Home Online Advertising How Dish Uses Non-Cookie Browser Data To Recognize Online Audiences

How Dish Uses Non-Cookie Browser Data To Recognize Online Audiences

SHARE:

Dish Network hopes to perform attribution and cross-device targeting using non-cookie-based browser data, said Brad Stamulis, Dish’s director of digital marketing.

The satellite TV provider is using a solution called fTrack, from online ad platform Flashtalking, which recognizes consumers based on about 50 data points – including browser type, user location, screen size and orientation, clock details, battery details and CPU speed.

So when visitors who reject cookies arrive at Dish’s website, Flashtalking aggregates those 50 or so browser traits and matches them to its database of profiles. If it identifies a match, Dish can continue targeting or performing attribution without the cookie.

Since Dish began using the product last summer, it has generated 40% more on-site associations, Stamulis said.

Non-cookie-based targeting is increasingly necessary as major browsers reduce cookie retention time.

That situation is a problem for Dish, since the average customer acquisition funnel lasts two to six weeks, Stamulis said, so the diminishing lifespan of a cookie disconnects upper-funnel activity from its attribution.

“It’s hard to know how long the funnel really is with the challenges in connecting views and conversions,” he said.

And as Dish does more upper-funnel branding with digital video – particularly in-app video, where there are no cookies – the gap widens between the content that first puts the brand into consideration and an eventual purchase.

Using fTrack also incrementally improved attribution from in-app traffic, which doesn’t support cookie tracking. But Flashtalking was able to match app audiences to its device profiles.

“We were basically not doing in-app inventory for a while because we couldn’t stitch it back to view-based conversions and down-funnel activity,” Stamulis said.

Beyond attribution, Dish was also able to send out more ads designed to drive conversions.

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

Get our editors’ roundup delivered to your inbox every weekday.

For instance, satellite TV customers disproportionately sign up over the phone, Stamulis said. This makes cookie-tracking particularly valuable because when Dish places a mobile site visitor in its marketing funnel, it offers a click-to-call number to convert.

But now people who reject cookies still get the click-to-call prompt if Dish matches the browser characteristics with Flashtalking’s profiles of previous campaign targets.

“Someone coming to Dish.com is the last step for us, not the first step, like it is for many brands, so we need to be able to recognize them,” Stamulis said.

Must Read

LG Electronics

Alphonso Shareholders Win Their Suit Against LG Electronics Over Corporate Board Drama

After being summarily booted from the board of LG Ads in late 2022, Alphonso’s founding team has won its lawsuit against LG Electronics.

Bye-Bye Sizmek! Amazon Advances Flashtalking And Smartly As Alternatives In Advance Of The Shutdown

According to emails seen by AdExchanger that were sent to Amazon customers this week, Amazon is officially naming integration partners to offload clients of the Sizmek ad suite, now the Amazon Ad Server.

2024 Promises More Premium Inventory – And Bigger Budgets – For In-Game Ads

Given the deprecation of third-party cookies and the reemergence of contextual targeting, 2024 could be a big year for in-game ads – so long as game publishers position themselves as a source of premium inventory.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

AdExchanger’s Top 3 Connected TV Newsletter Issues Of 2023

This was such a busy year in CTV land that we had to launch a dedicated newsletter just to keep up with all the trends, from measurement, currency, targeting and attribution to streaming data, identity, supply-path optimization and new ad formats – just to name a few.

M&A 2023: Ad Tech Deals Were Muted, But That Could Be A Mark Of Maturity

Who got bought in 2023, and who did the buying? Here’s a non-exhaustive list of some of the most notable ad tech M&A activity from this past year (with a few media and agency deals tossed in for good measure).

Comic: The Great Data Lakes

Snowflake Acquires Data Clean Room Startup Samooha

Snowflake has acquired Samooha, a startup that develops software to make clean room technology accessible to marketers who aren’t necessarily SQL wizards or data scientists.