"Since January, the advertising industry has been consumed with what a future without third-party cookies entails. But here’s the thing: Cookies are already half broken — and have been for a while.

Apple began restricting third-party cookies on Safari in 2014, with Firefox following suit in 2019. Today, both browsers are considered cookieless environments and represent 40% of all US web traffic combined. Here’s what that means for your advertising efforts today — and in 2022.

Safari’s High-Value Audience Is Lost to Brands

Safari (iOS) represents about 55% of mobile traffic, compared to 39% on Chrome (Android). Its cookieless nature has chipped away at campaign effectiveness in iOS for years, but few marketers have course corrected.

As a result, most brands’ high-profile advertising efforts are completely missing this lucrative, high-value audience. iOS users tend to be a more affluent demographic and typically have higher incomes, spend more time in apps, engage more deeply and are more likely to be early adopters than their Android counterparts.

Given the iOS audience size and its spending power, coupled with the current inability of cookie-based tactics to capture this audience, many brands’ campaigns already contain a gaping (albeit often unacknowledged) hole.

Niche Targeting Has Steadily Evaporated

As the industry continues to grapple with uncertainty, brands are prioritizing spend efficiency in their 2020 plans. For many, that means increased granularity in targeting efforts — but unfortunately, brands leveraging niche targeting might be missing their mark.

Niche targeting relies heavily on third-party cookies. In cookieless environments, the ability to create hyper-specific audience segments disappears, as does the ability to utilize modern day marketing staples like frequency capping, attribution and standard campaign measurement metrics. ..."

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