Last week, Google announced that they’re delaying Google Chrome’s third-party cookie deprecation to 2024. Prior to this announcement, third-party cookie deprecation, which was initially expected by 2022, was scheduled to occur in late 2023.
Given the reliance on third-party cookies across the media ecosystem, the initial deprecation timeline led to a proliferation of testing from agencies and advertisers, hard pivots from data providers, and technology advancements from identity management companies. Even with the first timeline extension, the digital marketing industry, including advertisers and agencies, was hard-pressed to be fully prepared for this loss of signal from the deprecation of third-party cookies.
Google is primarily pushing the timeline to provide a longer testing periods for the Privacy Sandbox and its related solutions that support cookieless marketing. As a newer initiative, the portfolio of solutions in the Privacy Sandbox has been evolving and shifting since Google’s initial announcement of third-party cookie deprecation. Below is a summary of some of the current Privacy Sandbox solutions for advertisers:
This latest update will allow the industry more time to prepare for cookie deprecation and establish a range of tried-and-true alternatives to third-party cookies. But the extension should not lead to complacency. Here’s what marketers should continue to do to be prepared when deprecation does occur:
Conclusion
Advertisers now have until 2024 to solidify their alternatives to third-party cookies as they pertain to Google Chrome. While some may use this time to kick solutions down the road, leading brands will take advantage to further innovate and evolve their first-party data and privacy-safe strategies. Keep an eye on our blog for future updates around third-party cookie deprecation, along with other timely topics like Google Analytics 4 migration.
Alex Langshur is the Alliance Chief Growth Officer for dentsu’s global Google tech practice. He is focused on creating joy and competitive advantage for clients by raising their digital maturity through deployment of advanced tech & creative solutions built on the Google stack. Prior to his current role, he was founder & co-CEO at Cardinal Path, a data and analytics consulting firm & the worlds largest reseller of Google Analytics 360. Alex is the past President and a Director Emeritus of the Digital Analytics Association (DAA), has taught digital analytics at the University of British Columbia, and keynoted numerous digital marketing conferences around the world. He currently splits his time between Boston & the Berkshires, where he lives with his wife, two sons and golden retriever.
View all postsAlex Langshur is the Alliance Chief Growth Officer for dentsu’s global Google tech practice. He is focused on creating joy and competitive advantage for clients by raising their digital maturity through deployment of advanced tech & creative solutions built on the Google stack. Prior to his current role, he was founder & co-CEO at Cardinal Path, a data and analytics consulting firm & the worlds largest reseller of Google Analytics 360. Alex is the past President and a Director Emeritus of the Digital Analytics Association (DAA), has taught digital analytics at the University of British Columbia, and keynoted numerous digital marketing conferences around the world. He currently splits his time between Boston & the Berkshires, where he lives with his wife, two sons and golden retriever.
Most analytics programs begin with foundational platforms like Google Analytics or Adobe Analytics. These tools…
In our previous post, we covered why custom metrics in GA matter and how to…
In today’s fast-paced digital world, marketing and product teams don’t just need data—they need answers,…
This website uses cookies.