Waterfalling is a method of selling advertising inventory in digital advertising that uses a sequential process for bidding and selling ad space. In this method, ad requests are sent by publishers to multiple ad networks or Demand-Side Platforms (DSPs) in a specific order, starting with the highest-paying network.
A publisher puts their ad inventory up for sale.
Suppose a publisher has an ad banner for sale. They first offer it to Network A at $5 CPM (cost per thousand impressions). If Network A is not interested, the offer moves to Network B, which is willing to pay $4 CPM, and so on until a buyer is found or the inventory is sold at the minimum acceptable price.
Waterfalling was popular in the early stages of programmatic advertising but is now often replaced by more efficient methods, such as Header Bidding, which allows all networks to submit bids for the inventory simultaneously, increasing competition and potential revenue for publishers.