
Valuation
$410.00M
2025
Funding
$22.50M
2024
Valuation
Vibe closed a $50M Series B in September 2025 led by Hedosophia at a $410M post-money valuation.
The company previously raised a $22.5M Series A in March 2024 led by Singular, following a $6.35M seed round in September 2022 led by Elaia Partners. Other notable investors include QuantumLight, Illusian, Sequoia's Scout Fund, and angel investor Carolyn Everson.
Product
Vibe is essentially Google Ads for TV advertising. Marketers open a browser, sign up with just an email and credit card, then navigate through a five-step campaign builder that mirrors familiar paid social advertising interfaces.
Users start by naming their campaign and selecting an objective like awareness, traffic, app promotion, or retargeting. They set daily or lifetime budgets starting at $50 per day and choose flight dates for their campaigns.
The targeting step offers over 50 built-in demographic, interest, and geographic categories, plus the ability to import first-party CRM lists from platforms like Klaviyo and HubSpot that Vibe matches to connected TV households using IP addresses and email data.
For creative development, users can either upload finished video content or use Vibe Studio, the platform's generative AI tool. By simply entering a business URL, the AI scrapes brand assets, selects stock footage, composes 15 or 30-second spots, and adds voice-over in approximately two minutes.
Once campaigns launch, Vibe's AI optimization layer continuously manages bidding through a proprietary real-time bidder, re-scores households using website and CRM conversion signals, and runs A/B tests at the strategy level to allocate budget to the best-performing creative and audience combinations. The platform integrates directly with over 500 streaming channels including Disney+, Roku, Paramount, CNN, and Peacock, while connecting to analytics tools like Google Analytics, Adjust, and AppsFlyer for performance tracking.
Business Model
Vibe operates as a self-serve connected TV advertising platform with a B2B go-to-market model targeting performance marketers and direct-to-consumer brands. The company monetizes through a percentage take-rate on advertising spend that flows through its platform.
The business model centers on democratizing TV advertising access by eliminating traditional barriers like high minimum spends and complex insertion orders. Where legacy demand-side platforms require $10,000-25,000 minimums and managed service relationships, Vibe enables advertisers to start campaigns with just $50 daily budgets through an automated interface.
Vibe's cost structure includes cloud infrastructure, data licensing fees to third-party providers, and the operational overhead of maintaining integrations with hundreds of streaming inventory sources. The company's AI-driven optimization reduces the need for human campaign management, creating operational leverage as the platform scales.
The platform creates a flywheel effect where more advertiser data improves targeting algorithms, which drives better campaign performance and attracts additional advertisers. The generative AI creative studio further strengthens this dynamic by reducing creative production friction and enabling businesses without existing video assets to access TV advertising.
Revenue expansion occurs primarily through increased spending from existing advertisers as they see positive returns on ad spend. The unlimited user model within customer accounts encourages broader adoption across marketing teams, while the low minimum spend threshold allows for natural budget increases as campaigns prove successful.
Competition
Performance-focused CTV specialists
MNTN represents Vibe's most direct competitor, having filed for IPO with 74% gross margins and 28% revenue growth. MNTN offers automated optimization and Creative-as-a-Subscription through QuickFrame, competing directly on ease-of-use and performance marketing positioning.
tvScientific has introduced guaranteed outcomes bidding where advertisers only pay for achieved cost-per-acquisition targets, backed by Roku and a recent $25.5M Series B. The company also powers Peacock Ad Manager, giving it significant inventory advantages.
Tatari positions itself in convergent TV by combining linear and connected TV buying in a single interface, while Simpli.fi serves 40,000 advertisers with geo-granular targeting popular among local agencies. These competitors generally require higher minimum commitments than Vibe's $50 daily threshold.
Vertically integrated inventory owners
Roku Ads Manager, Amazon DSP, and Disney/Hulu self-serve platforms compete by keeping advertising spend within their owned inventory ecosystems. These platforms bundle proprietary first-party data and offer direct access to premium content, but limit advertisers to single-platform reach.
