Craig Dennis
January 8, 2024
13 minutes
Imagine being able to target exactly who you want with personalized advertisements. Knowing who you want to target is one problem, but uploading your audience segments to your ad platforms is another problem altogether, and this key challenge is the exact reason LiveRamp exists.
LiveRamp helps you build enriched audiences for marketing campaigns and automatically onboard your data to your ad platforms like Facebook and Google in the realm of AdTech.
To help you understand more how LiveRamp achieves this, this article will cover:
LiveRamp is a data onboarding platform that gathers a company’s online and offline customer data, maps the data to individual customer profiles, and uploads enriched audience segments to advertising platforms.
Customer data at most companies is usually fragmented. This becomes a problem as teams look to scale advertising programs because your ads are only as good as your target audience. Without a reliable way to create comprehensive audiences of ideal customers, you leave money on the table in your paid campaigns.
LiveRamp was founded in 2011 and created a solution to this problem that was better than the alternative of bad data and manual uploads. Since 2011, they have grown to be a billion-dollar company with a near monopoly on the data onboarding space. However, they have recently struggled to adapt their offerings to the new world of cloud data warehouses, and newer, more flexible, more affordable competitors have emerged.
Here’s how a former LiveRamp employee defines the company:
“LiveRamp is a classic middleware company. LiveRamp moves data between marketing applications.
Middleware companies are essentially just integration companies. They integrate a bunch of software vendors so they can move data across those software vendors. Middleware companies are very valuable because they tend to have extremely high utility to both their customers and partners (and often end up essentially owning a market).
The economics of a middleware company can look very similar to a B2B marketplace. Marketplaces have buyers and suppliers. It is hard to get the buyers without the suppliers … and vice versa. So they have a large cold start problem. But once they do get started, they have a super flywheel."
LiveRamp solves the “fragmented data” problem for paid marketing teams by creating a centralized database for all your customers and their corresponding behavioral data. The platform enables you to create segments and then upload audience cohorts to the advertising platform of your choice.
This data onboarding challenge is difficult for a few reasons. Firstly, merging the two into a usable customer profile is very difficult as you collect data from various sources, including offline and online. Companies often have multiple identifiers on different data points. For example, from your website data, you have a user ID; from your email data, you likely have an email address; from your offline data (e.g., an in-store purchase), you might have a phone number or a transaction ID.
To use this data, marketers need to be able to map this data to a single profile and create a behavioral log for each person. Without this, you can’t reliably build different audience cohorts for personalized advertising campaigns.
However, even if you can build audiences, you still need to sync them to your ad platforms. There are two major hurdles here.
This multi-faceted problem is exactly what LiveRamp seeks to solve.
There are three core components or factors you have to consider when using LiveRamp.
Upload Data: First, you must upload your offline and online customer data to LiveRamp. You must follow their strict file format to ensure no problems. Uploading can be done via SFTP, retrieved via an S3 or GCS bucket, or LiveRamp connect.
Identity Resolution: LiveRamp anonymizes your data and creates an identity graph through identity resolution, where your customer data gets merged into a single profile and receives a unique identifier called a RampID.
Data Activation: With a more comprehensive view of your customers, you can send your data to multiple platforms to help find new customers and increase targeting by creating campaigns with the right message based on your segmentation.
LiveRamp aims to help you merge your many customer data sources. Having data scattered across your business means you’d never have a complete view of a single customer, preventing opportunities for hyper-personalization.
There are a few major downsides to how LiveRamp works:
While LiveRamp has many different features and capabilities, the company offers four base products: Activation, Authenticated Traffic Solution, Data Marketplace, and Identity Infrastructure.
LiveRamp offers a data activation product where you can send customer data to downstream destinations without creating or maintaining your integrations. The solution works by connecting the destination you wish to send data to, typically via an OAuth connection, and selecting the created audience segments to send to your end destination. LiveRamp offers over 600 destinations like Google Cloud, Amazon, and TikTok.
One thing to note is that this process can take between one and three days. This time delay is a large blocker for fast-moving marketing teams who want to test quickly. A pain point raised by LiveRamp customers is the inflexibility of the LiveRamp audience management features. You’re unable to edit existing audiences. Instead, you must consistently rebuild audiences and reconfigure them in ad platforms whenever you want to change your targeting.
Authenticated traffic solution (ATS) allows publishers to identify customers securely in real-time and present advertisements that would be relevant to them. It's a perfect solution to create audiences without needing third-party cookies or mobile identifiers, ideal for third-party cookie deprecation.
