Advertising just produced a clean example of this, and the lesson reaches well beyond marketing into any business adopting AI.
The example comes from Innovid, an ad serving and measurement platform, meaning the technology that delivers digital ads and tracks how they perform. Innovid is owned by Mediaocean, one of the largest software companies in advertising, which runs much of the financial and operational plumbing the industry uses to plan, buy, and bill media. Innovid recently launched an AI system called NIVO and reported cutting campaign launch time by up to 90 percent in early pilots with brands including FanDuel and Paddy Power. The number drew the headlines. The architecture underneath it is the part worth studying.
So let me walk through who built it, what it is, how it works, why they made these choices, and what it means for any leader thinking about their own AI stack.
Who built it, and why that matters
What makes NIVO work is everything Innovid already had before it added any AI. Innovid took its current shape when two established ad tech companies combined, Innovid and Flashtalking, both of which had spent years building the systems that serve and track digital ads. The merged company then became part of Mediaocean.
That gave NIVO a foundation most AI tools lack. It runs on a system that already touches trillions of ad impressions a year with independently accredited measurement, wired into Prisma, the tool much of the industry uses to plan and buy media, and Protected, Mediaocean’s verification and brand safety system. Innovid did not start NIVO from a blank page. It started from the pipes the industry already runs on.




