The IAB recently formed the Advertising Technology Council (ATC) to merge the fragmented ad technology sector and spearhead the development of industry-leading technology standards and best practices. One of the six ATC initiatives is called Future of the Cookie, which is co-chaired by myself, Philip Smolin of Turn, and Susan Pierce of Google.
In short, our goal is to investigate ways in which we can turn the industry’s most negative issue into a positive (or at least a neutral), resulting in a win/win/win for publishers, consumers and advertisers – basically the industry as a whole.
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IAB Ad Technology Council - Future of the Cookie
1. IAB Ad Technology Council
Future of the Cookie
Jordan Mitchell – the Rubicon Project
Philip Smolin – Turn
Susan Pierce – Google
2. The Cookie Situation
Originally designed for temporary data storage
Now a fundamental infrastructure of the Web, used
for many purposes:
● Targeting / retargeting
● User profiling, segmentation, optimization
● Mapping users between platforms
● Buying and selling of data
● Consumer privacy controls
● Frequency capping of ads
● Analytics, attribution and verification
● Session management, shopping carts, etc.
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3. The Cookie is Crumbling!
Not a stable or persistent tracking mechanism
● Too specific – domain, device, browser, app
● Cookies ≠ users
● High churn rates
Has lead to broader use, not less
● Every new vendor, publisher, segment, attribute, platform, etc.
multiplies the cookies used on the Web
● Internet bloat
This is a lose, lose, lose, lose situation for
advertisers, publishers, consumers and platforms
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4. The Publisher Problem
Proliferation of 3rd party pixels
● Slows page loads
● Increases discrepancy counts
● Degrades user trust and experience
● Risk of data leakage
Broken compensation model
● Revenue loss if they don’t support 3rd party pixels
● Revenue loss if users block cookies
● Tilted playing field, favoring large consumer brands
● DNT, IE9/Safari defaults, EU laws, etc. potentially
make their job harder, with more revenue risk
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5. The Ad Industry Problem
Cookie reliance + churn results in:
● Ongoing ramp-up time and effort with each new
segment, attribute, partner, etc.
● Rapidly degrading economic model
● Continuous, high-volume, redundant deployment
● Excessive network traffic and related costs
● Excessive ad exposure
● Redundant user tracking (devices, logins, apps, etc.)
● Tilted playing field, favoring large consumer brands
● Significant regulatory threats
Non-cookie supported mobile devices
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6. The Consumer Problem
3rd party cookie overload, causing
● Widely fragmented data collection
● Anxiety, lack of trust
● Degraded online experience
Fragmented opt-out or opt-in controls
● Can’t be applied across every domain, device,
browser, login, app, etc.
● No persistence
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7. Opportunities
Reduce or eliminate the need for continuous cookie
mapping between IAB-compliant stakeholders
Turn the industry’s most negative issue into a
positive (or at least a neutral)
● Improved, persistent consumer control and trust
● Improved tracking, targeting and analytics for advertisers
● Improved publisher business
Level the playing field
● Same advantages go to IAB-compliant vendors as the big 4
● Bad actors are disadvantaged
Better convey to consumers the relationship
between advertising and free content
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8. Project Goals
Define problem statement and scope
● Common understanding of the stakeholders, problems, solution
requirements and related value.
● Browser-based cookie tracking
● Mobile app user tracking
● Cross-device user tracking
Solution mapping
● Common understanding and stack-ranking of the solutions
available to the industry, with a recommended approach and
rationale.
Solution execution plan
● Common understanding of the solution project plan, milestones,
timelines, participants, etc.
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9. Calling on …
Publishers!
Ad infrastructure / platforms
DSPs
DMPs and data exchanges
US and Western Europe
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10. Email us if you’re interested!
Initiative co-chairs
● Jordan Mitchell, jordan@rubiconproject.com
● Philip Smolin, philip.smolin@turn.com
● Susan Pierce, pierces@google.com
Next steps
● September 2012 - White paper draft
● Q4, 2012
● Solution mapping draft
● Industry consensus building
● Recommendation
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