

Yes, Hulu advertising is available for small businesses — and it's a legitimate option. But the more useful question for any small business considering streaming TV is whether to put your budget on one platform or spread it across the full streaming ecosystem. The answer affects how many households you reach, how often they see your ad, and what you can actually measure.
Hulu advertising runs through Disney Ad Manager, Disney's self-serve platform. Small businesses can target by demographics, interests, geography, and content genre, and run 15- or 30-second non-skippable video ads across Hulu's ~51 million paid subscribers. Campaigns are self-managed — no agency required. For rates, minimums, and format specs, check Disney Ad Manager directly at disneyadsales.com.
There are two fundamentally different ways to buy streaming TV ads as a small business.
Single-platform buying means purchasing inventory directly from one streaming service. Your ads reach that service's subscribers — a defined, often large audience — and you manage the buy through that platform's own interface.
Multi-channel buying means running a single campaign that reaches audiences across hundreds of streaming channels simultaneously — from one dashboard, under one budget, with unified reporting. You are not buying from one service; you are buying across the ecosystem.
The difference matters most when you think about budget efficiency. A fixed daily spend on a single platform is capped by that platform's audience and the frequency at which that audience can reasonably see your ad. The same daily spend distributed across the CTV ecosystem means broader reach, lower per-household frequency, and more touchpoints with your target audience across the services they actually watch.
For small businesses with limited budgets, multi-channel buying often delivers more total reach from the same dollar amount — because your ad follows your audience across the services they use, rather than concentrating impressions on one.
Self-serve streaming TV platforms like Vibe start at $50/day with no long-term commitment. At that budget, you can:
At $50/day you are not running a national brand campaign. But you are running a real, targeted streaming TV campaign that reaches the right households in the right geography — and measuring results through the same attribution tools you use for social and search.
Vibe is a self-serve streaming TV platform built for performance-focused small and medium businesses. Starting at $50/day, you reach audiences across 500+ streaming channels from a single dashboard — with no agency, no annual contract, and results measured through your existing attribution stack.
What makes it work for small businesses:
Small businesses that have seen results with Vibe:
Vibe is rated 4.8/5 on G2 across 113 reviews — the highest-rated platform in the G2 Video Advertising category. Named a G2 Leader, Summer 2026. See the full awards list.
Yes. Hulu advertising is available for small businesses through Disney Ad Manager. You can set your own budget, choose your audience, upload a 15- or 30-second video ad, and launch without a media agency or annual contract. Check Disney Ad Manager directly for current rates and minimum spend requirements.
Hulu runs 15- and 30-second video ads in non-skippable pre-roll and mid-roll placements. Ads must be submitted as MP4 files at a minimum of 1080p resolution. Disney Ad Manager provides format specifications when you create a campaign.
A platform-direct buy puts your ads in front of one service's subscribers. A self-serve CTV platform runs your campaign across hundreds of streaming channels simultaneously — the same budget, broader reach, and unified reporting. For small businesses with limited daily budgets, multi-channel buying typically delivers more total reach because impressions are distributed across the services your target audience actually watches.
Yes. Self-serve streaming TV platforms like Vibe start at $50/day with no long-term commitment. That budget supports geo-targeted, retargeting, and lookalike campaigns running across 500+ streaming channels.
Self-serve CTV platforms like Vibe integrate directly with multi-touch attribution tools — Northbeam, Triple Whale, and others — so streaming TV impressions are credited in the same reporting stack as your social and search spend. Platform-direct buys typically report within their own dashboards and may require additional work to integrate with your broader attribution model.
A 15- or 30-second video ad (1080p MP4), a defined target audience, and a budget. Most self-serve platforms can launch a campaign within 24 hours of ad approval. If you don't have a video ad yet, some platforms offer creative services to help produce one.


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