When a user signs up for something on your website, like a newsletter, their information is collected. This information, or identifier, is then processed by a system known as ATS, which converts it into a secure, encrypted form. This encrypted form is called an identity envelope and contains a special RampID identifier.
Only certain Supply-Side Platforms SSPs equipped with LiveRamp Sidecar can decrypt these envelopes. When the user visits a part of the website with advertisements, the SSP uses the Sidecar to decrypt the envelope and obtain the RampID. This RampID is then sent in bid requests to Demand-Side Platforms (DSPs), platforms representing advertisers.
These DSPs use the RampID to identify the user and make bids to display their ads to the user. The DSP with the highest bid wins, and its advertisement is displayed on the user's website.
The benefit of ATS is that it protects PII throughout the programmatic advertising supply chain via RampID, reducing any privacy concerns with your data.
The LiveRamp Data Marketplace allows you to buy and sell marketing data. You can create segments of the data you wish to sell and add them to the marketplace for other companies to use. You can also purchase data if your customer dataset is incomplete or unavailable. This access to third-party data will help enrich your customer data with more data points, unlocking new actionable insights and segmentation options for your marketing campaigns.
If you want to sell data on LiveRamp, you can upload datasets directly to the storefront, where data buyers can then request specific segments and invoice you for their usage. Buying data is as simple as selecting the segments you want to buy, which you can find by searching keywords, phrases, or segment IDs. You are charged only when you activate the segments you select. The price varies depending on the pricing model chosen.
LiveRamp also offers identity resolution, where the platform deterministically matches all of your offline and online customer data into a single customer profile. The platform uses a unique identifier called RampID to help connect and recognize a user across different digital platforms and devices in a privacy-conscious way. The identifier of a customer is resolved into LiveRamp’s identity graph, which is used to create a unified view of your customers and resolve their identities.
One of the main reasons you’d turn to a company like LiveRamp is to enhance the impact of your data. There are several use cases that LiveRamp can help you achieve, which include:
One of LiveRamp's biggest advantages is that the platform is well-known and very established. However, the length of a company's running does not indicate quality. So, with that in mind, here is a list of the biggest pros and cons of LiveRamp.
Pros | Cons |
---|---|
Helps increase match rates to ad platforms | Expensive |
Well-known brand name | Poor UI |
Multiple product offerings | Limited to LiveRamp’s identity resolution algorithm |
Ability to sync data to ad platforms | Stores your sensitive data |
Matches offline and online data | Your identity graph is owned and managed by LiveRamp |
Several competitors in the market offer various data connectivity, management, and analytic features. Some of these alternatives include:
Here are some of the most common questions people ask when evaluating LiveRamp.
A diverse range of companies use LiveRamp across various industries, such as Ford Motor Company, Kimberly-Clark, Mindshare, The North Face, and Panasonic Corp. Companies in media and advertising, consumer packaged goods (CPG), retail, technology platforms are all users of LiveRamp. However, with more competition providing data onboarding solutions, LiveRamp no longer has a monopoly on the advertising world.
LiveRamp is neither a customer data platform (CDP), a demand-side platform (DSP), or a data management platform (DMP). It describes itself as a data collaboration tool that helps unite all your customer data and provides deep insights into your customers to create more effective advertising campaigns.
LiveRamp isn’t a CDP because it doesn’t focus on collecting, modeling, and storing that data. LiveRamp can send your data to downstream tools, but a CDP has a much broader scope of destinations you can send data to, such as email service providers, CRMs, and finance tools.
LiveRamp isn’t a DSP, as a DSP is a system that allows you to buy digital advertising inventory and manage multiple ad exchanges and data exchange accounts through one interface. A DSP focuses more on the automated buying of digital ad space.
LiveRamp is also not a DMP. A DMP collects, organizes, and activates large data sets, especially third-party data, mainly for advertising purposes. Its main aim is to segment audiences and target customers more effectively in advertising campaigns.
LiveRamp enables you to connect and activate your first-party data effectively but does not primarily supply it. It helps businesses leverage their existing data more effectively. It can facilitate access to third-party data through its extensive network of partners, but its core function is more about data management and integration rather than direct data provision.
Even though LiveRamp is a commonly used solution for data onboarding and identity resolution, it isn’t ideal, especially with the development of new technologies that offer better solutions.
If you’re looking for a cheaper, more flexible alternative to LiveRamp that offers more granularity around identity resolution and better match rates, book a demo with one of our solutions engineers to learn how you can implement Hightouch and replace LiveRamp.