Book a demo

3min read

Retail Media, Social & CTV: Who Actually Wins the Attention Economy?

Man running out of a blue TV screen holding shopping bags next to the text “Who Wins the Attention Economy.”

The attention economy is brutal.

Everyone’s fighting for the same thing: seconds of focus from a consumer who’s already swamped with content, ads, and algorithms designed to distract them.

Retail Media wants to own the last click.
Social wants to own the scroll.
CTV wants to own the screen.

And every vendor swears their channel “wins.”

But here’s the truth:
Most marketers are measuring the wrong thing.
And it’s why budgets keep getting wasted again. and again. and again.

Diagram showing CTV creating attention, Social shaping attention, and Retail Media capturing attention, with arrows indicating the flow.

Attention isn’t about where people are.

It’s about what they actually process.

And when you strip away the hype, the dashboards, and the self-serving vendor pitches — only one channel consistently creates real attention that moves people.

Let’s break it down.

Retail Media: Powerful… but narrow

Retail media is the new golden child.
Search. Sponsored listings. On-site display. It’s immediate. It’s conversion-friendly. It feels measurable.

But here’s the catch:

Retail media doesn’t create demand. It harvests it.

You’re talking to shoppers already in-market.
Great for ROAS.
Horrible for brand lift, memorability, or long-term growth.

You can’t capture attention that was never created in the first place.

Social: High reach, low retention

Social promises reach. Virality. UGC magic.

But let’s be real:

Your ads are stuck between a meme, a baby photo, and someone’s vacation flex.
The feed moves faster than your attribution model.

Social is incredible at:

  • Testing creative
  • Driving quick engagement
  • Reaching niche audiences

But it’s terrible at:

  • Holding attention
  • Building memory structures
  • Delivering consistent message recall

Add shrinking organic reach, rising CPMs, and an algorithm that changes weekly?
You’re building on sand.

OTT and CTV Advertising: The last real attention machine

Here’s the shift marketers still underestimate:

Screen attention is more valuable than feed attention.

OTT and CTV advertising gives you:

  • Full-screen, distraction-free placement
  • High-quality storytelling
  • Premium content environments
  • A viewer who chose what they’re watching

That’s not “impressions.”
That’s captured cognition — the thing that makes messages stick.

And unlike linear, CTV is:

  • Targetable
  • Flexible
  • Measurable
  • Optimizable

When CTV is done right — with clear reporting, direct publisher buying, and real frequency control — it beats social & retail media in the only metric that matters:

Memorability → motivation → eventual conversion.

That’s the entire game.

Why this matters for marketers right now

Budgets are tight.
Pressure is up.
CMOs are sick of inflated metrics and empty claims.

The attention economy rewards whoever understands the one reality everyone else ignores:

You don’t win attention by buying more inventory.
You win it by buying the right moments.

Retail media gives you the bottom.
Social gives you the middle.
CTV gives you the foundation.

And if your CTV partner hides behind jargon, blended metrics, or black-box reporting?

You’re not buying attention.
You’re buying air.