Digital Advertising Updates

The digital advertising space is constantly innovating and restructuring. In the digital sphere, it is essential to keep up with these changes, new technologies and trends developing. Here are a few updates to get the gears turning in the digital marketing space.
Facebook Ad Limits
Facebook has recently announced that it will place a cap on the number of ads a page can run simultaneously. The company stated “We’re implementing ad limits because very high ad volume can hinder an advertiser’s performance. With too many ads running at the same time, fewer ads exit the learning phase and more budget is spent before the delivery system can optimize and ad’s performance”. The changes are to take place at the end of March in 2020 and the company has begun a slow transition to notify users of the upcoming changes. Although affecting a small number of businesses who have a high volume of Facebook ads, it is a prime example of how quickly a digital advertising strategy can undergo changes that could affect your digital strategy.
Instagram Influencing
Instagram has recently announced that it is introducing policies banning influencers from promoting certain categories of goods such as tobacco products, vaping products and firearms. The company will additionally be banning branded content promoting dietary supplements and alcohol. The company has in the past announced similar banning of products but was loose with enforcement. This go around they are building and integrating new tools to step up their security. Instagram is notorious for introducing restrictions that can affect your digital strategy, but in hindsight the platform acknowledges the importance of doing what it can to assist its financial backbone… advertising funds from businesses!
Google BERT
Google is a prime example of tech companies who are continuously updating and innovating. With billions of searches every day the company is dedicated to increasing ease of usage for the end consumer. In fact, 15% of searches each day on Google are unique searches never used before. Therefore, Google attempts to optimize the listings to provide users the most relevant desired content. This of course goes hand in hand with a business’s Google Ads and SEO strategy.
So what’s the news? With a growing prevalence of voice assisted technologies such as Alexa and Siri, Google has been diligently working on a feature which integrates voice with context in search queries in a project known as Google BERT. BERT is an acronym for Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers, if you were curious. To consider what this means, picture how your search behavior differs when typing versus speaking to a voice assisted device. The word patterns used when speaking versus typing can vary significantly. Additionally, rather than Google querying results based simply on the words used in searches this will provide the algorithms a better understanding of the purpose of the word within context. For example, when searching for “2020 traveler from USA to Asia immunizations”, the algorithms will begin to recognize that the preposition “to” isn’t just a word to search for, but the positioning of it is important to the final result of the search results. With the integration of the technologies, Google algorithms will have the ability to better understand the intent behind consumers searches and deliver content that is relevant. In the future this will lead to diminishment of targeting strategies based on irrelevant keywords which businesses are using to generate additional web traffic. The goal of Google is to better understand search intent to deliver better search results, and as stated before, provide relevant content to users. Optimization of this technology could have large implications on the future of search engines and your SEO strategy as voice assisted devices become increasingly integrated with our lives.
Pandora Voice Ads
Speaking of voice technology, the music streaming platform Pandora has announced testing of a new ad feature in which listeners of the app will respond to ads through speech and generate the next message based on the response of listeners. If you’re familiar with the term programmatic, consider this a live voice integrated programmatic feature. For instance, an ad asking if you’re hungry will play and based on the response the ad will follow up with a differed ad or response. Beware though, people might think you’re crazy randomly saying yes aloud at the gym with your headphones in every six minutes. In the wake of this Pandora has placed parameters to continue playing music if users don’t respond within a few seconds of the questions. Pandora has advertisers on board to conduct the testing of the new ad feature including Doritos, Ashley HomeStores, Unilever, Wendy’s, Turner Broadcasting, Comcast and Nestlé. Similar testing on interactive voice ads has been done by Spotify and Amazon. Overall the trend of voice technologies is another creative trend by marketers to deliver relevant ads to consumers.

If you've been orbiting the digital marketing world for long, you'll know all about Google's plans to abandon the third-party cookie by 2022. The rules for cookies have already started to change thanks to the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA). Visit any website, and you'll get a "do you accept this cookie" pop-up. The fight for privacy and owning your data on the internet is just beginning. But what does it mean for marketers?
First, this only affects third-party cookies. Websites that track abandoned shopping carts or where you have chosen to log in will still be active and working. ( x) Those effective ads that follow you around to remind you to come back and buy? They are here to stay!
Second, even though we're losing access to visitors’ individual data, Google already has a plan in place to target ads effectively. Google created the Federated Learning of Cohorts (FLoC)for this very purpose. The goal of the FLoC is to "provide an effective replacement signal for third-party cookies." ( x) Any Google device or product you use will still file away your internet habits for advertising purposes; it will just be less precise. The idea is to shift people from individuals into broader categories. Those categories are what marketers will be targeting moving forward. If you're looking up how to replace a car battery on YouTube, you'll most likely be shifted into the "repairs vehicles" category and served ads accordingly. If we've learned anything from Facebook's targeting practices, it's that they can get very granular with those categories.
The main takeaway from the loss of the cookie is that marketers everywhere will have to be more strategic about their targeting plans. Utilizing advertising avenues that never relied on cookies is a great place to start. Paid search, emails, and social media are just a few areas of focus that generate clicks and customers while not relying on cookies. Leveraging traditional media alongside digital will also be vital to help grow your audience and brand awareness. As always, you can reach out to our digital marketing team of experts to help you navigate the change.
The cookie might be dead, but personalized digital marketing is still alive and well.







