It feels like just yesterday Google announced its plan to phase out the third-party cookie and sent the entire advertising industry into a tailspin.
Now, more than three years later and the initial panic has nearly subsided. The third-party cookie is still alive as the industry continues to field multiple delays from Google on their official deprecation date. Some are even speculating on whether it will even happen at all.
To many, these delays might make it seem as if user tracking and targeting remains unimpacted. But this couldn't be further from the truth.
While everyone screamed from the rooftops about Google's initial announcement, other browsers and government entities took quieter steps to restrict data tracking and usage in an effort to protect consumers. The result of these efforts leaves us in an entirely different audience targeting landscape than one that we were dealing with just a few years ago.
Proximic by Comscore partnered with Basis Technologies, a top-ranked demand side platform (DSP), to take a deeper look at what these changes mean for the programmatic advertising landscape. Together, we sought to answer the question, "How much of today’s programmatic inventory is still addressable with ID-based tactics and what does that mean for those advertisers who have not yet diversified their targeting tactics?”.
Want the TL;DR?Programmatic impressions that contain IDs, including alternative IDs, are now in the minority. Advertisers who remain focused on the ID-based audience targeting tactics of yesteryear are experiencing significant scale challenges that will only continue to grow.
Let's start with browsersSafari, the second-most popular browser, and Firefox, the fourth most popular browser, have been blocking third-party cookies for over three years already. Collectively, they make up nearly 22% of all browser traffic globally, which means 22% of the world's in-browser activity is already not targetable using traditional cookie-based tactics.
Google Chrome remains the most popular browser worldwide with over 65% market share, by far the largest browser that continues to allow third-party cookie targeting.
This might have you thinking, "Great! I can still target at least 65% of the market using cookie-based methods." But zooming in further proves this isn't the case. Amongst those using Chrome as their browser, only 60% are still addressable with IDs. The other 40% are deploying data privacy tactics such as incognito windows or other privacy settings.
Next came IDFAWhen Apple rolled out iOS 14.5 it provided users with the choice to block the IDFA identifier at the app level. Among other changes, the update required apps to ask users for permission to collect and share their data. This change resulted in a reported 96% of US iOS users politely declining tracking. This change single handedly wreaked havoc with the mobile universe, heavily impacting programmatic scale. Based on Proximic by Comscore’s data, the implications were that up to 70% of US programmatic mobile IDs vanished overnight.
Add compounding government regulations to the mixPerhaps the biggest source of confusion regarding the identity landscape stems from the erratic and inconsistent government privacy regulations that continue to be enacted. For most advertisers who serve ads across state and country lines it is becoming increasingly difficult to keep up with and to adopt proper protocols.
Each of these legislative policies bring an added layer of complexity to how advertisers can and can’t use ID-based data and further restricts the proportion of users that remain addressable through ID-based programmatic targeting.
The IAB recently released their State of Data report stating that 50-60% of programmatic inventory no longer had a user ID associated with it. While this percentage will vary based on the mix of available programmatic inventory at any given time, we sought to dive deeper to explore these figures.
All of the identity changes in the industry can be overwhelming. This has put the onus on platforms and data providers to bring better technology and solutions to the table.
The integration of Proximic by Comscore’s Predictive Audience segments into the Basis platform allows media buyers to easily access an extensive suite of performant, behavioral audience targeting segments delivered without IDs for maximum scale. These segments serve as the perfect complement for Basis clients’ ID-based campaigns, enabling them to activate a diverse targeting mix in their platform of choice in order to circumvent signal loss limitations.
“Providing our advertisers with scale and accuracy for their programmatic campaigns is a priority. Basis Technologies empowers them with solutions like Proximic by Comscore’s Predictive Audiences so they have high quality effective options for reaching valuable customers.” said Ian Trider, VP of RTB platform operations, Basis Technologies.
If you’re not sure where to start when it comes to diversifying your targeting mix, check out our top recommendations below and avoid missing out on any more valuable ad opportunities.