# Media Buying

**Category:** general  
**Short Description:** Execution of media plans through direct negotiation and platform-based buying.  
**Last Updated:** 2026-05-30T00:00:00Z

## Definition

Media buying encompasses the tactical execution of media plans through both traditional direct buying and modern platform-based purchasing. It includes negotiating and securing inventory across enterprise channels (TV, OOH, print) while managing campaigns through self-serve platforms (Meta, Google, TikTok) and programmatic DSPs. Modern media buying requires expertise in both relationship-based deal making and automated optimization across multiple buying platforms.

## Examples

- Managing upfront TV and streaming deals with major networks
- Executing social campaigns across Meta, TikTok, and Snapchat platforms
- Operating programmatic campaigns through DV360 or The Trade Desk
- Optimizing search campaigns across Google and Microsoft platforms

## FAQs

### What is media buying?

Media buying is the process of purchasing advertising placements — on search, social, display, video, TV, and beyond — to reach a target audience at the right price and time. Modern media buying is largely digital and automated, executed through ad platforms and programmatic exchanges, and focused on getting the most outcomes (reach, conversions) per dollar through targeting, bidding, and optimization.

### What's the difference between programmatic and direct media buying?

Direct buying negotiates placements directly with a publisher or platform (e.g. a reserved sponsorship). Programmatic buying uses automated, real-time auctions to purchase impressions across many sites/apps via exchanges, targeting audiences rather than specific placements. Direct offers control and guaranteed placement; programmatic offers scale, efficiency, and granular audience targeting. Most digital media buying today is programmatic or platform-automated.

### What do media buyers optimize?

Toward the campaign's goal at the lowest efficient cost: bids and budgets, audience targeting and exclusions, placements and inventory quality, timing/flighting, and frequency. On automated platforms much of the bid-and-budget tuning is algorithmic, so the buyer's leverage shifts to strategy, audience logic, creative, and steering the automation. The aim is maximum relevant reach or conversions per dollar without wasting spend on the wrong audiences or excessive frequency.

### How has automation changed media buying?

Heavily. Platform algorithms (Advantage+, Performance Max) and programmatic systems now handle real-time bidding, budget allocation, and targeting that buyers once set manually. This shifts the buyer's role from manual lever-pulling to feeding the systems strong inputs (clear goals, quality creative, clean signals), setting strategy and guardrails, and intervening when automation drifts. The skill moved up the stack from execution to strategy and oversight.

### What's the difference between media buying and media planning?

Media planning is the upstream strategy — deciding which channels, audiences, budgets, and timing will best achieve the goal. Media buying is the execution — actually purchasing and managing the placements that plan calls for, then optimizing them. Planning sets the blueprint; buying builds to it and tunes performance. In smaller teams the same person does both; at scale they're distinct roles.

## Related Terms

### Child Terms

- **[Media Planning](/resources/glossary/general/media-planning)**: Strategic framework guiding buying execution

### Component Terms

- **[Programmatic Advertising](/resources/glossary/general/programmatic-advertising)**: Automated digital media buying through DSPs
- **[Platform Advertising](/resources/glossary/general/platform-advertising)**: Direct buying through social and search platforms
