The cookieless web has arrived. First-party data is the new strategic asset
Third-party cookies are effectively gone — through a combination of browser policy, regulator pressure and Apple's longer-running ATT framework. The replacements — first-party data, consented identifiers, server-side measurement — are no longer a future agenda item. They are now the working baseline.
What 'first-party data' really means
The phrase is overused. In practice it means: the data a brand legitimately collects on its own platforms (site visits, app sessions, newsletter subscriptions, purchase history, CRM records) with clear consent and a clear value exchange.
It is not a magic dataset. It is a discipline: collect the right things, store them well, keep consent clean, and connect them to activation channels through compliant pipelines.
Activation is where value is created
Owning the data is the prerequisite. Activating it — building durable audiences that work in Meta, Google, LinkedIn and emerging channels without depending on third-party cookies — is where measurable value appears. Lookalike modelling on first-party seed audiences is consistently the highest-performing campaign type for many brands now.
Spalder Technology's First-party Data service is built around exactly this — from data collection design through activation.
Travel destinations are an underrated case
Destinations sometimes assume first-party data is a retailer concept. It is not. A region with a strong newsletter, an active Instagram audience, a website with returning visitors, and a clear tourism CRM is sitting on durable advertising assets — audiences that can be activated for partner campaigns far more effectively than buying cold third-party data.