Home Data-Driven Thinking Apple’s Privacy Change to Email – And How Marketers Should Respond

Apple’s Privacy Change to Email – And How Marketers Should Respond

SHARE:
Kerri Driscoll, VP of marketing strategy, Merkle

Data-Driven Thinking” is written by members of the media community and contains fresh ideas on the digital revolution in media.

 Today’s column is written by Kerri Driscoll, VP of marketing strategy at Merkle.

At Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference, Apple announced its intention to put additional privacy parameters in place for email with its Mail Privacy Protection feature.

Specifically, as Apple called out in a release, the feature stops senders from using invisible pixels to collect information, helps users prevent senders from knowing when they open an email, and masks a user’s IP address so it can’t be linked to other online activity or used to determine location.

Although it’s too early to say how broad the ramifications of this announcement will be, there will likely be a significant impact to email-specific metrics. The native Mail app delivers almost 40% of emails on iPhone, desktop, and iPad, according to Sparkpost.

On top of that, Apple also explicitly referred to a new approach whereby all content within an email will be preloaded as opposed to dynamically served. Gmail and Yahoo have both implemented similar approaches in the past few years.

This means that the pixel indicating an open will fire, and open rates may be highly inflated. Marketers beware. Not only that, but once these images are cached, they will remain the same. Therefore, any use of real-time content or forwarded images from device to device will become stagnant.

So, what does this mean for marketers? The main takeaway is that small- and medium-sized enterprises need to prepare for a few potentially substantial implications.

Rethink your testing strategy

Send time optimization (STO) will be delegitimized in some capacity, because the email open time will be inaccurate or potentially not reported back at all.

Machine learning and tools, such as the Einstein STO features within Salesforce’s marketing cloud, will likely have to pivot in order to address this concern. A/B testing and test-and-roll will also be sidelined since as open winners will likely be at parity within messages. Also, resending to non-openers will be diluted and likely a nonviable strategy going forward.

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

Get our editors’ roundup delivered to your inbox every weekday.

To that end, customer journeys should be reassessed for modification based on historical open rate and decided by a click or next best message that doesn’t assume an initial read.

Reassess dynamic content

Real-time personalization technology companies have built an entire business arm dedicated to dynamic content based on location, countdowns, inventory, weather and the like. Given that Apple will cache images, this could make that dynamic information irrelevant.

Rethink your approach to focus on what you know about the customer and pull in attributes such as complementary products with an existing purchase, customer preferences or a piece of content that doesn’t assume someone has engaged with previous messages.

The point is to create some other relevant consideration that gives an opportunity to deepen your relationship with your customers.

Prepare the organization to think – and measure – differently

Whether it’s with your own team or your leadership team, start conversations now about migrating to different metrics.

Opens, for example, will no longer be a viable metric of success, because Apple will likely signify most emails as “open” when it preloads a message.

So, how do you create that deeper relationship?

Build experiences based on what you already know about your customers and manage beyond opens and clicks.

It’s challenging to lose foundational metrics, but opens are considered by many to be a vanity metric in any case. It’s time to move on. Although opens may still be an historical indicator of list hygiene, they will likely no longer work as an indicator of success.

My advice? Consider each email message to be an experience.

Use this opportunity to reach beyond the open and think about the multichannel moments and points of connectivity that will provide that next best message and experience for your customers.

Follow Merkle (@Merkle) and AdExchanger (@adexchanger) on Twitter.

Must Read

Google filed a motion to exclude the testimony of any government witnesses who aren’t economists or antitrust experts during the upcoming ad tech antitrust trial starting on September 9.

Google Is Fighting To Keep Ad Tech Execs Off the Stand In Its Upcoming Antitrust Trial

Google doesn’t want AppNexus founder Brian O’Kelley – you know, the godfather of programmatic – to testify during its ad tech antitrust trial starting on September 9.

How HUMAN Uncovered A Scam Serving 2.5 Billion Ads Per Day To Piracy Sites

Publishers trafficking in pirated movies, TV shows and games sold programmatic ads alongside this stolen content, while using domain cloaking to obscure the “cashout sites” where the ads actually ran.

In 2019, Google moved to a first-price auction and also ceded its last look advantage in AdX, in part because it had to. Most exchanges had already moved to first price.

Thanks To The DOJ, We Now Know What Google Really Thought About Header Bidding

Starting last week and into this week, hundreds of court-filed documents have been unsealed in the lead-up to the Google ad tech antitrust trial – and it’s a bonanza.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

Will Alternative TV Currencies Ever Be More Than A Nielsen Add-On?

Ever since Nielsen was dinged for undercounting TV viewers during the pandemic, its competitors have been fighting to convince buyers and sellers alike to adopt them as alternatives. And yet, some industry insiders argue that alt currencies weren’t ever meant to supplant Nielsen.

A comic depicting people in suits setting money on fire as a reference to incrementality: as in, don't set your money on fire!

How Incrementality Tests Helped Newton Baby Ditch Branded Search

In the past year, Baby product and mattress brand Newton Baby has put all its media channels through a new testing regime for incrementality. It was a revelatory experience.

Colgate-Palmolive redesigned all of its consumer-facing sites and apps to serve as information hubs about its brands and make it easier to collect email addresses and other opted-in user data.

Colgate-Palmolive’s First-Party Data Strategy Is A Study In Quality Over Quantity

Colgate-Palmolive redesigned all of its consumer-facing sites and apps to make it easier to collect opted-in first-party user data.