To block competitor ads on your bar’s TVs, install Taiv on your screens. During the live broadcast’s commercial breaks, Taiv shows your venue’s own promotions instead of the rival brand and irrelevant ads that would otherwise air. You decide what plays during every break, and Taiv is free for venues.
Why are competitor ads playing on my bar’s TVs?
Because the commercial breaks in a live broadcast are sold by the network, not by you. The game draws the crowd, but every break hands your screens to whoever bought that airtime: a rival beer brand, a national chain down the street, a delivery app that pulls customers out the door. Your TVs spend a real share of the night advertising for businesses you compete with, and you earn nothing from it.
That is the moment to take back. The crowd is already watching the screen. The break is the one window where you control the most attention in the room and use it on someone else’s message.
How does Taiv block competitor ads during the game?
Taiv runs on your existing TVs. When the live broadcast cuts to a commercial break, Taiv shows your own promotions on those screens instead. The game stays live, the room keeps watching, and the break that used to sell a rival brand now sells your happy hour, your kitchen special, or your event next Friday.
Taiv shows ads during commercial breaks. That includes your venue’s promotions and relevant brand campaigns you earn a share of, not the off-brand spots a competitor placed. You set what runs. When the game comes back, your TVs return to the broadcast.
What can I run during the breaks instead?
Anything that moves money across your bar. The break is prime real estate, so use it on the offers that change what your guests order next.
- Drink and food specials timed to the daypart
- Upcoming events, trivia nights, live music, and watch parties
- Loyalty signups, reservations, and your own app or website
- Slow-mover pushes to clear inventory during quiet stretches
Promotion on your screens drives real behavior. Venues running their own promotions through Taiv see a 10 to 30% sales lift on the items they promote. The crowd sits with you for an average of 82 minutes per visit, so a promotion that runs across a few breaks reaches the same guests more than once in a sitting.
Does taking control of the breaks cost me anything?
No. Taiv is free for venues. You earn a share of revenue from the relevant brand campaigns that run on your screens, and venues average $1,000 to $2,000 in annual revenue from that share. The revenue share is 15%.
So the same break that used to advertise a competitor for free now does two jobs: it runs your promotions, and it pays you for the relevant ads it does carry. The economics flip from a cost you absorb to a line you collect.
Will controlling the TVs change the room?
Yes, in the direction you want. Screens that show your specials and your events keep guests engaged with your bar instead of a brand that wants them somewhere else. Digital signage on those screens also cuts perceived wait times by up to 35%, so the room feels faster during a rush even when the kitchen is slammed.
The product holds up because operators keep it. Taiv has a 99% monthly renewal rate. Bars that take control of their breaks do not go back to handing the screens away.
How do I get started?
Sign up, and Taiv goes on your existing TVs. From there you decide what plays during every break: your promotions, your events, your offers. The game runs as it always has, and the commercial breaks finally work for your bar instead of your competition.
See what Taiv does for your screens at Taiv for venues, or get started and take control of your breaks.
Two sides of the same screen.
Venues take control of their TVs, run their own promos, and earn from every break. Brands reach real crowds during the games that matter. Whichever side you are on, Taiv is how the screen pays off.