
AdTech has never had more data, yet it has rarely been harder for brands and agencies to answer a simple question: what actually drove the result?
Clicks, conversions, and platform-reported performance have long served as proxies for success, shaping how campaigns are evaluated, budgets are allocated, and results are communicated. But they were never designed to measure business impact directly. They offer a directional view of activity rather than a definitive answer.
Clicks indicate interest, conversions indicate action, and platform-reported metrics reflect performance within a given environment. Each of these signals plays a role, but none of them, on their own, can confirm whether marketing led to a business outcome.
That limitation isn’t new, but it’s becoming more visible as signals shift and measurement becomes more fragmented. Measurement systems are under increasing strain, shaped by signal fragmentation, privacy constraints, and data environments that make it harder to connect media exposure to outcomes. In fact, 75% of marketers say their current approaches are falling short.
Performance can appear strong in one platform and materially different in another, making it harder to reconcile results across partners. Connecting campaign performance to actual business outcomes remains difficult.
As identity, data collaboration, and measurement become more strategic to marketing performance, organizations are looking for infrastructure that can connect data across partners while preserving neutrality, flexibility, and interoperability.
Why performance doesn’t always reflect impact
Even when data is available, it doesn’t always tell a complete or accurate story.
A conversion after an ad exposure may suggest a relationship, but it doesn’t establish causation. Attribution models favor what’s easiest to measure, and platform-reported metrics often reflect biases toward their own ecosystems. Over time, this creates a version of performance that can appear accurate while overstating actual impact.
Measurement should move from signals to conversions, then to verified outcomes, and ultimately to incrementality. Each step brings measurement closer to understanding true business impact. In practice, most strategies stall in the middle, treating conversions as the endpoint even though they don’t show whether marketing drove the result.
This creates a gap between what’s measured and what matters. Incrementality is gaining focus because it isolates what changed due to marketing, separating true impact from what would have happened anyway. Industry guidance increasingly reflects this shift, recognizing incrementality as a reliable way to measure causal impact in a fragmented, privacy-first ecosystem.
As AI and agentic technologies become more involved in planning, optimization, and decision-making, the quality of the underlying identity and data foundation becomes increasingly important. Reliable outcomes require trusted identity and interoperable data.
The infrastructure shift: Why CAPI matters now
Measurement is evolving at both a conceptual and technical level.
As browser-based tracking becomes less reliable, the industry is shifting toward server-side approaches, including conversion APIs (CAPI). These approaches create a more direct, durable connection between advertiser data and platform systems, reducing reliance on signals limited by browsers and privacy controls.
Platforms are reinforcing this shift. Meta positions CAPI as a way to improve data quality, measurement accuracy, and optimization by enabling more complete event capture. Google similarly emphasizes server-side tagging to improve data control, resilience, and performance in modern measurement environments.
On their own, these approaches don’t solve the measurement challenge. Combined with identity, they create a stronger foundation for connecting marketing activity to real outcomes.
Stronger data collection infrastructure is most effective when paired with interoperable identity and privacy-first governance, giving marketers greater confidence in how data is connected, activated, and measured across environments.
Identity as the connective layer
Identity resolution is a key enabler of that foundation. By connecting identifiers across platforms, devices, and environments, it helps marketers tie exposure to consumers and, ultimately, to real-world outcomes. Without it, measurement stays siloed across platforms and channels. With it, marketers can see how activity across environments contributes to a single outcome.
Interoperable identity is becoming more than a marketing capability. It increasingly serves as a foundational layer that helps brands, agencies, publishers, platforms, and partners collaborate across a growing number of data and media environments.
Industry efforts around data clean rooms, interoperability, and privacy-safe collaboration all address the same challenge: how to connect data across environments without relying on outdated or fragile signals. Solutions that strengthen identity resolution within these environments improve match rates between partners, making collaboration more effective and measurement more complete.
As collaboration expands across clean rooms, platforms, and activation channels, marketers benefit from identity frameworks that support interoperability rather than limiting how data can move across the broader ecosystem.
What brands and agencies should expect next
For brands and agencies, the focus is shifting from what appears to perform within a platform and toward what drives results. That requires looking beyond platform-reported metrics, asking more of measurement partners, and incorporating incrementality into how success is defined.
