Capture the Moment
Paul Wright spent three years building Uber Advertising in the UK, Ireland, and then across EMEA and APAC, helping take the business from launch to a $2 billion annual run rate. His case for contextual advertising is grounded in 35 years across Sky, Apple iAd, Amazon, and Uber: the moment of intent is more powerful than any amount of audience data, and simpler too.
“60% of people on Uber Eats open the app without knowing what they want. With us, we know the intent is real.”
Paul Wright is a Board Advisor and Strategic Consultant, having served as Head of EMEA at Uber Advertising from June 2025 to February 2026, building on three years at Uber that began with the founding of the UK and Ireland advertising business in December 2022. He was part of the team that took Uber Advertising from a sponsored listings product to a $2 billion annual run rate across 30-plus markets.
Paul joined Sky in 1988, a year before launch, and spent seven years on the ad sales team. He then co-founded Aura Sports, a digital sports advertising network that grew to a portfolio of 92 UK football clubs and was sold to Sky in 2006. After stints at Sports.com and Sky Digital Media, he became Chief Digital Officer at OMD UK and then Omnicom Media Group UK, joined Apple in 2013 to run iAd across EMEIA and APAC, was CEO of iotec Global, joined Amazon through its acquisition of Sizmek, before moving to Farfetch and then Uber.
Paul has been made redundant three times and describes each as a redirector. The pattern of his career: operator at Sky before Sky was Sky, startup founder twice, holding company CDO, platform leader at Apple and Amazon, and commerce media builder at Uber. The common thread is contextual and moment-based advertising: right place, right time, right person, simple signal.
“Everyone talks about innovation. But innovation is something people would like to do, not something they have to do.”
“If you are going to Wembley and Taylor Swift is playing, we know you are a Taylor Swift fan. One data point is enough.”
Paul’s critique of the industry’s data obsession is not that data is wrong but that complexity has been confused with precision. Uber’s model operates on a handful of high-quality contextual signals: destination, time, whether someone is looking for food. Those signals tell you more about what a person wants in the next fifteen minutes than any retargeting stack built on their last ninety days of browsing. The iAd experience at Apple produced the same insight a decade earlier. The platforms that win at moment marketing are the ones that resist the temptation to add more data.
“We do not want ads to interrupt the user experience. We want them to fit within it.”
Uber Advertising’s product philosophy is that an ad that enhances a user’s decision in a moment they are already in is not an ad in the traditional sense. When 60% of Uber Eats users arrive not knowing what they want to eat, a well-placed sponsored listing is a recommendation service as much as it is an ad unit. Paul believes the advertising products that succeed in the next decade will be the ones built on this additive principle rather than the interruptive one.
“You are presenting advertisers with formats they have never seen. That takes a certain style of person.”
Uber Advertising launched into a market that had no established buying behaviour for its formats. The salespeople it needed were not the ones who knew the product from a rate card. They were the ones who could go into a room, understand what the advertiser was trying to achieve, and construct a proposal around a format that had no analogue in any other platform. The 25 people Paul hired in the first 12 months in the UK, 54% female and representing 10 nationalities, reflected that approach.
Stay close to the conversation.
New leaders and insights. No noise.