Most advertising platforms describe themselves as AI-powered. The claim has become so common it says almost nothing. What matters is where in the stack the AI sits, what it does there, and whether the advertiser ever sees it working, or whether it runs entirely out of sight.
For most of its recent history, PropellerAds has embedded AI in places the advertiser never directly touches. Bid optimization runs automatically in the background, adjusting in real time without requiring the advertiser to intervene. AutoCreatives generates ad creative at scale without requiring the advertiser to produce original assets. The AI is present and consequential across both functions, but it is infrastructure, invisible by design, doing its work after the advertiser has already crossed the threshold into the platform.
Agent NIKO, launched by PropellerAds on May 28, 2026, is something different. It is not a new layer of back-end optimization. It is a conversational interface that sits at the very front of the platform, handling the exchange between a new advertiser and the system before a single campaign parameter has been set. The AI moved from inside the engine to the front door.
The distinction matters because the two applications solve different problems. Back-end AI addresses performance: it optimizes bids, reduces wasted spend, and improves creative relevance after a campaign is already running. That kind of AI requires the advertiser to have already crossed the threshold: registered, configured, launched. Its value is conditional on prior access.
NIKO addresses what happens before that threshold. An advertiser opens a chat session, describes what they want to achieve, and NIKO conducts the setup: GEO selection, revenue type, bid recommendations calibrated for unfamiliar markets, real-time currency conversion, and language detection. No integrations. No configuration forms. No tokens to manage. The campaign goes live inside a single conversation, without the advertiser touching a dashboard at any point.
That makes it an architectural decision as much as a product one. PropellerAds is arguing, through NIKO’s design, that the friction preventing new advertisers from reaching the platform’s optimization layer is not the difficulty of use once inside. It is difficulty of entry. Fix the entry problem first, and the back-end AI can do the rest.
“We built NIKO AI because the biggest barrier to performance advertising isn’t budget or strategy — it’s friction. From registration to a running campaign in one conversation, in your language, in your currency — that’s the standard we set for ourselves, and we’ve delivered it,” said Juliia Larionova, Head of Marketing at PropellerAds.
PropellerAds is not alone in applying AI to the advertiser relationship at a structural level. PubMatic has built AgenticOS for autonomous campaign execution on the supply side. Across the broader industry, platforms have experimented with AI-generated creative, automated bidding, and predictive audience modeling. What remains less common is an AI agent handling the full onboarding conversation: no forms, no dashboard navigation required, no prior platform experience assumed.
At launch, NIKO supports Onclick campaigns, which PropellerAds describes as its widest-reach format. Additional formats are in development, with the roadmap shaped by post-launch feedback.
The platform reaches more than 1.5 billion users across 195 geographies, according to figures PropellerAds publishes. Multilingual support means NIKO adapts automatically to the advertiser’s language, a feature the company has specifically flagged for Asia and LATAM markets, where English-language interfaces have historically added a layer of friction beyond the platform complexity itself.
PropellerAds has described its strategic direction as moving toward true multi-source campaign management, a trajectory the company says NIKO fits within rather than departs from. NIKO is framed internally as the next milestone in that progression, not the first sign of AI investment. The back-end work came first. The visible layer came after. That sequencing is, for once, the honest account of how AI in advertising actually gets built.
For platforms still weighing whether to build AI into the onboarding experience or keep it confined to campaign optimization, NIKO offers a clear answer about where PropellerAds has placed its bet. The question of whether advertisers respond to a conversation the way they respond to a well-designed form, or respond better, will take months of activation data to resolve. The infrastructure to test it is now in place.


