WPP Media, the media arm of advertising group WPP, unveiled a video Buyer Agent inside its WPP Open platform on Thursday 18 June at Cannes Lions, the advertising industry's flagship festival in southern France.1 Alongside it the agency convened an Agentic Standards Initiative, a shared effort to agree common rules for buyer and seller AI agents, with six of the largest US rights holders.
WPP buys advertising on behalf of brands, the buy-side, and a Buyer Agent is software that places and adjusts those buys automatically. The initiative runs on the Model Context Protocol (MCP), an open standard that lets a buyer's agent and a seller's agent exchange data and instructions without a bespoke integration for every pairing. The named partners are Disney, Netflix, Fox, NBCUniversal, Paramount and Comcast Advertising's FreeWheel, working with the standards bodies IAB Tech Lab and Prebid. WPP routes more than $8.5bn of media spending through this system.
WBD rebuilt the sell-side on Amazon Web Services; WPP is now wiring the buy-side to meet it on the same protocol . The two halves connect only if the standard holds, and six rivals agreeing an interoperability spec at a press conference is easier than shipping one. The same fortnight that Meta put a price on AI access to its own platforms , the agencies moved agentic buying to the centre of theirs. The EU's Code of Practice on marking AI-generated content applies from 2 August, yet it still carries no media or broadcaster signatory, so the buying standard is arriving ahead of the disclosure rules.2
