Horizon Media, the largest independent advertising agency in the US, launched an agentic buying layer called HorizonOS Blu on Thursday 18 June, the same day WPP convened its standard.1 Blu's agents place and adjust media buys across channels in real time, and its named partners span Disney, Fox, NBCUniversal, TikTok, Snap, iHeartMedia, Clear Channel and OUTFRONT.
Horizon sits on the buy-side, buying media space for brands, and Blu hands that placement to software that negotiates across channels in real time. Blu runs on the same Model Context Protocol that underpins the WPP initiative, the open agent-to-agent standard, so a second major buyer committed to it within hours of the launch. Horizon manages a media-spend book matching WPP's, and together the two agencies now point roughly $17bn of annual media spend at agentic buying.
That combined weight means the cost of staying off the standard rises for every holdout. The buy-side agents are built to meet the sell-side WBD rebuilt on Amazon Web Services, the agentic ad products it first showed at its May upfront . Horizon's product chief Domenic Venuto said agentic buying would soon be the new standard.2 One launch reads as a press release. Two independent agencies shipping buy-side agents on one protocol in a single day reads as the start of a trend. Neither WPP nor Horizon has yet run a year of live campaigns through these agents.
