You’ve determined how you’ll find your audience and developed creative assets for various digital channels. Now how can you identify and track your audience to determine who sees your ad, if they convert and – at the risk of losing them after one exposure –where they go next? Cookies are the digital breadcrumb that make all this possible.
So what is a cookie? A cookie is essentially a text file tied to the user’s device that is passed back to their browser upon loading a website. Here’s how it works:
Cookies have enabled the publisher and advertiser to track these conversions to attribute them to ads, as well as record the number of times someone has seen an ad. Other cookies may be placed by ad tech vendors across multiple websites, allowing that 3rd party to track and aggregate behavior data that can be sold for advertising, as we discussed in our blog post about targeting.
In the past, users were given no warning, explanation, or opportunity to “consent” to this process. Then last year, Google announced it would phase out 3rd-party cookies on its Chrome browser and, similarly, Apple announced users must give permission for IDFA tagging, which works like cookies but on iOS in-app browsing.
Policy changes show the pendulum has swung in favor of consumer privacy. The California Consumer Privacy Act (or CCPA) ensures that consumers have the right to opt out of data collection, to have the data collected about them disclosed, and the right to have their data deleted. That’s why you’ve noticed websites serving you popups that fully disclosing the use of cookies, providing a privacy policy that elaborates on how they are used, and making sure that users have opted in before collecting data. In this blog post we covered why publishers and app developers are less than enthusiastic about these changes.
But not all cookies are going away. First-party cookies – which advertisers and publishers collect directly from their customers or site visitors – will stay. They will continue to track on-site behavior including language preferences, what’s in your shopping cart, what pages you visited on the site.
So what is the future of digital advertising in a post-cookie and post-IDFA world? For starters, contextual targeting – which doesn’t bring the same data privacy or tracking concerns – is now more attractive. Programmatic, on the other hand, is up in the air.
Third party audiences built on cookie-based aggregated web behavior will lose tremendous scale or disappear. Programmatic targeting of other list-based audiences will be difficult until a new solution is in place for identity matching – linking customer profiles across devices, publishers, advertisers, and data sources – to be able serve ads to specific users. The top digital data and advertising companies are working together on new privacy-compliant solutions that will solve for both the issues of targeting and cross-channel conversion tracking that were previously facilitated by cookies.
In the meantime, there are immediate steps that our clients and potential clients can take to future-proof themselves.
If you would like to learn more about how Rhea + Kaiser can help prepare your brand for a world with fewer cookies, including reviewing your brand destinations for compliance, contact our Business Development Director.