online fingerprint

What will agencies do without cookies?

Privacy initiatives are spurring innovation in data usage

For more than 20 years, digital data has been based on and around user cookies. Cookie-based solutions have evolved into a plethora of functions for media agencies, determining what creative message a user sees, tracking how many users bought which widgets, and even enabling messaging to customers down to people in a specific zip code or postcode who browsed a specific pink sweater on a specific partner site on any given weekend in May.

With the usefulness of cookies and the services they enable inhibited by initiatives like General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), how will agencies and advertisers achieve similar outcomes and drive results for their campaigns? Instead of reducing effectiveness, these new constraints are actually spurring innovation based in using data in new – and even some old ways – at higher granularities.

At Essence, I’m part of a cross practice team that has been focused on how regulation will impact advertisers’ ability to run high performance digital campaigns. Our team brings together people from across our Data Strategy, Analytics, Activation and Ad Operations practices. To address this challenge from a variety of angles, it is embracing an approach that moves from a single solution, used across all channel partners, to multiple point solutions that allow us to measure campaign success within individual environments.

So how do we measure campaign results, manage frequency and deliver reporting in a world without cookies? In analytics reporting, for example, we can tap into solutions within walled gardens that open up queryable data within those platforms’ ‘clean rooms’ in order to glean campaign insights. For measurement, we can split panel surveys across channels with vendors like Survata, Dynata and Nielsen. We’ve purposefully redesigned our custom survey solution, Scrutineer, to fill gaps like in-app inventory via the adserver’s native capabilities.

Frequency capping, which had been done using IDs previously available in data transfer logs, can be performed in the platforms themselves. Even Dynamic Creative, a favourite solution deployed as a remarketing tool for lower funnel activity, can be repurposed into a contextual solution that still achieves similar functionality and outcomes.

There is still much work to do as new regulation – like the CCPA – becomes a reality, and a need to keep a close eye on variables like cost, bias, and reach. Meanwhile, multi-point approaches like the ones we are pioneering at Essence, are allowing advertisers and their agencies to continue innovating around the measurement of brand and performance campaigns.

Read more from Essence

Eric Kirtcheff

Senior Vice President, Global Ad Operations, Essence

published on

06 February 2020

Category

Technology & data Communications

Related Topics

Data privacy Industry insight

More in Technology & data

3D generated soap bottles in the a bathroom

WPP puts itself at the heart of collaborative 3D worlds

Pixar's 3D animation file format – USD – is the invisible building block of our digital 3D future.

Sound wave graphic with a pink to turquoise gradient

A clarion call for AI, accessibility & advertising

Innovating at the intersection of AI, accessibility, and advertising

Blue Glowing Neon Network Motion Blurred on Black Background

AI and health: a delicate balance

Healthcare marketing is in a category of its own and there’s a delicate balance to be struck between AI and human connection