Good morning, Marketer, my inbox is full of cookies. After the announcement last week that Google was punting the deprecation of cookies down the field and into 2023, I was deluged with comments from martech and adtech leaders. Most were just a variation on, âGreat! We have more time.â Here are some of the more interesting ones. âGoogle may be giving marketers more time, but consumers arenât waiting â they want transparency and value in use of their data now. Leaving cookies in the oven longer will only burn them furtherâ (Anne Hunter, VP Product Marketing, DISQO). âGiven the state of readiness of the Privacy Sandbox initiatives, the regulatory & commercial doubts over FLoc and the position of the vast majority of publishers across the internet for such a meaningful change, there was already an expectation that the switchover date would need to be delayed until late 2022â (Tim Sleath, VP of Product Management, VDX.tv). And someone speaking up, in part, on behalf of the old chocolate chips. âGoogle has been trying to âhackâ cookies by introducing an alternative, an alternative that theyâre saying is less personal and more behavioral. However, the alternative that they introduced isnât really any different than cookies, and the loss of cookies will negatively impact them as well because their primary source of revenue comes from advertising. There needs to be an alternative, or new solution, that is truly different from cookies, but for now, cookies is the best option â even if it isnât ideal (Dimitri Lisitski, co-founder and CEO, Influ2). Kim Davis Editorial Director | |
| Transformation | | | Securian Financial grapples with new Workfront-Adobe integrations | In November 2020, Adobe announced an agreement to acquire Workfront for a headline-grabbing $1.5 billion. It seemed a timely, albeit costly, deal with so many distributed teams needing to get a better handle on workflow. Securian Financial, the St. Paul, Minnesota-based financial services company, is an example of a brand that was using both Adobe and Workfront within its marketing organization before the acquisition happened, or indeed was even foreseen. As for getting value out of integrations between Workfront and Adobe tools, itâs early days. âIâm seeing the possibilities theoretically. We havenât squared them away yet. We are starting to â and here weâre just scraping the surface â capture metrics where it makes sense,â said Chris Brown, Securianâs Marketing Operations Manager. âTwo things weâre looking at right now are the Adobe Creative Cloud connector to Workfront, allowing people to accept tasks within Illustrator, within the Adobe tools,â he told us. âThe other one is the Adobe DAM connector which allows us to add metadata, add new assets to the DAM. Our mantra is that we want to eliminate as much pivoting as possible, and we view Workfront as the starting place. If we can get people working in Workfront, and staying in Workfront, pulling in data on the campaign or whatever theyâre working on, thatâs what weâre trying to do.â Read more here. | |
| Travel | | | Tripadvisor looks to monetize membership through subscriptions | Tripadvisor, the travel discovery platform, has announced the launch of a new subscription plan for users. Previously, it had been free to prospective travelers and had monetized its offering through membership plans for hotels, resorts and other attractions. The D2C plan will initially be limited in geographical scope and product offers, but essentially it will offer subscribers perks, discounts and deals. Tripadvisor had around 400 million unique visitors per week pre-COVID and has relationships with thousands of hotels and hundreds of thousands of tour and activity providers. Why we care. Okay, this might look like an old-fashioned loyalty program â but not really. Itâs not a points-for-prizes structure, apparently, but a gateway to unspecified perks. Effectively, it makes subscribers a VIP subset of the membership. The theme here, which weâll see repeated in the months to come, is developing something more than a transactional relationship with an audience. If this is executed well, it promises to build engagement and trust. And itâs no coincidence that CEO Steve Kaufer, announcing the news, referred to âspecial experiences.â Thatâs what people are truly in the market for â not just flights and hotels, but experiences. | |
| | Looking to leave WordPress behind? Youâre not alone | Rising priorities like site speed and multi-platform distribution are driving enterprises to explore headless and hybrid content management systems, according to our new MarTech Intelligence Report. With a value proposition similar to a customer data platform or a digital asset management platform, the headless CMS serves as a repository for all of a companyâs content. Itâs meant to be the âsingle source of truthâ for content marketers and it incorporates an application programming interface (API) that allows the CMS to deliver content to any channel. Learn more » | |
| Data | | | Mozillaâs Rally browser extension collects data for academic research on how people use the web | âHistorically, data-hoarding digital companies such as Google, Facebook and Amazon have made it difficult for academic researchers to access that data to study how people behave on the internet,â said Max Willens for Digiday. Mozillaâs new Firefox browser extension Rally hopes to change that. Internet users can âdonate their dataâ for research studies âthat are designed to build new resources, tools, and potentially even policies that empower people just like you to build a better internet and fight back against exploitative tech,â according to the Rally website. With consumer privacy top of mind and both advertisers and consumers worried about the âblack boxâ of Googleâs FLoC, many internet users may be willing to use the data that others collect for research purposes. The goal is also to help understand how big players exploit user data for their own gain. Currently, Rally is used by hundreds of people, but the goal is to expand those numbers to collect even more data. The data collected from the extension varies based on the research youâre participating in, and Mozilla says it will not sell any data. Itâs purely for academic research. To join you set up a profile, find a study to join, and then browse away. âBefore you enroll, weâll tell you exactly who weâre working with, which data is being collected, where itâs going, and how itâs being used,â says Mozilla. Why we care. Not using this data for commercial purposes is, of course, really important. But trusting Mozilla, this seems like a worthy project. Why should marketers care? Itâs not an immediate thing, but the academic research will eventually filter through and should contain useful teachings about internet UX. | |
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| Quote of the day | | | | âI think whatâs going to happen is that everyone on the marketing team is going to be in the business of improving the customer experience, and email people will be leading this charge because theyâre pros at this.â April Mullen, Director of Brand and Content Marketing, Sparkpost. | |
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