Wednesday, 13 May 2015

Atlas OF Facebook And Server
















For years, digital marketers have been shackled to an increasingly outdated technology known as the cookie, which are still used to measure and target digital ads.

Cookies — bits of code dropped into web browsers — are known to generate poor approximations of how many people view a digital ad, inaccurate estimates of how many times any given individual sees an ad, not to mention unreliable measures of clicks and sales. Worst of all, cookies are a non-starter within mobile apps.

In a new in-depth explainer and report from BI Intelligence, we dive into how Face-book-owned Atlas aims to take digital marketing beyond the cookie. Atlas is notable for how it leverages anonymous Face-book identity data to correct cookies' inaccuracies and shine a light into what's happening within the cookie-less world of mobile apps. In addition, Atlas' ambition is to be able to connect off-line purchases and conversions to digital ads shown across mobile and the web.

Purchase the full report »

Here are a few of the report's main takeaways:

Face-book's Atlas is an ad server that also allows ad buyers to measure, target, and optimize digital and mobile ads across digital (i.e., not just on Face-book). Atlas operates separately from Facebook, does not access personal information from the social network or share marketing data with Face-book.
Atlas is pitching itself primarily based on the claim that it can go far beyond cookie-based measurement to more clearly establish the ROI of digital ads, particularly when mobile is involved. Taking measurement beyond the cookie means marketers can focus on metrics beyond the last click, and observe the multi-device process that often leads in purchasing on-line or off-line.
Atlas' ambition is also to be able to connect off-line purchases to digital ads shown across mobile and the web. To do so, it must have access to advertisers' customer data or consumer data from third-party data vendors.
Atlas has a particularly strong advantage when it comes to measuring mobile ads. Cookies don't work in mobile apps, so many marketers are flying blind when it comes to in-app ads. Atlas matches device-ID data with anatomized identity data of the user that accesses Face-book on the same device.
It's important to remember that Atlas works with ad buyers, not ad sellers. Some major brands and agencies are already using or at least testing Atlas.
Despite some clear advantages, Atlas has some crucial limitations, which are spelled out in the report. The principal one is that it will be very difficult for Face-book to wean the digital-media ecosystem off its reliance on Google's Double-click
platform, which is so well-entrenched.
In full, the 22-page report:

Explains how Atlas plans to take digital advertising beyond cookies, and the advantages this entails
Lists the limitations and barriers faced by Atlas in the context of the ad-server space
Discusses how a few agencies and brands have moved tentatively to adopt Atlas as their ad server
Includes 8 charts and 3 explainer slides on how ad serving works, how Atlas measures mobile ads, and how Atlas measures ads within browsers
Analyzes the difference between ad serving and measurement and how Atlas advances each function
Delves into market-share numbers for ad servers in the digital-ad industry

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