For decades, advertisers have relied on various types of
data to ensure their campaigns succeed. And though we are used to hearing about
first, second and third-party data, a new player has joined the game and is
looking to turn it around. Zero-party data is information that consumers
purposefully supply companies, whether its for sweepstakes, in exchange for a
coupon, or access to some sort of exclusive product.
Watch what
you say around marketers—there are some new four letter words out there that
are known to immediately raise the temperature in the room when people start
dropping them. We’re talking about GDPR, CCPA, and the rest of the data
compliance regulation acronyms. If you’re in marketing and you haven’t felt the
impact of these laws on your work yet, it’s probably only a matter of time.
Digital marketing is highly reliant on browser data such as cookies and
third-party tracking, but with browsers taking steps to curtail data
collection, it’s going to become increasingly harder to run effective marketing
campaigns
How can you
tell if you’re being affected by these changes? Just look at your cost per
conversion and see if it’s been rising. If so, it’s reasonable to think that
has something to do with the additional requirements imposed by the recent wave
of new privacy regulations.
What’s a
marketer to do? Consider why these regulations are flourishing in the first
place. Consumers are put off by brands they’ve never heard of coming at them
with overly intrusive personalized messaging. Aggressive approaches to data collection
leave them feeling like they’re in an oppositional relationship to the
businesses trying to sell to them. Now that it’s come to this, the best thing
you can do is win back their trust and reestablish a relationship based on
mutual give-and-take…but how? One way is to recenter trust and consent by
requesting and utilizing zero party data.
What is Zero
Party Data?
In the
beginning, there were three categories of consumer data used for marketing
purposes:
- First Party Data – which you’ve collected directly from the consumer.
- Second Party Data – which is provided to you by the entity that collected it—in other words, somebody else’s first party data.
- Third Party Data – collected from various sources and provided to you by a broker who may not have had any direct interactions with consumers.
As digital
marketing evolved, it became clear that not all first party data was alike and
that a new category needed to be created to refer not just to any data
collected through a consumer’s interactions with your brand, but data that they
intentionally supplied to you for some specific purpose. This is zero party
data.
With cookies
and trackers, you can tell a lot about a consumer when they visit your
website—where they’re located, what browser and device they’re using, what
they’re clicking on. You can infer a lot about them from that data. Zero party
data takes you out of the tracking and inferring game and gives you the chance
to focus on the things the consumer actually wants you to know about them:
- How they want to be identified
- How, where, and when they want to be contacted
- What their purchase intentions are
In other
words, zero party data is what consumers tell you when you ask them directly,
“what do you want?”
Why Use Zero
Party Data?
You might be
wondering what the advantage of zero party data is when it consists entirely of
volunteered information. Today’s consumers are guarded about their privacy and
suspicious about what companies want to do with it (and to whom it might get sold).
Why rely on zero party data when cookies, trackers, and third party brokers
have the potential to deliver so much more information—whether the consumer
likes it or not?
The thing to
remember is that all that first, second, and third party data is becoming less
accurate and useful for marketing purposes as more protections get put in place
and consumers wise up to the ways their data is being used without their
consent. Zero party data avoids these potential pitfalls because the consumer
gave it to you on purpose, for a reason. If you use the data for marketing
activities that align with those reasons, you can expect to reach those
consumers much more effectively.
To break it
down further, here’s a rundown of some of the ways in which zero party data can
be advantageous:
- It builds trust with consumers by respecting their privacy and intentions
- It makes you better prepared for a future in which data compliance regulations make it harder to collect data without consumer consent
- It enriches the data you already have by adding accurate and reliable data points straight from the consumers themselves
- It improves the quality of your data by avoiding inferences and outdated information from third party data sellers
- It lets you find out what really concerns your audience when it comes to privacy
At its core,
zero party data is data obtained through dialogue with consumers, not from
observing, extrapolating, or soliciting old data that was collected by others.
That means it’s more timely, more likely to reflect the consumer’s current
interests and preferences, and more relevant from a marketing perspective.
What Are
Some Good Ways to Collect Zero Party Data?
Generally
speaking, collection methods for zero party data are transactional in nature.
You can’t really expect consumers to be oversharers who supply you with their
identities, contact information, and purchasing preferences just to make your
life easier. The most effective way to obtain good zero party data is to offer
something in exchange.
Every site
and business is different, so there’s no one-size-fits-all solution for
collecting the right kind of zero party data for your needs—but there are
plenty of effective and widely adaptable methods you can use.
- Preferences Centers – allowing users of your website to set preferences for email contact, search filtering, and other variables can gives you lots of useful insights into what they hope to get from your site and how they want to be interacted with.
- Downloads – lots of users will gladly provide contact information and answer a few questions in exchange for a free download of an ebook, app, software demo, etc.
- Contests – who doesn’t love winning free stuff? You can ask users to provide some information in exchange for being entered in a drawing for prizes.
- Discounts – you can reward consumers for volunteering information by offering coupons or reward points.
- Recommendations – many consumers will happily give up some information about their purchasing needs in order to get some relevant product recommendations.
- Quizzes – people enjoy answering quizzes and questionnaires. If you can make them fun and relevant, you might be surprised how much information you can obtain through them.
- Social Media – direct engagement through posts, comments, and social stories can open up dialogues through which consumers will be willing to volunteer all kinds of actionable information.
Whichever
method you use, the watchwords are transparency and consent—you want users to
know what they’re giving to you, and why, and for them to be okay with it. As
long as you’re upfront about what you’re doing and they feel like they’re
getting something worthwhile out of the exchange, you should see good results
in acquiring useful zero party data.
Conclusion
Zero party
data is where privacy concerns and personalized marketing can meet up and play
nicely together. It’s long been somewhat of a paradox that consumers want to be
engaged with personalized messaging, but they don’t like the manner in which
the data necessary to create that personalization is acquired. With zero party
data, they’re in control of what they’re sharing, and businesses have the
opportunity to really listen and demonstrate that they don’t need spyware and
brokered data to personalize their content in a way that’s both relevant and
respectful.
As the
four-letter data regulations sweep across the globe, the old ways of collecting
and using data are becoming less effective at informing effective marketing
campaigns. Zero party data can assist you in building spot-on customer
personas, performing granular audience segmentations, and crafting campaigns
and messages that will speak to the things that matter most to your potential
customers without alienating them.
