Retail Media Breakfast Club

Today I’m focusing on my recent article for The Drum, breaking down what really stood out from Home Depot’s third annual Infronts event, and there’s more going on than just incremental progress. Sure, merchant alignment and the shift toward self-service are important, but what really caught my attention is how Orange Apron Media is doubling down on the things only Home Depot can do.

From turning the Pro customer into a powerful media asset, to rethinking how in-store and online performance are measured, this episode explores how differentiation (not scale) is becoming the real competitive edge in retail media. I also dig into how tighter integration between media and merchandising data is changing the game for suppliers, and why Home Depot’s so-called “limitations” might actually be its biggest strengths.

This episode is sponsored by Mirakl Ads

Timeline

[00:00] – Two major themes from InFronts: merchant alignment and self-service evolution
[00:30] – Why Orange Apron Media is focusing on what makes Home Depot uniquely powerful
[00:45] – The Pro customer as a high-value, deeply owned media audience
[01:45] – Scaling in-store media: 1,400 stores and a layered retail media ecosystem
[02:45] – Why paint is a top performer when you measure beyond e-commerce
[04:00] – Connecting media spend to real sales through integrated analytics
[06:30] – Home Depot’s hybrid tech stack strategy: build vs. buy decisions
[07:15] – “Quirks are a feature”: turning specialization into a competitive advantage

Links & Resources

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Orange Apron Media is leaning into the things only Home Depot can do
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[00:00:00] Speaker: I wrote this week in my column for the drum about two big themes coming out of Home Depot's. Third annual in France event, which happened on Tuesday this week. One of them was merchant alignment, and the other one was [00:00:15] the push towards self-service. Both of these are notable, and the progress that Orange Apron Media has made towards those goals is notable, but there is something else.

[00:00:27] It's all the ways that [00:00:30] Orange Apron Media is leaning into things that other retailers cannot do.

[00:00:34] And that's a real story. Let's jump in.

[00:00:37]

[00:00:38] Speaker: So number one, the pro customer is a media product. Nearly every speaker [00:00:45] at the in fronts hammered. The Pro customer pros represent half of Home Depot's sales. Orange Apron Media has built hundreds of pro audience segments and a [00:01:00] localization capability that lets suppliers or advertisers Target Them by regional building codes and trade specialties. For example, an electrician in South Florida has different product [00:01:15] needs than a general contractor in the Pacific Northwest and Orange Apron Media can now segment those accordingly. The pro customer isn't a segment that Home Depot is trying to acquire.

[00:01:28] It's a segment they [00:01:30] already own at a depth that no competitor can match. Orange Media is treating that depth as a media product rather than just one of many audiences to reach. Number two stores [00:01:45] are the Moat. Orange Media announced that it would scale in store screens to 1400 stores by the middle of this year, which is a crazy number considering that they only have a.

[00:01:58] Low hundreds [00:02:00] in stores right now. It is the largest deployment to date and it's gonna happen in the next few months.

[00:02:07] ~So this is building on top of what has existed in stores to date, which is thing which is placements, like paint screens, pro focus screens, screens visible.~

[00:02:07] ~Uh.~

[00:02:07] But the headline number understates the layered media estate that Home Depot has been assembling incrementally over [00:02:15] several years. There are now paint screens, pro focus screens, side caps, and as of this rollout screens positioned in view of the racetrack, which they call the main walkway at the front of the store, where [00:02:30] shoppers can see every aisle's end cap.

[00:02:32] And in store audio runs across more than 7,000 locations. Each format serves a different moment in the shopping journey.

[00:02:41] Now Jordan Brogue, who is the executive vice president [00:02:45] of Online at the Home Depot, shared an example that made this really tangible paint as in house paint has the lowest e-commerce conversion rate of any category on Home [00:03:00] depot.com. Makes sense by conventional digital metrics, it looks like a poor investment.

[00:03:07] Why would you run our dollars against this? Product category that consistently underperforms online. [00:03:15] But when Home Depot measures enterprise conversion, that is factoring in store purchases that have been influenced by online research. Paint is consistently the top performing category. So for every [00:03:30] dollar transacting on Home depot.com, another $3 transact.

