As anticipated, third-party targeting cookies are finally going away with Google's Chrome ending support for third-party cookies.
Advertisers balanced pros and cons of cookie usage through ad networks, ad exchanges, demand side platforms, and other programmatic channels, a as the digital advertising ecosystem has evolved.
The use of third-party cookies was a ways of separating or distinguishing the user from the media - using a pixel to find them again across the internet.
Cookies as a mechanism enabled the ability to cherrypick an audience from a broad array of media, but lost the relevance of where you reach that audience, which is very important.
The deprecation of third-party cookies brings a shift back to publishers, connecting audiences to content. This approach will not only assuage privacy concerns, but also strengthen user experience as consumers engage with advertising and content.
Before we get into how to plan for advertising in a cookieless world, let’s take a brief look back at how and why the cookie came to be.
Third-party data held promise for digital advertisers because it enabled them to learn about their web visitors' overall online behaviors beyond what they could gauge with first-party data: from other websites they frequent to what they’ve bought to their interests.
With this detailed data, you can build robust visitor profiles and create a retargeting list that can be used to send ads to both past visitors or people with similar web profiles.
The original use case for the cookie was retargeting, quickly followed on by frequency capping. This digital marketing approach did not offer a lot of scale or efficiency until the exchanges and real-time bidding (RTB). After that, behavioral targeting, or third-party cookie-based targeting, was a favorite with advertisers because it was easy and fast, requiring less planning time.
As privacy concerns grew, legislation like the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), which requires user consent to track website visitors with cookies, came into effect. More laws and initiatives have come into play since then to usher in a new age of “privacy-first” advertising meant to give individuals more control over consumer data collection and its use. In early 2020, Google announced its plans to retire third-party cookies from its Chrome browser as a response to global consumer privacy concerns.
But just before Google put its take in the ground on consumer privacy, Firefox had also decided to block third-party cookies by default. Safari followed soon after the Google announcement. With Firefox and Safari web browsers making these data privacy updates, roughly 40% of US web traffic comes from people who already block third-party cookies.
Then, Apple started making considerable privacy upgrades to its iOS. Apple essentially now allows users to view and opt in to or out of every single app tracking or collecting data. Users can see how often these apps are collecting their data as well as how much data is being shared with third parties for tracking purposes. This limits what marketers can learn about their customers, and how they collect, store, and use data of all types to engage with them.
Data privacy concerns aside, third-party cookies became both an inefficient and ineffective method for targeting users and measuring performance. As smartphones, tablets, and other connected devices were developed, more consumers used them interchangeably. Third-party cookies are unable to track users across devices, or even between apps, resulting in an incomplete picture of the customer journey that often means advertising budgets get wasted on users who have already converted. It also results in consumer annoyance, as a user might make a purchase on their mobile device, and a third-party cookie was unable to detect, leading to obnoxious retargeting on that user’s computer or tablet.
Heavy reliance on third-party cookies as a marketing strategy left many digital advertisers scrambling to find replacement solutions. While third-party cookie deprecation is good for consumer data privacy, brands, media agencies, and some ad tech platforms could be heavily impacted as the last place for cookie usage goes away.
Publishers, too, will face challenges. McKinsey & Company analysis suggests that publishers will have to replace up to $10 billion in ad revenue after third-party cookies phase out. Non-premium publishers may see most effects, because they are selling the most inventory within exchanges.
While the path to the cookieless future will include some bumps along the way, this new era does stand to benefit both the buy and sell sides.
Cookieless targeting creates an opportunity to reshape advertising, ultimately strengthening the value exchange between publishers, advertisers, and consumers as the ecosystem shifts.
Cookieless targeting is synonymous with contextual targeting, and while we like to talk about in the context (pun intended) of the post-third-party cookie future, it’s actually been around for more than a decade.
Contextual targeting was deprioritized in favor of cookie-based, or behavioral, targeting for the perceived campaign optimization and measurement capabilities that the latter allowed. However, as we now know, this was never the intention of third-party cookies, and as device proliferation and fragmentation emerged, it became clear this legacy technology could not accurately track users well enough for clear, transparent advertising metrics.
Contextual targeting is on the rise again because its capabilities are now that much more robust, nuanced, and intelligent. Modern cookieless targeting uses machine learning and artificial intelligence algorithms to target ad placements based on keywords, website content, and other metadata.
This way, ads are shown to users in relation to the content they are consuming at that moment in time, not their past behavior, such as web pages they have visited. This means buyer intent is far more accurate and can be used to create personalized experiences for the user.
There is proof that third-party cookie replacement solutions such as contextual targeting create a more relevant experience. When digital advertisers start with context, they align ads with content, which results in far more relevance than ads that follow users around on every internet page they visit for days on end.
When attention and alignment are the foundation of a digital advertising strategy, ROI improves by as much as 30%. Research also shows that 82% of individuals prefer ads relevant to them.
Cookieless tracking effectively focuses on user events instead of an anonymous identifier tied to certain interactions. Third-party cookies necessitate advertisers targeting users based on activity across websites. Cookieless tracking, on the other hand, is focused on the content of the websites users frequent. In this way, cookieless tracking doesn’t rely on specific visitor data.
Cookieless tracking necessitates gathering other forms of information beyond third-party data. These data sets include:
Collecting and then activating more of these alternatives to third-party data can help strengthen the customer experience. There are a couple different platforms for gathering and then using this data in an advertising context:
The cookieless future calls for a shift to a data-first strategy, not waiting around for whatever cookies 2.0, universal ID, or other tracking solutions emerge. Coupled with Apple iOS privacy changes and Facebook’s limited attribution window and decreased ability to measure users interactions across domains and devices, using first-party data will become the mainstay approach.
Brands and their media agencies get more control over the advertising strategies in this way, as first-party data is something they are already collecting and using. There is additional benefit in that first-party identity strategies are also innately privacy-compliant, since they are based on opted-in information, which strengthens both consumer trust and customer experience. Here are some options on the horizon that leverage first-party cookies:
Here is what some of the major industry and business outlets have to say about the impact of the cookieless world on advertisers.
As referenced, a cookie-free world can mean better user experiences for consumers. This is predicated on the fact that any replacements for third-party cookies will be based on collecting richer, opted-in zero- and first-party data.
Similar to advertisers, publishers can also turn to strategies based on first-party cookies to prepare for the deprecation of third-party cookies. With their direct relationships with users, they, in many ways and cases, are well-positioned with enough data to build robust user profiles.
Yes! Given that mobile, tablets, Safari, Firefox, and other browsers have been without third-party cookies for years, advertisers have already been doing this. Still, the type of targeting advertisers will be able to do will evolve.
They will no longer be able to conduct behavioral targeting with third-party data, but they will be able to do contextual targeting. The benefit is that it leads to increased relevance at lower cost compared to the former, because ads are targeted to the content and context of a page.
First-party cookies with consent will some of cookieless targeting strategies, though advertising needs to create awareness to fill those funnels. There is a wide variety of sources from which to glean first-party data, from websites to CRM databases to surveys, which can contribute to a more robust user profile.
With third-party cookie deprecation likely less than a year away, advertisers can shift their cookie-based strategies into cookieless ones to future-proof themselves for a cookieless world:
Third-party cookie deprecation marks the end of an era, but the cookieless future will be bright for those advertisers who pivot to first-party-based strategies like contextual targeting to engage with users.
To learn more about how Peer39 can help you prepare for the cookieless world, get in touch today.