TL;DR cookies are going away and we're not sad about it (they weren't as effective as they promised to be anyhow) but modern marketers still need to adjust their measurement strategy. As of right now, organizations can rely on experimentation, mixed media modeling, qualitative surveys, and monitoring business performance (in addition to cookies, as long as we have them). We believe marketing teams that fully embrace experimentation and other statistical measurement techniques in 2024 and beyond are going to win against teams delaying the transition away from cookies. A culture of experimentation is the only way for marketers to win going forward.
I’ve been in digital marketing for 15 years and have seen the rapid rise of cookie-based attribution — I’m here to say that I can’t wait for them to be dead.
Sure, it’s going to be a big year of changes for marketers but it’s for the better. Cookies weren’t great at measuring performance marketing anyhow.
But it does leave the question, how do organizations measure their advertising spend going forward? That’s exactly what we’re going to dig into.
The earth is shifting under marketers in 2024. Third-party cookies, a simple and ubiquitous marketing measurement technology, will be blocked by the largest web browser (Google’s Chrome) in 2024.
With the death of third-party cookies so too dies the dream of hyper-granular digital marketing measurement and the foundation for how many marketing teams today measure the results of their advertising campaigns.
Thankfully, the tools and approaches replacing cookie-based attribution are much better anyhow. Why? These tools put the focus on incrementality, getting away from short-term thinking and creating a better understanding of the levers driving real business goals.
The marketing teams that embrace this change will set themselves up for long-term sustainable growth while the rest struggle to find performance in an industry bent on granularity.
Let’s start with some of the reasons why marketing measurement isn’t as easy as installing a pixel, setting up a campaign, and watching sales go up and to the right.
Website tracking today mostly relies on cookies - little bits of data created in your browser to tell advertising platforms and analytics tools what you’ve done and who you are.
And they work amazingly well! They help websites remember you. They help analytics tools know which pages you’ve visited for analysts to understand behavior. They can even connect a user back to their profiles on Facebook, Google, or other platforms.
But things get complicated when you go past just a single web session. Cookies expire, are cleared, or are blocked by browser plugins (or browser settings). People use multiple devices, their partner’s device, their office device, a public device, or any device they can get their hands on. Users also SPEAK to each other, both in real life and in closed garden platforms like Slack, Discord, and many more.
Basically, there are a million ways cookies can’t track users effectively across their interactions with a brand. So the moment your advertising is disconnected from when a user viewed it to when a user takes an important action - cookies fail to make the connection.
We call this a “known unknown” - cookies aren’t tracking the whole user journey but we don’t know what pieces are missing. This is a huge problem for accurately measuring the impact of your marketing on sales. Take this example from our VP of Product & Partnerships, Phil Ware.
Ok, so we know tracking people across the internet is difficult but where does that leave marketing teams who are trying to demonstrate the ROI of their campaigns and to justify their marketing budgets in 2024?
Here’s a high-level picture of the ways to measure marketing right now:
Cookie-based attribution
Experimentation
Media Mix Modeling
Qualitative surveys
Business Performance
If all of that seems complicated, that’s because it can be - but it doesn’t HAVE to be.
Every organization is going to have different capabilities to measure marketing, but in general, this is where we see many marketing teams today.
We believe marketing teams that fully embrace experimentation and other statistical measurement techniques in 2024 and beyond are going to win against teams delaying this transition.
Here are some reasons why:
We believe any marketing team should be running experiments in 2024. But specifically, those spending over $2mm on advertising per year as they can't afford not to — with so many elements at play, having a clear path to measurement and understanding of results is imperative. Ultimately we want you to get the most out of your spend and measurement across channels becomes particularly difficult if you aren’t running those experiments.
I’ve covered a whole lot on this topic here so if you have any specific questions, I’d love to chat! Feel free to reach out to me on LinkedIn.