As marketers continue leaning into new tools and technologies to prepare for a world without third-party cookies, much of the conversation about adaptation has focused on planning and targeting. These are obviously critical aspects of any marketing strategy, but it’s important to not exclude the need for accurate measurement as changes in the digital media environment accelerate.
Importantly, the changes the industry has been making in response to increasing privacy requirements have implications for all aspects of digital marketing, and the new world of digital audience measurement looks just as different without cookies or MAIDs (mobile ad IDs) as planning and targeting does.
The other thing worth pointing out is that a transition to consumer-first digital marketing practices means that the data and insights marketers will have to work with will look different from what they are accustomed to. Said differently, we’re not simply replacing old processes with new ones that fit neatly into the same mold.
As we know, the increasing limitations on third-party access to cookies, MAIDs and other identifiers complicate the ability for marketers to know exactly who sees their campaigns. That’s because as companies chart their individual paths to limit access to information related to their users, the deterministic approaches to link demographics to exposures that the industry previously used are no longer viable.
Instead of recognizing people and what devices they’re using, measurement services now need to establish new ways to identify devices and the people who use them, in a manner consistent with applicable privacy requirements. To be effective, these identifiers need to be: