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As the third-party cookie fades away, marketers are seeking innovative solutions to help them step into the new marketing era.
In recent years, marketers have become familiar with the impending “death of the cookie,” correlated with an increase in data privacy regulations, such as the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) and the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).
Along with these limits placed on the use of third-party data by new data privacy laws, new standards are being set by tech companies to protect privacy while enabling continued brand connections with consumers.
With these changes in mind, many industry players throughout the (m)adtech landscape are seeking innovative solutions that take a consumer-centric approach; businesses want to reach audiences where it matters, powered by compliant customer data, to build a strategy that drives personalization and meaningful outcomes.
According to the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) State of Data 2020 report, 57.1% of respondents stated that they have already increased their use of first-party data for targeting over the past 18 months. Additionally, the use of first-party and contextual data for targeting has increased as marketers look to make better use of the data-driven transformation in a privacy-compliant way.
Among the varied tactics and technologies surfacing in the post-cookie world, contextual targeting is once again making headlines, and for good reason. By design, this cookieless solution is not only privacy-compliant, but built around the concept of in-the-moment marketing.
Contextual advertising in and of itself, however, is not new; the original method of keyword targeting was previously a favored tactic for marketers looking to reach the right audience in “brand safe” environments. Yet, as we transition into new waters, we are seeing a resurgence in its popularity, while acknowledging that keyword-based targeting alone does not meet the needs of today’s sophisticated media buyers. The evolution of contextual targeting needs to move from being yet another targeting tactic to the driver of measurable outcomes.
Redefining context for the modern marketer
Marketers are seeking the same outcomes that they have sought since the dawn of advertising: ensuring that their coveted brands will be seen at the right time, the right place and in the right moment.
Context targeting (also referred to as suitability targeting) identifies in-the-moment marketing opportunities by analyzing content along with the broad spectrum of data signals available to align consumer receptivity with the brand message. In fact, some studies suggest that context targeting can increase purchase intent by 63% when compared with audience or channel-level targeting.
In a contextual paradox, this method is the exact opposite of “brand safety blocking” from the cookie era—when it was all about negative avoidance—and has revealed one of the critical reasons why the tools of the last era are insufficient for modern marketer needs.
To identify in-the-moment marketing opportunities, next-gen context-targeting solutions must include a few key elements. First and foremost, they must be capable of accurately analyzing a variety of mediums including text, video, audio and images; after all, this is a generation that consumes ever-more content through shifting and innovative formats across a plethora of connected devices. Secondly, marketers must extend their prior investment by leveraging targeting signals from their hard-earned first-party data. First-party data has a massive role to play in the new wave of contextual marketing, and is one of the richest forms of insight a brand can extract from. And lastly, and by no means least, marketers must look to optimize outcomes by turning campaign insights into actions that continuously drive increased performance.
Delivering outcomes through context
With the death of the cookie; the acknowledgement by a leading social media platform that walled-garden attribution is changing; and a leading search engine undertaking greater consolidation inside its ecosystem, we are at a unique moment in time where we can redefine the outcome to one that makes sense, is measurable and, most importantly, is actionable.
Defining a digital media outcome as the closest point to the transaction that can be accurately measured and correlated back to advertising dollars is the best way to start. By defining the digital outcome as the closest point, we have built flexibility into the definition. It evolves with brands as they make investment choices in technology and partners while providing clarity to all who strive to build a better ecosystem together.
The great news is that these types of outcomes can now be achieved by using real-time contextual data signals, clearly redefining what a contextual platform should be able to do for marketers in the modern era.
Looking to the new wave of contextual intelligence
Now is the time for marketers to take a deeper dive into the contextual landscape as they ready themselves for the inevitable identity shift to fall into place.
What won’t change in the cookieless world is marketers’ need for differentiation. It won’t change the fact that publishers need funding from advertising to survive. And, perhaps most importantly, consumers will still want personalized advertising and content experiences, tailored to them, their needs and preferences, while feeling protected against data fraud. Contextual targeting—and its advancements wrapped around innovative solutions—today stands strong as a solution for each of these needs, offering marketers more confidence that their ads are relevant, safe and suitable.
As the programmatic industry evolves, it is time to work together to push the creative boundaries for clients and campaigns—and what better place to begin than by delivering true marketing outcomes through the power of context.
To find out more, please contact Silverbullet at wearesilverbullet.com.
— Industry view from Umberto Torrielli, Co-founder and CSO, Silverbullet and 4D
This article originally appeared on Business Reporter. Image credits: Courtesy of Silverbullet Media