Text: Tom van Bentheim
Let’s rewind: why advertise without cookies?
Privacy is a hot topic, especially now that we spend more and more time at our screens. We become more privacy aware and want to know what happens to our data. This proved to be anything but transparent: what data was being used for advertising purposes? And who was using it? Not only the consumer struggled with these questions; there were unclarities for brands, as well: due to the various (invisible) intermediaries in the online advertising chain it remained unclear for a long time where their advertising money actually went.
In 2018 this prompted politicians, online parties and visitors to take a critical look at the way in which personal data was processed. The consequence was a tightening of the privacy legislation1, which resulted in so-called cookie screens whereby visitors can choose upon opening a website if and which cookies may be placed.
Naturally, these screens appeared at the websites and apps of the NPO (the Dutch public broadcaster, for which we sell advertising space) too: visitors initially had to consent to the placement of cookies in order to gain access to the NPO content (see the image2 above of the screen you saw while installing the NPO app). This manner of requesting consent immediately created uproar, which led to the public broadcaster switching to a different module in April 2018 whereby visitors could explicitly choose which cookies would be placed without losing access to the content:
This step immediately resulted in a large loss of online advertising space. Because only one in ten visitors to the NPO websites consented to placement of advertising cookies, Ster lost 90% of its digital inventory. A clear signal from the public and a reason for us to look for a privacy-friendly way of online advertising: is it possible to serve ads without using personal data?
Because only one in ten visitors to the NPO websites consented to placement of advertising cookies, Ster lost 90% of its digital inventory. A clear signal from the public.