This Week in Canadian Marketing – September 13, 2025: Netflix’s Ad Buy Breakthrough, Cross-Platform Video Planning, and SocialEast Heads for a Sellout

Welcome back to your weekly roundup of the biggest stories shaping Canadian marketing, business, and media. This week, we’re looking at global tech partnerships with Canadian implications, new measurement tools for smarter media buying, a marquee event nearing capacity, and a notable West Coast agency evolution.

1. Netflix Inventory Now Available Through Amazon DSP in Canada

In a landmark move for programmatic video buying, Amazon Ads and Netflix have announced a global partnership giving Canadian advertisers access to Netflix’s premium ad inventory through Amazon DSP, starting Q4 2025.

This means marketers in Canada can now include Netflix in their multi-platform strategies alongside Amazon properties, using unified insights and planning tools. The partnership reflects the increasing demand for converged TV buying, enabling brand-safe, high-reach campaigns across CTV and digital.

With Canada named among just 10 global markets included at launch, this is a major shift in how top-tier video inventory is accessed, and a strategic opportunity for media planners aiming to connect with highly engaged streaming audiences.

2. NLogic & Magnite Launch Canada’s First Cross-Platform Video Marketplace

NLogic, a Numeris subsidiary, has partnered with Magnite to launch Canada’s first curated video marketplace inside its Video Planner tool. Built on the VAM (Video Audience Measurement) dataset, the marketplace merges linear and digital video audiences in one planning dashboard.

Magnite becomes the first SSP partner, allowing advertisers to plan across CTV, live linear, and digital with verified, VAM-tracked data. This simplifies buying and increases transparency across fragmented video environments.

For agencies, broadcasters, and buyers in Canada, it’s a game-changing step toward unified video strategy — long a pain point in the shift from broadcast to streaming.

3. SocialEast Is Almost Sold Out — Less than 25 Tickets Remaining

SocialEast returns to Halifax September 25–26, and fewer than 25 tickets remain for what’s set to be the region’s biggest marketing event of the year. The two-day conference features 15+ tactical sessions, a powerhouse speaker lineup, and unforgettable networking with marketers from across Atlantic Canada.

This year’s headliner: Arlene Dickinson, one of Canada’s most influential entrepreneurs and marketers, takes the mainstage to talk brand resilience, evolving consumer expectations, and the intersection of purpose and profitability. Her keynote alone is worth the trip.

From AI and analytics to content strategy and campaign execution, SocialEast delivers practical insight in a tight, energizing format — all within a walkable, waterfront setting. If you’ve been waiting to book, now’s the time: this will be a full house.

Tickets at: socialeast.ca

4. ICA Names Paul Tedesco Canada’s First Head of Marketing Effectiveness

The Institute of Canadian Agencies (ICA) has appointed Paul Tedesco as its inaugural Head of Effectiveness, a new leadership role focused on helping agencies and brands improve how they measure and deliver marketing outcomes.

Tedesco, formerly of TrackDDB and Proximity, will lead the ICA’s Marketing Effectiveness Council and co-author the upcoming Alchemy of Effectiveness report, while supporting the expansion of the Effie Canada Awards.

As marketers continue to chase performance and accountability, this move underscores the growing priority of outcomes over outputs in Canada’s marketing community.

5. Vancouver’s Wasserman Rebrands as 9Letters, Marking Strategic Overhaul

After 30 years, Vancouver’s largest independent ad agency, Wasserman, has rebranded as 9Letters, marking a deeper shift in strategy, talent, and client offerings.

The new name draws inspiration from optometry eye charts (a metaphor for clarity and focus) and reflects the agency’s push toward sharper data insights, audience strategy, and creative built to earn attention, not just interrupt it.

New leadership hires, including Creative Director Neil Shapiro (ex-DDB) and Strategist Laura McRae (Levi’s, Westfield), further signal the agency’s evolution into a national contender in integrated, insight-first marketing.


With a near sellout in Halifax, a streaming ad shake-up, and Canada’s first cross-platform video planner, this week’s headlines show an industry in motion: smarter, sharper, and increasingly measured by impact.

Got a campaign or trend we should cover? Send tips to news@socialnext.ca.

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