5 Things Marketers Need to Know About Addressable Marketing
Signal loss is expanding across the advertising landscape, limiting the effectiveness of traditional approaches to understanding and targeting your audience.
Download our Advertiser Action Plan for practical strategies to help you transition to a cookieless world.
How well do you really know your customer?
You might be finding it increasingly difficult to answer that question this year in the face of the crumbling cookie and new consumer privacy legislation.
Here are five key things you need to know to identify and mitigate these addressability issues and maximize your marketing reach, engagement, and impact.
1. Don’t just replace the cookie – adopt a whole menu
Google has officially deprecated 1% of third-party cookies in Chrome. Yet some 50% of the internet was already cookieless – from CTV to smart home devices to walled gardens.
Cookies simply weren’t designed for the many ways that consumers engage with brands today. Compensating for them with a single approach encourages data fragmentation and inefficient budget spend.
Don’t just settle for a quick fix. Replace a cookie-based approach with a flexible data collaboration platform that opens up a broad menu of addressability options across applications, platforms, and partnerships – it’ll pay off today and tomorrow.
2. Think of hashed emails (HEMs) as just one tool in your pseudonymous identifier toolbox
HEMs are a cost-effective and easy-to-implement approach to targeting, making them a popular replacement to cookies for many marketers. While HEMs have their benefits, remember that your customers are so much more than a single identifier. A solely HEMs-based targeting strategy accounts for only that: their email.
Customers interact with your brand across many touchpoints – from mobile to CTV to direct mail – and HEMs capture one aspect of that behavior. A true pseudonymous identifier is authenticated, people-based, and comprehensive – spanning not only different consumer touchpoints, but different channels such as programmatic, CTV, and social media.
Consider HEMs as just one useful tool in your targeting toolbox to ensure optimum match rates, reach, and campaign performance.
3. Remember that mobile ad identifiers (MAIDs) are only a fraction of your customer picture
If tracking by browser and email have their limitations, what about by device? Mobile ad identifiers (MAIDs) such as Apple’s Identifier for Advertising (IDFA) and Google’s Google Advertising ID for Android (AAID) issue a random identifier for each mobile device that helps you understand user behavior without revealing PII – in theory.
The problem is, MAIDs don’t offer customers transparency or choice. They can either opt in to the tracking of all device behavior or opt out altogether. Consider the various interactions you make on your mobile device each day – you likely have different privacy preferences for different experiences. Perhaps that’s why Apple’s IDFA consent rate sits at only 25% in 2023, leaving three-quarters of your audience behavior in the dark.
Shine a light on your customers’ mobile interactions and build stronger relationships with them by using a privacy-first, people-based approach to creating addressable audiences across channels at scale. See how phone service provider TextNow improved in-app monetization using LiveRamp’s Authenticated Traffic Solution.
4. Plan your advertising strategy for a privacy-first future
The year 2024 started off with new consumer privacy legislation passed in Utah, with similar regulations from Washington, Oregon, Texas, Florida, and Montana hot on its heels. In the face of rapidly evolving state legislation – and a comprehensive US federal consumer privacy law unlikely – playing privacy catch-up state by state is just plain unsustainable.
Protect yourself against data privacy landscape changes by developing your own privacy best practices. Form a strong relationship with your privacy team, build consumer trust through transparency and ethical use of data (such as adopting a people-based identity solution designed for evolving regulations), and audit your data and processes regularly. This ensures you control your future while respecting the privacy all customers deserve.
5. Strengthen your first-party relationship with customers
As a marketer, you know the voice of the customer reigns supreme. With the internet becoming more consent-based, that voice is evolving. Your customer is increasingly in control of their digital identity, and with that power they’re choosing to share information with brands they trust in exchange for personalized, high-value experiences.
Make the choice easy for them by enabling a trustworthy path to sharing first-party data via authentication. Voluntary authentication strategies such as direct registration and social log-ins empower customers with control over their experience and help build powerful brand affinity.
Cookies, HEMs, and MAIDs alone won’t cut it anymore. Trusted, first-party data – and the customer relationships they represent – are the strongest way to drive not only optimum campaign performance, but lasting brand and business value.
Advertiser Action Plan: How to Navigate the Post-Cookie Era
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