Google is Getting Rid of Cookies: 3 Steps To Creating an Intelligent, First-Party Data Marketing Strategy
Sometime in 2023, third party cookies on the world’s most popular web browser are going away.?
But for some reason, I don’t see the marketers of the world making a big deal out of this. Why??
Frankly, I don’t think they get it.
Without third party cookies, digital marketing teams at thousands of major companies will have to alter their entire marketing strategies, tactics, budgets, and operations from top to bottom.?
The cookie-filled world of micro-targeting vast audiences of highly niche consumers across every corner of the internet, is over.
What marketing teams are doing right now will no longer work one year from now.
First-Party Data
I whole-heartedly believe in a cookie-less, privacy-first internet. Not only is cookie-less browsing better for people as a whole, it also forces marketing organizations to adopt not only new, but smarter, and more customer-friendly tactics.
Fortunately, most companies are sitting on mountains of first-party data. This is data generated by individuals who have opted-in to have information about them collected by your organization. The benefits of first-party data are two-fold:
If those are the benefits, what are the problems?
First-Party Data Strategy: 3 Steps To Success
If you already understood the benefits and challenges of first party data, or you’re just now learning in this article, how can you actually take the steps to forming a complete strategy?
Here are three specific suggestions to get you started:
1) Identify the systems that have valuable first-party data
Every marketer I know is obsessed with personalization–but doesn't quite know how to actually achieve it. Most marketing teams don’t have anywhere near enough access or understanding of data to be able to support an intelligent personalization strategy.?
Before you can even begin to discuss personalization, you need to create a map of all the systems your customers use and the data points (or potential data points) collected by those systems.?
Examples of systems where data is gathered on your customers:
This can be as simple as a spreadsheet that contains a list of every system on the left in each row, and across the top a list of potential data points. Then check marks to indicate which data points might exist where.
Create this document before meeting with a technical consultant or anyone from a ‘Big Data’ team.
2) Create your ideal plan for how you want to leverage the data
Once you’ve mapped out the data that you want and the systems it comes from, you need a plan for how to leverage it.?
This is the place where Google or Facebook used to do most of the heavy lifting. It used to be as simple as picking an objective, writing the copy, and then telling your ad-platform of choice the type of audience you wanted to target.?
领英推荐
Not anymore.?
Marketers have to have a clear vision of the tactics they want to use in conjunction with the array of data points that are available to them.?
Here’s an example:
Let’s assume a retail eCommerce marketing team wants to create a campaign that sends messaging to customers across devices and channels based on a specific category of product they’ve looked at in another channel.?
What are the data points you would need to accomplish this?
What does the marketing team need to support the specific tactic?
As you can see from this example, things can start to get complicated rather quickly.
Unfortunately, the array of tactics that most marketing teams can employ in a first-party data environment are hamstrung by whatever marTech tools they were using in the third-party cookie world.
Which brings me to ...
3) Identify and fill the technology gaps that will allow you to achieve the plan created in #2
Assuming you completed steps #1 and #2, you will be well prepared to evaluate the technology you will need to create an intelligent first-party data based marketing strategy.?
In my observation, most marketers skip #1 and #2 altogether and go straight to marTech companies to solve their problems. This inevitably leads to disappointing results and disillusionment.
Most marTech companies will tell you that their tool can do anything and everything under the sun–but this is almost always far from the truth.
The reality is you will not only need an array of tools and systems to accomplish your goals, you’ll also need tools that can help those systems speak to each other.?
Navigating the wide array of tech that you will need to seamlessly work together can be a challenge, but doing so is essential to making sure you can operate unhindered in a cookie-less world.
Stay Ahead of the Curve
In case I wasn’t clear before, I’ll repeat: what marketing teams are doing right now will no longer work one year from now.?
In this article I’ve provided three clear steps to make sure that your team stays ahead of the curve.
* * *
At Stoke, we’re building Micro Integrations that take all the systems your teams are already using (Salesforce, Google Ads, Adobe EC, Marketo, Mailchimp, etc.) and seamlessly integrate them together. Rather than centralizing data from these systems in one hard-to-reach location, our Micro Integrations push customer-level data between systems–giving you access to vital operational data right in the tool you’re already using (no dashboard required). Go to stokedata.com to learn more.
International Development Manager w SALESmanago Marketing Automation
3 年Interesting! From my side, I also submit an article about how using 0 and 1 party data can change your business and accelerate its growth. I've provided the link: https://blog.salesmanago.com/tips-and-tricks/10-expert-tips-on-how-to-make-zero-and-first-party-data-the-bloodstream-of-your-business/ ????
Marketing Leader | Business Strategist
3 年Spot on Sam. I think we got the first hiccup with Apples privacy initiatives last year. And even with the forewarning, many of us were left flat-footed.
Pretty OK at data. ??
3 年This is timely. I happen to be going through the same exercise right now.
Product @ Meta | Passive Income Investor
3 年Nice article Sam. We should chat, Launch Server Side/Event Forwarding is selling well, might be some opportunity to create micro services with systems that need real-time event level data.
Founder & CEO || Follower of Jesus Christ || Galatians 4:4-5
3 年Great article Sam Fonoimoana!