Programmatic Buying is all about how we use data more efficiently to reach a target audience
The ability to analyze and act upon data is important to any business. In programmatic advertising, data is the most essential thing that makes it so effective. It helps find ideal customers on the web. It allows us to segment, target and buy the right audiences instead of mere placements. The more quality data a trading desk/agency can collect and aggregate, the better its results will be.
Deciphering user behaviour from the data at hand is the first step towards an effective programmatic strategy.
There are three broad kinds of data to look at. First-party data is the advertiser’s own data collected from their customers.This is the most powerful data of all, because it’s collected directly from the advertiser’s web page, its mobile apps or physical business and is therefore the most relevant and accurate. For example, email ids, device ids and phone numbers of a company’s customer base is a kind of first party data.
While second-party data is collected by someone other than the advertiser, Second party data is essentially another advertiser’s first party data that you can purchase. It is more often used when both the brands gain from the sharing of data. For example, if you are a hotel booking website, you could partner with a travel site to share information about customers who have recently booked their itinerary. If a customer books a ticket, you can use that data from your travel partner to reach those potential customers and offer them hotel rooms. Conversely, the travel partner can reach out to customers who have booked a hotel room on your site.
Third-party data is available to anyone at a cost and is usually sold on a CPM basis. Third party data is collected by someone other than the original data source, who then sell it to other marketers. In other words, the data aggregator doesn’t directly collect data from customers/shoppers/visitors but has relationships with several companies and sources that collect first party data. Some examples of third party data providers include Bluekai, Acxiom, and Epsi.
You can also add a layer of DMP to complement your programmatic strategies. A Data Management Platform is a data warehouse. It is used to store and analyze the data. DMPs help agencies make best use of the massive amounts of data they collect, by analyzing data from multiple sources like the web, mobile app, email marketing, physical retail stores, CRM platforms etc and presenting it in a comprehensible manner/format. DMPs are used by ad agencies, marketers, and publishers to create rich, custom data-sets and target users more effectively through online advertising.
There are several added advantages to using a DMP, such as being able to re-target clicks and impressions without placing a pixel on the advertiser’s web-page, track average user session duration’s on a web page etc. DMPs can be used to collect and organize data and also push it to other platforms or your existing Advertising/Marketing Technology stack (such as DSPs, SSPs, and ad exchanges) for targeted advertising.
By utilizing data and programmatic advertising, we can implement innovative solutions such as weather synchronisation and power synchronisation campaigns. For instance, we have access to scheduled power cut timings from government websites. This allows us to run targeted power sync campaigns aimed at specific areas through mobile ads. This approach is particularly beneficial for advertisers in the inverter industry, as it ensures your message reaches potential customers at critical moments when they need it most.
Furthermore, this strategy opens doors for even more tailored campaigns based on real-time data and local conditions. Imagine the impact of reaching your audience precisely when their needs align with your product offerings!
We should think about all these data sources as representing potential customers. For programmatic success, we should concentrate on the Current Database, Inventory, Technology and knowledge. Here, we are looking for the audience that we are trying to reach, for a given day, operating software, device, age, gender, browser, mobile device and recency time etc. We look at what we know about them behaviorally, based on their habits.
Also it is important to note the drivers of those clicks and sources of traffic. I see all too many businesses focused on driving clicks, eyes on a page, and other arbitrary goals. The best traffic is generally a smaller community that is highly engaged. Many businesses assume they can’t achieve a higher engagement rate so they focus on getting a bigger audience, when really they should focus on quality engagement.
By using all the above types of data and strategies, we can enhance programmatic tactics, pre and post-campaign. Follow for more articles.
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About the author:
Uday Kumar Haliga, Trader Manager, INDIA & SAARC, MiQ Digital India