In this issue of the ID5 Partner series, ID5’s Ian Vazquez, Business Development Director, sat down with Amelia Waddington, Chief Product Officer at Captify, to learn more about their mission and what she thinks the end of cookies means for programmatic advertising.
What is the series all about? The Q&A with ID5 series invites ID5’s publisher, advertiser, and platform partners to share their insights on the big questions and hot topics circulating the digital media industry today. Tune in for new editions featuring thought leaders and experts from across the space.
As the largest holder of onsite search data outside the walled gardens, Captify is the leader in real-time audiences and insights, fuelled by Search Intelligence. Connecting searches from over 3 million websites globally, Captify helps brands understand consumer interests, motivations and mindsets. Search behaviour provides the most authentic view into consumer intent, using the truest dataset that exists – onsite search. Our machine learning technology makes that intent actionable. This is what we call Search Intelligence.
Our innovative, search-powered solutions empower brands through pre-campaign strategy with smarter audience-building and targeting, seamless omnichannel activation, and fresh, actionable measurement and insights.
We’ve been future-proofing our solution since 2020, so we’re very prepared for when cookies eventually deprecate. The good news is that our cookieless solution allows us to continue working with clients as we did before – delivering the same great product and performance, just without cookies.
We launched our contextual-based solution more than 3 years ago, and it is the industry’s only contextual solution with the power of Search Intelligence at its core. This solution has seen great success with programmatic campaigns performing even better than other standard contextual and our own cookie-based programmatic campaigns. We’re continuing to invest in and develop our cookieless offering ahead of the full depreciation of cookies, and we’ll be launching a second identity-based cookieless solution later this year.
We believe that consumers want a free and open internet, and that information should neither be controlled by a small set of tech giants nor locked behind paywalls that restrict knowledge to those already privileged enough to have wealth.
Online advertising is what keeps the internet free, funding online journalism and powering commerce and communities. However, this should not come at the expense of consumers’ control over their data and its usage. Privacy-preserving solutions like ID5 maintain the balance between privacy and advertising by ensuring that the unauthorized re-selling or distribution of data, which was commonplace under third-party cookies, is no longer possible.
Furthermore, Captify only processes consented data obtained directly from publisher sites. Captify is compliant with the industry’s privacy regulations, including GDPR and CCPA. Notably, Captify is IAB Gold Standard 2.0 certified and fully integrated into IAB TCF 2.0 Framework.
Measurement is going to be the biggest challenge, as many tried and tested methodologies are being replaced with new technologies and solutions. New benchmarks will need to be created, and many downstream and upstream processes changed. However, I do believe this is also an opportunity, as measuring outside of the cookieable environments becomes more commonplace in a future world based on persistent IDs. Captify’s search-based metrics will still be able to be utilised in a post-cookie world, so we will still be able to provide needle-shifting search lift studies.
While the date for the deprecation of third-party cookies is something of a moving target, brands shouldn't use this as a reason to delay. Those who haven’t yet started testing cookieless solutions should do so now alongside their existing setups, while they still can. You can’t A:B test when there are no As left, so if brands want to understand the impact on scale, price and performance, now is the time. There are advantages in both the short as well as long term.
In the short term, persistent IDs can give incremental reach to cookies today (from non-cookie-able environments), so not using these options now is leaving eyeballs/consumers on the table. In the long term, those who are best prepared and have invested in and tested the alternatives will be the winners on the other side. Marketers may be pleasantly surprised with cookieless solutions, including Captify’s, that can both improve performance and be more cost-effective.
I think this will come; it is in everyone’s best interest to make it as easy as possible for advertisers’ dollars to reach publishers. Fragmentation always results in friction and leads to negative commercial outcomes for all of us in the industry.
There are so many post-cookie solutions out there now. Captify alone has contextual and identity-based offerings. It’s important that platforms keep up with how partners want to integrate and invest in supporting our solutions, or they will lose out to competitors with better offerings.