It also requires investment in identity and measurement that enable outcome-based measurement. Without that foundation, even advanced reporting will struggle to provide a clear view of performance.
That foundation should include trusted consumer data, transparent governance practices, and identity capabilities that can adapt as technology, privacy expectations, and AI-driven workflows continue to change.
Many organizations are also evaluating how measurement, identity, and activation strategies can maintain long-term flexibility across agencies, platforms, publishers, commerce media networks, and emerging channels.
What this shift means for AdTech
Reporting within platforms or optimizing intermediary metrics is no longer enough. Success increasingly depends on demonstrating how marketing activity translates into business results across channels and environments.
As marketing systems become more automated, brands need visibility into the data and identity layers informing those decisions, along with confidence that those systems are operating on accurate, privacy-safe consumer information.
That shift requires interoperable identity, cross-platform measurement, and infrastructure that supports more complete and reliable data collection. It also requires validating whether marketing drove incremental business impact, rather than simply reporting observed conversions.
Independent identity and neutral data infrastructure can help support that effort by giving organizations the flexibility to work across partners, platforms, and channels while maintaining consistency in measurement and audience understanding.
This means building systems that connect exposure to outcomes, measure incremental impact, and link media investment and business results. Clicks and conversions remain useful, but their limitations are becoming more visible as reliability declines.
Trusted identity, privacy-safe data collaboration, and transparent measurement are becoming central to how marketers build durable strategies that can adapt as the ecosystem continues to change.
Measurement will be defined by the ability to connect marketing activity to verifiable outcomes, with incrementality at the center of understanding true impact.
Contact us
About the author

Ali Mack
VP, AdTech Sales
Ali Mack leads Experian’s AdTech business, overseeing global revenue across the company’s expansive tech and media portfolio. With over a decade of experience in digital and TV advertising, Ali drives strategic growth by aligning sales, customer success, and solutions teams to deliver impactful outcomes for clients and partners.
She has successfully guided teams through two major acquisitions, integrating sales organizations and product portfolios into unified go-to-market strategies. Under her leadership, Experian has consistently exceeded revenue targets while fostering collaborative, results-driven teams and mentoring emerging leaders. Working closely with finance, product, and marketing, Ali develops strategies that support a diverse ecosystem of publishers, brands, and technology partners, positioning Experian at the forefront of data-driven advertising and identity resolution.
Latest posts
Identity resolution strategies are critical for marketers to continue consumer engagement and satisfaction in an increasingly complex ecosystem
Marketing data and identityStudy reveals that brands with more mature identity programs were significantly more likely to be successful in achieving their key objectives Tapad, a part of Experian, a global leader in cross-device digital identity resolution and a part of Experian, has commissioned Forrester Consulting, part of a leading research and advisory firm, to conduct a new study that evaluates the current state of customer data-driven marketing and explores how marketers can use identity solutions to deliver privacy safe and engaging experiences, in an evolving data landscape. The study highlights the changing ground rules for digital marketing and the threat that poses to marketers’ ability to deliver against long standing KPIs and campaign goals. Nearly two-thirds (62%) of respondents said that the forces of data deprecation will have a significant (40%) or critical (21%) impact on their marketing strategies over the next two years. Among those surveyed, identity resolution strategies have surfaced as an opportunity to create more powerful customer experiences, with 66% aiming to have it help improve customer trust and implement more ethical data collection and use practices, while nearly 60% believe it will point the way to more effective personalization and data management practices. Although organizations are eager to implement identity resolution strategies, a complex web of solutions and partners makes execution a challenge. For example, respondents report using at least eight identity solutions on average, across nearly six vendor partners, and they expect that fragmentation to persist in the ‘cookieless’ future. Additionally, brands’ identity resolution technologies typically represent a patchwork of homegrown and commercial solutions. Eighty-one percent of respondents use both in-house and commercial identity resolution tools today, and 47% use a near-equal blend of the two. Despite the challenges, many brands have the foundation for a strong identity resolution strategy in place, and they are thriving as a result. Specifically, more mature brands were 79% more successful at improving privacy safeguards to reduce regulatory