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Cookieless World Impact

Introduction to Data Clean Rooms

The digital marketing landscape has undergone significant changes in recent years, particularly with regards to user privacy and data tracking mechanisms. One major development was Google’s initial plan to phase out third-party cookies in Chrome by 2022, which was later reversed in July 2024. This reversal has implications for data clean rooms, which were poised to become essential tools in a cookieless world.

What are Data Clean Rooms?

A data clean room is a piece of software that enables advertisers and brands to match user-level data without actually sharing any personally identifiable information (PII) or raw data with one another. Major advertising platforms like Facebook, Amazon, and Google use data clean rooms to provide advertisers with matched data on the performance of their ads on their platforms. All data clean rooms have extremely strict privacy controls, and businesses are not allowed to view or pull any customer-level data.

How Data Clean Rooms Work

Data clean rooms allow brands and publishers to combine datasets without exposing raw data, adhering to stringent privacy regulations. This advancement addresses the challenges posed by increased data fragmentation and the heightened emphasis on user privacy. The benefit to advertisers is a much clearer picture of advertising performance within each platform. However, it does rely on a solid bank of first-party data in the first place in order to run any significant matching with platform data.

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Example: Google Ads Data Hub

Google’s Ads Data Hub is expected to be a future-proof solution for Google-specific advertising measurement, campaign insights, and audience activation. Ads Data Hub is most effective when running multiple Google platforms, and if you have a substantial amount of first-party data to bring to the party (e.g., CRM data). Ads Data Hub is essentially an API that links two BigQuery projects – your own and Google’s.

Challenges and Limitations of Data Clean Rooms

First-party data comes with fewer headaches around complying with privacy regulations and managing user consent. However, first-party data is also much harder to get than third-party cookie data. This means that the "walled gardens" such as Google, Facebook, and Amazon, which have access to the largest bank of customer data, will benefit from being able to provide advertisers with enhanced measurement solutions. Most data clean rooms today only work for a single platform (e.g., Google or Facebook) and cannot be combined with other data clean rooms.

Alternatives to Data Clean Rooms

Data clean rooms are just one way of overcoming the challenges we face with the loss of third-party cookies, but there are other solutions. Two other notable alternatives being discussed right now are:

Browser-Based Tracking

Google claims its Federated Learning of Cohorts (FLoC) inside Chrome is 95% as effective as third-party cookies for ad targeting and measurement. Essentially, this will hide users’ identities in large, anonymous groups, which many are skeptical about.

Universal IDs

Universal user IDs are an alternative to the browser-based tracking option presented in Google’s privacy sandbox. These would be used across all major ad platforms but anonymized so advertisers wouldn’t see a person’s email address or personal data.

The Future of Data Clean Rooms

Tracking and reporting are no longer background tasks that we used to take for granted; they now require explicit user consent. This transition requires companies to ask users for their consent to give up their data more often. Beyond the "walled gardens" such as Google, some companies are working to build omnichannel data clean rooms. These secure environments facilitate collaborative data analysis, enabling marketers to derive actionable insights without compromising user privacy.

Conclusion

Data clean rooms have become indispensable in navigating the complexities of modern digital marketing. Their ability to enable secure, privacy-compliant data collaboration positions them as crucial tools in addressing the challenges of data fragmentation and stringent privacy regulations. While this would certainly help with the challenge of cross-platform attribution, there will likely be a mismatch between the data provided between different ad platforms that will require manual interpretation. Regardless of the "clean room" technology that will enable this data matching, there is a need to invest in building up your own first-party data now to enable any cross-referencing of data with advertising platforms or ad tech providers. This requires creating and trading value for deep data on your customers.

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