Data & Signals March 2026 · 5 min read

Temporal Targeting: Why Time of Day Is Worth More Than You Think

Time-based temporal targeting signals for programmatic advertising dayparting and publisher yield

The value of a programmatic impression isn't fixed. It fluctuates based on when it serves. Advertisers have always known this — it's why TV primetime costs more than 3am. Programmatic publishers who pass rich temporal signals are finally capturing the same dynamic.

Why Time Matters in the Bid Stream

Every advertiser has a target audience. That audience has patterns — when they're most receptive to messages, when they're most likely to convert, when they're in the mindset to engage. A coffee brand values morning impressions differently than evening ones. A streaming service values Sunday evening differently than Monday morning. A financial product values end-of-month traffic differently than mid-month.

These temporal preferences are real, they're measurable, and they drive meaningful CPM variation — but only for publishers who communicate the time context accurately in their bid requests.

+22%
Average CPM on impressions served during peak daypart windows vs. off-peak, for publishers passing hour-of-day signals

The Temporal Signals That Matter

Temporal enrichment covers several dimensions:

Who Benefits From Temporal Signals

Daypart targeting is used by: QSR brands targeting lunch and dinner windows, financial services targeting paycheck timing, retail targeting weekend shopping intent, entertainment targeting evening leisure periods, and B2B advertisers targeting business hours. These advertisers are spending significant budgets on dayparted campaigns — and they can only reach impressions where the publisher communicates temporal context.

Metrux passes full temporal context in every enriched bid request — hour, day of week, seasonality signals, and session recency. Publishers typically see a 15–25% improvement in peak-hour CPMs within 30 days of activation, as daypart campaigns begin accessing their inventory for the first time.

The Session Depth Signal

Beyond clock time, session depth is an underappreciated temporal signal. A user on their fourth page visit in a session is in a different engagement state than a first-page visitor. Deep session engagement correlates with higher purchase intent for certain categories. Publishers who pass session depth signals open access to retargeting-adjacent campaigns that don't require cross-site cookies to identify high-intent users.

Ready to enrich your bid stream?

Metrux delivers 20–40% yield improvement through signal enrichment — no dev work, no tag tax, no risk.

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