[00:03:34] In store that are influenced by the site and that kind of measurement sophistication means it's possible to reframe the entire [00:03:45] value proposition of digital media investment at Home Depot because the return isn't just what happens on the website,

[00:03:54] which leads into the next point, connecting media to merchandising data. [00:04:00] Orange Apron Media's integration of its supplier analytics program into orange access may have been the most significant announcement of the day. The supplier analytics platform, which is built on an old system [00:04:15] called Fusion.

[00:04:16] Back in 2016, it gives suppliers rich merchandising data. Things like sell through rates, category performance, competitive positioning, inventory levels, things like that. But it [00:04:30] was a completely separate system that was used by merchandising teams, and it was disconnected from the media buying workflow.

[00:04:37] Stephanie Catona, who is Orange, a print media's senior director of strategy product, and analytics told me that the [00:04:45] disconnect became obvious during a proof of concept stage that some advertisers didn't even know that they were subscribers to the analytics program. Those who did had to become experts in two separate platforms and [00:05:00] manually connect the dots between their ad campaigns and their sales outcomes.

[00:05:05] Now that data flows into Orange Access, which is the name of Orange Apron Media's media buying platform. So it flows in [00:05:15] alongside campaign. Reporting and that is the feature that seemed to get a lot of suppliers attention. Allison Fowler, who is the director of media strategy at Rustoleum, told [00:05:30] me after the event that that was the feature she was most excited about.

[00:05:33] She said, we need to translate our retail media spend and KPIs into tangible sales results. At the end of the day. That's why we have these spends to grow sales [00:05:45] together. In partnership and she says that the integration here is really gonna help with that. Miracle Ads is the Ad Tech solution trusted by Rakuten and [00:06:00] over 50 global enterprise retailers. That's because Miracle Ads was built with both three P Marketplace sellers and one P suppliers in mind. Both advertiser audiences demand a seamless advertising journey [00:06:15] from onboarding to reporting.

[00:06:17] Kiri Masters: You can offer everything from sponsored products to video ads all in one solution. Learn more@miracle.com. That's M-I-R-A-K l.com.

[00:06:29] Speaker: Okay. [00:06:30] Number four, the tech stack as differentiator.

[00:06:33] I've talked before about how a lot of retailers are secretive about their tech stacks. Um, that seems to be changing. Home Depot has shared a [00:06:45] little bit more than others about their approach to technology, and when I spoke with Stephanie Catona, she reinforced this hybrid approach where that they have, where they have, uh, they've partnered with tech vendors to [00:07:00] build some core infrastructure while building other proprietary solutions in-house.

[00:07:06] And that was really made those tech build versus buy decisions are really made on a module by module basis. wrapping up here, [00:07:15] quirks are a feature, not a bug. Home Depot is a category specialist. It doesn't sell groceries, it doesn't sell shoes, it doesn't sell general merchandise. It's customers come with high intent [00:07:30] projects and its catalog is curated rather than being an open.

[00:07:35] Marketplace. And for years that narrower positioning might've looked like a limitation in a retail media landscape. Where things like [00:07:45] monthly active users and impressions and reach and skew count, those were the primary selling point. But Orange Apron Media is leaning into these characteristics as features, not bugs.

[00:07:58] The pro [00:08:00] customer, the Curated catalog, the 2000 plus stores, the project based shopping journey, these are assets that can't be replicated. Buy a marketplace with 20 million skews or a grocery chain that's optimizing for weekly replenishment, [00:08:15] worth considering for every, every other retailer with media network.

[00:08:19] What are you doubling down on? Every retailer has something distinctive and the retailers who figure out their own version of feature, not a bug, have a path forward. [00:08:30] As Allison Fowler of Rustoleum told me, orange Apron Media operates differently than many retail media networks.

[00:08:38] And And she said, I think they doubled down on what set them apart. Thanks for listening, [00:08:45] and I'll catch you next week.

[00:08:46]