What Google's anti-tracking moves mean for advertisers
Good morning and welcome to Insider Advertising for March 4. I'm senior advertising reporter Lauren Johnson, and here's what's going on:
- What Google's anti-tracking moves mean for advertisers.
- The big ad accounts up for grabs.
- E-commerce M&A.
If this email was forwarded to you, sign up here for your daily insider's guide to advertising and media.
Tips, comments, suggestions? Drop me a line at LJohnson@insider.com or on Twitter at @LaurenJohnson.
Google CEO Sundar Pichai.
JOSH EDELSON/Getty
JOSH EDELSON/Getty
Google's move away from targeted advertising threatens to upend marketers' scramble to save digital ads
- Google's plans to nix ad tracking has big implications for adtech companies, brands, and publishers.
- Advertisers will shift toward collecting their own consumer data and targeting them contextually, experts said.
- The move will likely make Google's ad business more powerful, ad execs predicted.
Read the story.
Regis Duvignau/Reuters
Regis Duvignau/Reuters
18 giant advertisers from Unilever to Infiniti that are scrambling to hire ad agencies, and who could win the business
- Billions in advertising will be up for grabs this year as a rash of brands look for new agencies, report Lindsay Rittenhouse and Patrick Coffee.
- The trend follows a slow 2020, when many marketers cut budgets and paused agency searches.
- Accounts like Coca-Cola, Walmart, and Unilever are up for grabs.
Read the story.
Assembly
Assembly
Startup Assembly rode the online shopping wave - its CEO shares how he's trying to become a one-stop shop for e-commerce advertisers and sellers
- As online shopping and advertising soars, M&A has grown for companies that help sellers advertise and sell online, I report.
- PE-backed Assembly has acquired four e-commerce companies over the past 18 months.
- CEO Sandeep Kella described the three types of companies he looks for.
Read the story.
More stories we're reading:
- The movie-theater chain Alamo Drafthouse Cinema has filed for bankruptcy and is being sold (Insider)
- An Instagram test gave a glimpse of a world without public 'like' counts and some influencers say it would be better for the business and their mental health (Insider)
- Auto giant Stellantis is seeking a new ad agency to handle its $2 billion global advertising business (Insider)
- A cofounder of Bleacher Report on selling his startup at age 28: 'Your startup is not your baby - it's OK to let go' (Insider)
- PR firm Bevel hired a Goldman Sachs alum to cash in on the SPAC craze and win market share from financial communications heavyweights (Insider)
- Sports streamer DAZN taps Disney veteran Kevin Mayer as chairman (The Wall Street Journal)
- Twitter tests new e-commerce features for tweets (TechCrunch)
Thanks for reading and see you tomorrow! You can reach me in the meantime at LJohnson@insider.com and subscribe to this daily email here.
Read the original article on Business Insider
Contributer : Business Insider https://ift.tt/30ai4Np
What Google's anti-tracking moves mean for advertisers
Reviewed by mimisabreena
on
Thursday, March 04, 2021
Rating:

No comments:
Post a Comment