In this special blog post, we're thrilled to introduce a guest contributor whose valuable insights are a result of our exciting marketing collaboration. Mateusz Krempa, Chief Operating Officer at Piwik PRO is a Warsaw School of Economics graduate with over eight years of management experience. He is responsible for the optimization of revenue streams and oversees everything related to the existing business portfolio, including customer service and account management
Privacy and sustainability are vital trends in the ad tech industry – both have risen in prominence in recent years. These two concepts go hand in hand in helping you cultivate an ethical approach to your business strategy.
Consumers today expect companies to respect their privacy and provide them with a choice in what happens with their data. Customers are also growing conscious of how their actions impact the environment, both online and offline. They perceive sustainable, transparent organizations that respect user demands as ones that have values beyond financial goals.
However, according to IAB Europe’s 2023 Brand Safety Poll, privacy, transparency, and sustainability are now bigger challenges for digital advertisers than brand safety. Advertisers, publishers, and vendors need to drastically adjust their approach to gain consumer trust, stay competitive, and grow their business.
How do you combine privacy-oriented and sustainable practices with providing the best user experience? By putting the users at the front of your strategy.
Let’s explore the state of privacy and sustainability in advertising and assess how the ad industry should move forward.
There has been a longtime regulatory concern about digital advertising, mainly due to the industry’s reliance on third-party cookies. According to Hubspot, the most common reason for using ad blockers is that users view ads as annoying or intrusive. GWI’s research shows that users view brands negatively if they display too many or irrelevant ads or block access to the content they’re trying to see.
The list of privacy issues in advertising is long and includes:
Some solutions that have been introduced include:
Just like with privacy, the need for sustainability in digital advertising is driven by consumers. Their expectations have increased remarkably due to recent climate events, such as wildfires, floods, air-quality dangers, extreme heat, and drought. According to a survey by GreenPrint, 75% of consumers are concerned about the environmental impact of the products and services they buy.
However, people tend to be skeptical of the sincerity of brands that claim to be environmentally friendly. In the same survey, 78% of respondents said they don't know how to identify environmentally friendly companies.
This pushes the need for action. Consumers want companies to validate their sustainability claims through independent sources, both on the organizational and product levels. Organizations today need to be transparent about the implemented sustainable measures and areas still requiring their attention.
In the end, being sustainable means better satisfying consumers’ expectations. Putting the consumer at the forefront is always a win for a business.
The climate impact of digital advertising isn’t as apparent as in other industries, but it takes massive amounts of electricity to run servers, power connections, and generate ads. Recent estimates suggest the environmental footprint of digital advertising amounts to 1% of global energy consumption. Each ad impression produces around one gram of carbon, making it the most significant factor contributing to programmatic advertising’s carbon footprint.
Despite the immense environmental impact, the industry lacks a commonly adopted measurement for carbon footprint that companies could use as a benchmark. Another issue is the lack of regulations and standards that could enforce sustainability practices across the industry.
The challenge for brands resides in balancing communication for a more sustainable future with the potential to grow sales and market share for the brand. There are different roles and expectations across the supply chain:
There are a few steps for organizations to make their advertising more privacy-oriented:
Digital advertising needs regulation to help companies follow their climate commitments. Through regulations, certain small changes can become the norm and enable a better footprint across the industry.
For now, there are sustainable practices you can apply across your organization. Here are our recommendations:
The future of digital advertising is shifting, and previously dominant trends simply won’t cut it anymore. The new standards and methods we discussed today are becoming the norm. And even though these changes are profound, they provide more room for novel, practical ad approaches.
While many actions have been taken to push for more privacy in ad tech, there is still a need for meaningful, industry-wide enforcement of sustainability. When thinking about sustainability, the ad tech industry should leverage lessons learned from privacy regulations, which helped introduce privacy-friendly solutions into product development.
From the users’ perspective, sustainability and privacy are on the ethical and moral spectrum of “the right thing to do.” You can use sustainable and privacy-oriented practices to help cultivate your brand’s transparency and consistency and stay genuine in the eyes of the consumers.
You have an opportunity to better understand what your audience wants and give it to them. You need strong, trust-based relationships with consumers to build a solid foundation and prepare a sustainable, effective privacy-facing strategy. Collective actions and responsibility within the industry can bring about a shift that consumers, advertisers, and other supply chain members will benefit from. Ultimately, what the user wants should be at the core of what the ad industry provides to be successful and balanced.