IAB Launches Project Eidos to Rebuild Ad Measurement From the Ground Up

IAB Project Eidos Aims to Fix Ad Measurement

At the 2026 IAB Annual Leadership Meeting, CEO David Cohen didn’t announce a tweak. He announced a reset.

Dubbed Project Eidos, the new initiative is a coordinated, industry‑wide push to fundamentally modernize advertising and marketing measurement—replacing today’s fragmented, channel‑by‑channel systems with a unified, interoperable framework designed for an AI‑powered era.

The name comes from the Greek verb meaning “to see.” The goal: bring clarity and consistency back to a measurement ecosystem that’s more advanced than ever—and yet trusted less than it should be.

Advanced, But Not Trusted

The urgency behind Project Eidos isn’t theoretical. It’s backed by fresh data.

Alongside the announcement, IAB released State of Data 2026: The AI‑Powered Measurement Transformation, based on a survey of more than 400 senior brand and agency decision‑makers conducted with BWG Global.

The headline finding? Advanced measurement is widely adopted—but confidence is eroding.

Between 60% and 75% of buy‑side users say current approaches fall short on rigor, timeliness, trust, and efficiency. Not a single respondent believes all paid channels are well represented in today’s marketing mix models (MMMs).

That’s a problem.

As Cohen put it, the era of one‑off frameworks and single‑channel fixes is over. The underlying issues are structural, and they’ve been building quietly for years.

AI: Massive Promise, Major Risk

If trust is slipping, AI is both the opportunity and the anxiety.

According to the IAB report:

  • Buy‑side leaders believe AI‑driven improvements in advanced measurement could unlock $26.3 billion in media investment and generate $6.2 billion in productivity value within 1–2 years.
  • Roughly half of respondents are already scaling AI inside existing measurement frameworks.
  • Of those not yet scaling, more than 70% expect to do so within two years.

But enthusiasm comes with caveats.

About half of respondents cite significant or critical concerns around legal and security risks, data quality, and accuracy. Yet fewer than 40% report having mitigation plans in place.

There’s also a contractual shift underway. AI‑related clauses appear in roughly 40% of brand‑agency and partner agreements today—a figure expected to double in the next one to two years.

Angelina Eng, VP of IAB’s Measurement Center, framed the issue bluntly: past work‑arounds and band‑aids have allowed systemic problems to worsen. AI may accelerate performance—but without structural alignment, it could just as easily magnify inconsistencies.

From Patchwork to Interoperability

Project Eidos aims to move the industry from fragmentation to shared architecture.

Rather than layering new tools on top of old systems, the initiative will focus on creating shared constructs, consistent language, and interoperable data flows across the ecosystem—spanning brands, agencies, publishers, platforms, and measurement providers.

The effort is positioned as holistic and multi‑year, drawing participation from leaders across IAB’s Centers of Excellence and board representation from commerce, experience, media, and measurement sectors.

Three pillars define the roadmap:

1. Unifying and Harmonizing Measurement

Project Eidos will establish shared structures and classifications so that the industry “speaks the same measurement language.” The goal is interoperability at scale—reducing the friction agencies currently face reconciling conflicting methodologies.

2. Cross‑Channel Outcomes, Attribution & Incrementality

The initiative seeks to create a unified but flexible framework connecting exposure to outcomes. That includes standardized approaches to attribution and incrementality across platforms—long a pain point in multi‑channel planning.

3. Modernizing Marketing Mix Modeling (MMM)

MMM is getting a refresh.

Project Eidos will define standardized, privacy‑ready inputs for a modern MMM framework capable of delivering consistent ROI signals and comparable cross‑channel guidance. In an era of signal loss and tightening privacy regulation, this piece may be the most consequential.

Maggie Zak, EVP of Analytics & Engineering at Havas Media Network NA, noted, no single methodology answers every business question. The real constraint has been the lack of alignment between them. Eidos aims to fix that at the foundation.

Why This Matters Now

Measurement complexity has ballooned over the past decade:

  • The deprecation of third‑party cookies.
  • The rise of retail media networks.
  • Fragmented streaming environments.
  • Proliferation of walled gardens.
  • Rapid AI deployment across analytics workflows.

Each shift added layers of methodology without harmonizing the underlying system.

The result? Agencies and brands often spend more time reconciling dashboards than optimizing growth.

The Kellogg‑style review of ad measurement underscores that even as tools get smarter, the foundation must be solid.

Governance and Industry Backing

In January 2026, IAB convened a new Measurement Advisory Committee composed of senior leaders across brands, agencies, publishers, platforms, and measurement firms. Members gain early influence over emerging standards, taxonomies, and specifications—effectively shaping how the next decade of advertising performance measurement will function.

That governance model matters. Measurement reform historically stalls when stakeholders operate in silos. Eidos attempts to align incentives before fragmentation deepens further.

The Bigger Picture: Confidence as Currency

Advertising measurement isn’t just about analytics—it’s about confidence.

When CFOs question ROI signals or when channel data doesn’t reconcile, investment slows. If AI is poised to accelerate planning and optimization, the measurement foundation must be resilient enough to support it.

Project Eidos is IAB’s acknowledgment that modernization can’t be incremental anymore.

Whether the initiative succeeds will depend on adoption, not ambition. But the stakes are clear: in a cross‑channel, AI‑driven marketplace, interoperability isn’t optional. It’s survival.

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