Clean rooms are a new essential tool in marketing, driven by a need for privacy compliance and cross-media attribution. By definition, a data clean room is a secure, isolated platform that links anonymized marketing and advertising data from multiple parties. Data clean rooms are distinguished from other data-sharing methods by the inclusion of detailed advertising impression data, with privacy-safe restrictions on outputting user-level results.
How do marketers know if a clean room is right for their brand? Gartner’s May 2020 report, How to Plan for Data Clean Rooms, has answers, and we’ve included best practices from Epsilon related to clean rooms.
By 2023, 80% of advertisers with media budgets of $1 billion or more will utilize data clean rooms, according to Gartner, which estimates there are 250 to 500 clean room deployments active or in development today.
There are two main categories for data clean rooms:
They can deliver ad impression data at massive scale, but Gartner notes that within walled gardens, clean rooms are “programmed to receive data, but not to let it leave.” For multi- platform versions, clean rooms offer an ability to do multi-channel and multi-touch attribution at scale, across channels.
When it comes to walled garden clean rooms, an important consideration is whether or not you’re doing so much in one of those channels that it justifies only needing a clean room solution from that channel. If most of your marketing is funneled through just one platform, that would make sense to focus your efforts there, but most marketers need to splice together views from multiple platforms, meaning that a multi-channel clean room solution is best.
The simple answer: measurement. Gartner advises marketers to push for independent, cross-media measurement. “It’s no surprise that the Google, Facebook and Amazon data clean rooms are not interoperable,” the report states. “But in a highly consolidated media market with limited advertising options, independent, audited reach/frequency metrics are critical to ad buyers.”
If you spend over $1 billion in advertising, Gartner advises making clean room investments now. But what solutions are right for you? Ask your partners if they can see individual customer journeys across all devices or offline touchpoints. Can they analyze, activate and measure any channel or media partner with full performance transparency at the individual level? These answers are key as you consider clean room benefits, such as improving media effectiveness, reducing media waste, obtaining cross-media attribution, gleaning deeper customer insights and activating across channels at the individual level.
If you already have a clean room solution (or an amalgamation of a few different solutions), be sure you’re following these best practices to get the most out of your investment:
Always remember, the tool is not the solution. You need the right expertise to effectively build, manage and execute a clean room solution to the best of its ability.
Interested in learning more about how a clean room can integrate into your marketing? Learn more about Epsilon PeopleCloud Prospect.
Image credit: Pan Xiaozhen/Unsplash