CTV only when you have verifiable attribution and at least $5,000 a month to test.
The broader pattern: multi-channel promotion is moving from campaign coordination to platform orchestration. Brands that still manage channels separately will spend more and learn less. Unified creative feeds and single-source calendars are the default now. The question is whether you build it in-house or rent the infrastructure.
The takeaway
One promotion calendar, rendered live across display, DOOH, and CTV from a single feed — message alignment at scale without channel silos.
Two hundred brands. Eight months on the desk. $0.003 an impression.
The branded-identity layer Chiefs of Staff and heritage CMOs route through — imprinting on real authorized stock for Nike, YETI, Patagonia, The North Face, Carhartt, Stanley, Peter Millar, TUMI, Montblanc, Moleskine, Waterford, and 190 more. Nine editorial desks publish the intelligence those operators read before they sign: The Stash Edge, Markets Edge, Sports Edge, Voyage Edge, Black's Edge, House Edge, the Article Engine, Ramen, and Fending.
$0.003per impression · vs ~$0.007 digital CPM
8 monthson the desk · vs 0.8s for a digital ad
200+authorized brands · Nike · YETI · Patagonia
9 deskspublishing daily · since 1997
70,000 SKUs · virtual proof in 60 seconds · no platform fee · blind-shipped · ASI #217876
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Strategy, positioning, identity, creative, and messaging — wired into an AI system that publishes and distributes on its own. Nine editorial desks generate the authority, the production house ships the physical proof, and the attribution layer tells you which post sold which SKU. What you get is an operating layer — content, catalog, and order path under one roof — that keeps working whether or not you are in the room. Built for principals who would rather own the machine than rent the agency.
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Drop your logo on any product and see the virtual proof before asking. Quote routes direct to the desk. MCP catalog for AI agents. Celeste for the fast conversation. Full self-service checkout in development.