CNN readies AI agents to buy and sell ads

The news: CNN is building an in-house system where AI agents can automatically buy and sell ads from each other, per Digiday, with plans to begin testing later this year and aim for full-scale transactions by early 2027.

  • CNN is combining in-house agentic infrastructure with third-party tech and trading vendors, such as demand-side platforms.
  • The initiative will roll out in phases, starting with defining how these AI agents communicate, then testing how CNN’s inventory is interpreted by large language models (LLMs), before moving into early-stage experiments with advertisers.
  • The system is likely for its inventory as a publisher—rather than as a streamer—applying to content like articles and short-form video that are hosted on CNN’s website and app.

Zooming out: Agentic buying processes are in vogue right now as companies like Google and The Trade Desk push out similar tools, aiming to make ad buying faster and cheaper through automation.

CNN may also be facing some pressure to show growth in its ad business ahead of its parent company Warner Bros. Discovery being acquired by Paramount. As CNN will soon be housed together with rival CBS, the former may be looking to strengthen its monetization strategy and show it can compete for ad dollars in a consolidated news media landscape.

Why it matters: If successful, agent-to-agent ad buying could streamline how campaigns are executed by reducing fees and speeding up transactions. It also marks a shift toward a more automated, data-driven media buying landscape, which may require marketers to rethink how they plan and optimize ad strategies.

  • CNN’s early move on agentic ad buying suggests publishers are trying to get ahead of a potential power shift in programmatic, where AI could control more of the transaction layer and pricing dynamics.
  • By building and testing now, the media player is positioning itself to influence how these systems operate now rather than being forced to adapt later.

Implications for marketers: In the near term, adoption will likely skew toward performance-driven campaigns where automation and real-time optimization matter most.

Marketers should work to strengthen first-party data, measurement frameworks, and creative differentiation, which will remain key as buying becomes more automated and commoditized.

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