Home Mobile Zeotap Hopes To Become The LiveRamp Of Europe

Zeotap Hopes To Become The LiveRamp Of Europe

SHARE:

Zeotap is launching a global identity graph to try and beat LiveRamp to the punch across the pond.

On Tuesday, the Berlin-based mobile data platform announced the global rollout of Connect, an identity solution that deterministically links offline data to anonymized online identifiers based on exclusive relationships with telco operators in markets across Europe, India and Latin America.

Although Zeotap does have an identity graph in North America that uses deterministic matches from publishers and ecommerce partners, for brands looking to onboard their offline data in the US, the answer is usually to just get in touch with LiveRamp or perhaps an indie upstart like Throtle.

But for advertisers looking for reach in Europe, there aren’t really any other scaled onboarding options, said Miles Pritchard, head of data and technology in Europe at Omnicom-owned Annalect.

“There’s a vast amount of value to be extracted from a CRM database, though, so we’re always looking for ways to onboard it, make it available and make it interoperable,” Pritchard said, noting that LiveRamp doesn’t have much market penetration beyond the UK and France.

Omnicom Europe signed a European-wide contract in January to use Zeotap’s global identity graph for its clients.

“We’ve had a major challenge finding partners that can scale across regions, particularly in smaller markets,” Pritchard said. “We’ve been talking to LiveRamp for over 18 months and they’ve said they’re ready to move into Germany, Spain and Italy, but we haven’t seen that manifest yet.”

There are two big challenges to cracking smaller markets: getting to scale and staying on the right side of local privacy laws.

The General Data Protection Regulation “hasn’t made it easy for US companies doing business in Europe,” said Zeotap CEO and founder Daniel Heer, “but it has harmonized the regulations in Europe, and that’s actually helped us as a German company.”

Zeotap only processes consented user data, Heer said, whether that be the brand’s first-party data or the data coming from its telco partners to help with the matching.

In terms of reaching scale across regional markets, Zeotap capitalizes on its carrier relationships rather than partnering with publishers one by one, Heer said.

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

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

“Building a graph by approaching publishers and convincing them to share their identity linkages in Europe is super difficult, because it’s a process that has to be repeated over and over again across a multitude of countries,” he said.

In the North America, though, Zeotap does partner with publishers and ecommerce marketplaces rather than telcos, because the prevalence of family plans in the US muddies the identity waters.

All the matches in Zeotap’s graph are deterministic, Heer said, and the company has no plans to add probabilistic matching to up the scale. Telco data provides a more high-fidelity truth set, he said.

But what do the telcos get out of this arrangement?

The ability to monetize their subscriber data in the addressable ecosystem without having to build their own ad tech or partner with other telcos for scale, always a hairy proposition in the ultra-competitive world of telecom operators.

Mobile network Three in the UK, one of Zeotap’s 10 telco partners, gets permission from its users through its consumer-facing rewards app called Wunto, whose users share info in return for prizes, and the opt-in rate is high, claims Charlie McGee, director of advertising at the carrier – about 94%. That’s the type of data Zeotap uses for its deterministic truth set.

“It makes much better targeting sense for advertisers than making assumptions,” McGee said. “This data takes the guesswork away.”

In addition to the Omnicom Europe contract, Zeotap says it has global or regional deals with two other agencies. Three large brands, including Unilever in India, ran pilots using the global identity graph last year.

Must Read

Intent IQ Has Patents For Ad Tech’s Most Basic Functions – And It’s Not Afraid To Use Them

An unusual dilemma has programmatic vendors and ad tech platforms worried about a flurry of potential patent infringement suits.

TikTok Video For Open Web Publishers? Outbrain Built It.

Outbrain is trying to shed its chumbox rep by bringing social media-style vertical video to mobile publishers on the open web.

Billups Launches Attention Measurement For Out-Of-Home

Billups, a managed services agency that specializes in OOH, is making its attention measurement solution and a related analytics dashboard available for general use.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters
US District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, Alexandria

The Google Ad Tech Antitrust Case Is Over – And Here’s What’s Happening Next

Just three weeks after it began, the Google ad tech antitrust trial in Virginia is over. The court will now take a nearly two-month break before reconvening for closing arguments right before Thanksgiving.

Jounce Media's Chris Kane at Programmatic IO NY on Sept. 25, 2024.

The Bidstream Is A Duplicative, Chaotic Mess – But It Doesn’t Have To Be That Way

Publishers are initiating more and more auctions – but doesn’t mean DSPs are listening to more bids, according to Chris Kane.

Readers Are Flocking To Political News, Says WaPo – And Advertisers Are Missing Out

During certain periods this year, advertisers blocked more than 40% of The Washington Post’s inventory over brand safety concerns.