Samsung and LG smart TV platforms are opening self-serve advertising tools that leverage device-level data for targeting. These hardware manufacturers can offer unique household-level insights but lack the cross-platform inventory breadth that independent platforms provide.
Omnichannel DSP giants
The Trade Desk and Google Ads represent the enterprise-focused competition with comprehensive programmatic buying capabilities across all digital channels. These platforms offer sophisticated identity graphs and AI-driven optimization but maintain high minimum spends and complex interfaces that exclude smaller advertisers.
Amazon DSP combines e-commerce data with streaming inventory access, creating powerful attribution capabilities for retail advertisers. However, the platform requires significant technical expertise and minimum commitments that put it out of reach for many direct-to-consumer brands that Vibe targets.
TAM Expansion
New products
The AI creative studio represents Vibe's clearest path to expand beyond pure advertising spend take-rates into software-as-a-service revenue. The generative AI pipeline that creates video advertisements from business URLs can be white-labeled to agencies and larger advertisers as a standalone creative tool.
Agentic AI campaign management offers another software expansion opportunity where autonomous agents handle bid strategy, budget pacing, and performance reporting. This capability could be packaged as premium add-on licensing similar to Meta's Advantage+ suite, increasing average revenue per user.
The Integration Marketplace launched in May 2025 creates a third revenue stream through paid connectors for identity resolution, incrementality measurement, and data warehousing tools. Each integration expands Vibe's role from advertising platform to marketing infrastructure hub.
Publisher yield management tools represent a move toward supply-side platform capabilities, allowing Vibe to capture take-rates from both advertisers and content publishers. This two-sided marketplace model could significantly expand total addressable market by monetizing inventory optimization.
Customer base expansion
Vibe's 10,000 current advertisers represent a small fraction of the hundreds of thousands of small and medium businesses that spend under $50,000 annually on Meta and Google advertising. The platform's self-serve model and low minimums position it to capture budget from Instagram and Facebook advertisers looking to diversify into TV.
Enterprise and consumer packaged goods brands represent significant upmarket expansion as cookie deprecation shifts budgets toward connected TV. These larger advertisers typically have substantial first-party data assets that align well with Vibe's targeting capabilities and incrementality measurement tools.
The Shopify integration that serves over one million merchants creates a natural expansion path into e-commerce advertising. Extending similar integrations to BigCommerce, WooCommerce, and Amazon Buy With Prime could convert millions of online retailers into TV advertisers.
Geographic expansion
Vibe's dual headquarters in Paris and New York positions the company for European expansion where connected TV adoption is accelerating. The European market offers less competition from established players and growing advertiser demand for cookieless targeting solutions.
Latin American markets present opportunities for geographic expansion as streaming adoption increases and local advertising budgets shift from traditional TV to connected platforms. The company's self-serve model could scale efficiently across multiple countries without requiring local sales teams.
Asia-Pacific expansion represents the largest long-term geographic opportunity, particularly in markets like Australia and Southeast Asia where English-language advertising tools can gain adoption. However, this expansion would require significant localization and compliance investments.
Risks
Inventory concentration: Vibe's business depends on maintaining access to premium streaming inventory from major platforms like Disney+, Roku, and Paramount. If these content owners decide to exclusively sell their advertising inventory through their own self-serve platforms or restrict access to independent demand-side platforms, Vibe could lose its core value proposition of cross-platform reach and be forced to compete primarily on price with lower-quality inventory.
AI creative limitations: The generative AI creative studio that produces 10% of platform advertisements and drives significant customer acquisition faces potential quality and brand safety issues as it scales. If AI-generated advertisements perform poorly compared to professionally produced creative or create brand safety incidents for major advertisers, it could damage Vibe's reputation and force the company to invest heavily in human creative review processes that would hurt margins.
Platform competition: Large technology companies like Google, Amazon, and Meta have significantly more resources to invest in connected TV advertising capabilities and could rapidly build competing self-serve platforms with lower take-rates. These companies can subsidize TV advertising tools with profits from other business lines and offer integrated attribution across all digital channels, potentially making independent platforms like Vibe obsolete for performance marketers.
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