and compliance risk, 247% more successful at improving marketing ROI, and over four times more effective at improving customer trust compared to their low-maturity peers. Additional insights include: Marketers Are Increasingly Playing a Key Strategic Role Within the Organization, But There is a Mandate to Demonstrate Value. Nearly three-quarters of respondents in our study agree the marketing function is more strategically important to their organization than it used to be, while almost two-thirds agree there’s more pressure than ever to prove the ROI or business performance of their activities. Consumers Expect Brands to Deliver Engaging Experiences Across Highly Fragmented Journeys: Tapad, a part of Experian found that 72% of respondents agree that customers demand more relevant, personalized experiences at the time and place of their choosing. At the same time, 67% of respondents recognize that customer purchase journeys take place over more touchpoints and channels than ever, and 59% of respondents agree that those journeys are less predictable and linear than they once were. Marketing Runs on Data, But the Rules Governing Customer Data Usage are Ever-Evolving: According to the study, 70% of decision-makers agree that consumer data is the lifeblood of their marketing strategies – fueling the personalized, omnichannel experiences customers demand. At the same time, 69% of respondents recognize that customers are increasingly aware of how their data is being used. At least two-thirds agree that data deprecation, including tighter restrictions on data use (66%), as well as operating system and browser changes impacting third-party cookies (68%) means that legacy marketing strategies are unlikely to remain viable in the long-term.“ Our latest survey findings give us a better understanding of how our customers and other companies around the world are trying to master the relationship between people, their data and their devices,” said Mark Connon, General Manager at Tapad, a part of Experian. “This research shows why it’s fundamental for the industry to continuously work to develop solutions that are agnostic. Tapad, a part of Experian has worked tirelessly to deliver on this with our Tapad Graph, and by introducing solutions like Switchboard to help the evolving ecosystem and in turn helping customers reap the benefits of better identity in both short and long-term.” The study is founded on an online survey of over 300 decision-makers at global brands and agencies, which was fielded from March to April, 2021. Data deprecation and identity are fast-developing, moving targets, so this study delivers targeted insights and recommendations for how to prepare for coming shifts in customer data strategies – whether they manifest tomorrow or a year from now. Get in touch
With the recent announcement of delaying third-party cookie deprecation to 2024, the industry has more time to rethink how to identify and communicate with consumers.
As today’s digital landscape gets more and more complicated there are more ways for brands to connect with users and drive purchases and more ways for ad tech to target and measure those touch points. As in-person shopping picks up steam due to the re-normalization of society post-COVID 19; the connection between digital ads and in-person purchases needs to be made once again. With the rise of Connected TV throughout the pandemic there are even more digital opportunities to target a user. But how do you make sure that those brand engagements are captured and correctly attributed to offline purchases and conversions? The answer lies in a holistic identity resolution strategy. Cross-device identity resolution with The Tapad Graph connects the identifiers and devices of individuals within a household to each other; enabling targeting, frequency capping, extension, segmentation and measurement or attribution between devices; including Connected TV and hashed (privacy-protected) email addresses along with Cookies, Mobile Ad Ids and IP Address. Brands can join their first-party data to The Tapad Graph to execute strategies that connect online and offline data for pre, mid and post-campaign efficiencies. Let’s imagine a scenario in which an outdoor retail brand is targeting users watching specific content on a Connected TV device. Powered by identity resolution, they start with a general ad on CTV and continue targeting down individual paths with each user. When one of them converts in store and makes a purchase; the outdoor retailer can connect that action through location and in-store traffic data with the cross-device identity resolution used to execute the digital campaign. Now the actions of the user online and offline are resolved for more accurate measurement and attribution after the campaign ends. But it doesn’t stop there– the brand’s CRM data can be reactivated for the next digital campaign and leveraged to capitalize on the most effective media mix for the user who made the purchase previously. These combined insights can be invaluable in shaping up future campaign strategies with geo-contextual ads, recommended additional products and personalization to help drive more conversions and purchases in-store or online. As in-person shopping picks back up and marketers are tasked once again with balancing online and in-store KPIs, the right identity resolution strategy can unlock necessary efficiencies for retailers, ad tech vendors and agencies tasked with supporting these initiatives. Get in touch