Korea's OOH faces structural shift as Kakao Mobility links 40,000 screens to major media reps
Kakao Mobility, a memeber of World Out of Home Organization, has taken a significant step toward reshaping Korea’s out-of-home advertising market, announcing on 17 November that it has signed partnership agreements with KT Nasmedia, CJ Mezzomedia and Incross to enable real-time programmatic integration for digital outdoor screens. For an industry long dependent on fragmented operators and manual scheduling, the move signals one of the most comprehensive attempts yet to create a unified, data-driven DOOH ecosystem.
The partnerships go far beyond simple media sales cooperation. Kakao Mobility and the three media reps plan to jointly develop OOH products, connect their advertising platforms for automated bidding, and pursue integrated planning packages that combine mobility-based data with large-format screens across the country. The company’s ambition is clear: establish a system in which buying a billboard follows the same programmatic logic as buying a mobile display impression.
Central to this strategy is Kakao Mobility’s next-generation CMS, a platform already managing about 40,000 screens nationwide in real time. Built from the outset with programmatic linkage in mind, the CMS standardises a wide spectrum of media assets—from small indoor signage to large-scale digital billboards—and connects them to ad-tech platforms in a unified format. This allows advertisers to manage delivery, data collection and performance analysis as a single automated workflow rather than the conventional multi-vendor manual process.
Industry officials note that the integration is more than a technical upgrade. Historically, Korea’s OOH market has been characterised by decentralised ownership structures and inconsistent operational standards, making it difficult for advertisers to scale campaigns efficiently. By synchronising disparate media owners under one CMS and linking it directly with the systems of Korea’s three major media reps, Kakao Mobility is effectively establishing a practical framework for market-wide standardisation.
For advertisers, the shift opens the door to extending digital-first strategies into physical city environments. Media reps will now be able to expand campaign execution into offline spaces with greater precision, tapping mobility, location and behavioural data that mirror the capabilities of online platforms. This aligns with the global trend in which DOOH increasingly functions as a measurable, addressable channel within omnichannel buys.
Kakao Mobility sees the agreements as a turning point that will accelerate the industry’s transition to real-time ad trading and data-verified planning. The company says it will expand collaborations with domestic and international ad-tech networks to strengthen Korea’s position in the global programmatic DOOH landscape. According to Kakao Mobility advertising division manager Kye Kyung-hyun, the partnership is expected to set “a technological inflection point for the country’s outdoor advertising sector,” establishing a foundation for broader platform-to-platform integration.
The company’s recent recognition by the Korean Academy of Advertising underscores this momentum. On 24 October, Kakao Mobility received the Digital Innovation Award in the 2025 Brand of the Year honours, cited for its nationwide mobility data, advanced CMS capabilities, and contributions to improving the competitiveness of Korea’s advertising industry. Judges also praised the firm for introducing accessible packages for small advertisers and enabling data-based, cost-efficient OOH solutions.
With the new agreements now in place, industry observers expect Korea’s DOOH market to enter a period of rapid structural change. As advertisers seek omnichannel consistency and measurable impact, the integration of platforms such as Kakao Mobility’s CMS with the country’s leading media reps may mark the beginning of a more unified, scalable and digitally mature OOH landscape.