The news that Google will no longer be depreciating third party cookies has been spoken about a lot, including by our partners at Search Labs. The main takeaways are: 

  • Google will still allow people to opt out of cookies permanently, there will be an impact felt by this 
  • Various browsers and operating systems had already disallowed third-party cookies, meaning the AdTech industry was already shifting to other forms of identity resolutions for tracking and measurement.  
  • To some degree, the drop in identifying signals will need to be replaced by modelling for both targeting and measurement  

This means that in reality, nothing much is changing… So, instead of going into more detail on why this matters, I wanted to ask a question: who does this matter to? Brands? Agencies? AdTech Vendors? Media Owners or Publishers? Who really needs the third-party cookie, or any of its alternatives, to stay in business? 

Brands

Brands don’t need cookies to generate revenue. They need their customers to buy their products. Yes, over the years the cookie has helped them do that by giving them a way to see which channels generate the best ROI, but cookies did not give clients the full picture anyway. 

This doesn’t mean that advertising is suddenly irrelevant because it’s harder to measure, or that adverts can’t reach the right audience. It just makes it harder for advertisers and their agencies to do it in the way they’ve long been accustomed, by using algorithms to do this for us. In fact, I would argue that it levels the playing field for comparing ROI across offline and digital media, which is a positive thing. 

Fundamentally though, successful campaigns that drive a strong ROI existed before the cookie and will continue to exist after them. Brands and their agencies do not need cookies to run successful businesses or even successful marketing campaigns.  

Ad Tech Vendors & Digital Publishers

The cookie has powered this section of the advertising ecosystem for years, playing a much more important role in their business models than brands’. The sheer scale of digital advertising inventory that became available as the internet grew necessitated a common way to value it at scale, in a way that everyone could use. Cookies did this by recording browser and website behaviour allowing vendors to use this information to build profiles and target audiences. However, this resulted in a model where the industry has ended up building ever more sophisticated models to game the system and chase these data signals.  

Over 50% of available web inventory is already cookieless and this is continuing to shrink, so the market has already had to adapt. AdTech vendors and digital publishers using cookie-based technology will continue to face issues in an ever-decreasing pool to identify and monetise audiences, which for advertising means fewer effective solutions. But the market is shifting. We’ve already seen several cookieless models appear and the power of first party data is becoming ever stronger.  

Contextual targeting, which prioritises the content surrounding an ad placement over the identity of a user, is one of the core ‘replacements’ for the cookie. In traditional media, a lot of value is placed on ensuring that media placements are contextually relevant. We buy certain airtime on TV at a premium because it’s contextually the most valuable. So why has digital marketing historically valued cookie-powered audience targeting above contextual relevancy? Brands and agencies certainly saw better short-term ROI when relying on cookies and AdTech vendors and publishers could certainly monetise more inventory. But in the end, did consumers get the best deal? 

Consumers

Let’s not forget that the driving force behind cookie depreciation is that many consumers found hyper personalisation and one-to-one targeting creepy and invasive. Who hasn’t been chased around the internet by ads powered by cookies or tried to read some content only for a delayed ad to load and push that content out of sight? We all know a site or two where the publisher has flooded its site with placements because they could make more money selling more inventory.  

All of this has culminated in a poor experience for many consumers on the open web. We know consumers like good advertising and are not ignorant to the value exchange that brands need to monetise their sites to create content. But consumers are clearly paying less attention to these ads than those on TV and other channels, as attention partners like Lumen can demonstrate time and time again. 

So, are cookies really vital for anyone across our industry?

Cookies allowed for a huge amount of data to be collected across the web. The industry took advantage of this new and unregulated data and sold the promise of hyper targeting, competitive advantage and huge sales growth. However, we have seen over time that regulation was required, user experience has diminished, and the digital world has joined a race to the bottom for the bidding algorithm. 

So, are cookies vital?  

Well, no. Cookies have been ‘on their way out’ for a number of years anyway. We will just need to continue to adapt as an industry. Maybe we will end up with a space which delivers more creative, more engaging and contextually relevant advertising to consumers, while delivering true value to clients. 

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