Retailers know the value of personalized offers and communications based on customer preferences more than most. They’re also acquainted with buyers being more aware of data collection practices now than ever before. With governments enacting new privacy and data protection regulations in jurisdictions worldwide, retailers must now balance strict compliance requirements while also delivering a personalized customer experience.
That’s not all. Apple and Google have both issued new guidelines on data collection, requiring maximum transparency in retailer apps with declarations for third-party trackers and personal data collection policies. To further complicate things, the deprecation of third-party cookies is looming on the horizon. In 2024, third-party cookies are going away for good, which will eliminate tracking, data collection, and ad personalization and targeting. While consumers enjoy the benefits of personalized communications, they are increasingly concerned about how companies use, store, and secure their data. Brands must establish trust and demonstrate a transparent value exchange to convince consumers to share their data.
This evolving world of strict data compliance and protection might seem daunting. But it’s also an opportunity to deliver engaging customer experiences and build trust across the various touchpoints with your brand. From engaging users from their first visit to your website, implementing creative in-store strategies to providing easy post-purchase experiences – adopting a consent and preference management strategy can help you capitalize on that opportunity.
Getting started now is paramount. Taking a wait-and-see approach will only diminish your capacity to market to customers and monetize interactions.
How can you navigate these challenges to build trust with customers?
Retailers interact with customers across physical and digital properties with numerous data collection points. These include requesting consent and preferences at the first website or in-store visit, tracking nurture activities and post-purchase interactions, and storing purchase data, history, and payment methods.
To effectively manage this data collection, you need to understand how various regulations define consent. One size does not always fit all. The EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), as amended by the California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA) on January 1, 2023—are the most prominent privacy laws and regulations governing how companies should handle customer data. It’s important to keep track of the applicable regulations for your business and ensure that your processes address any possible nuances that are present.
Here’s some ways below that your business can generally cover its compliance bases:
While achieving compliance is critical, providing a simple way for customers to navigate consent and preference management processes is also essential. Include a simple explanation of who is processing the data, what data is being processed, and why it’s being processed. This information can be instrumental in helping customers understand the value they will receive, increasing the likelihood of them sharing data.
Harness the value of collected data for preference management-based marketing
Personalized experiences are the future of retail. They require the effective use of collected data to develop customized campaigns that are non-intrusive and valuable for customers.
Cookie banners are the first step towards this. Most often, when a visitor hits your website for the first time, they are considered “unknown”, meaning they haven’t interacted with the brand before and the brand likely doesn’t have an identifier to validate who the individual is. A cookie banner, also known a consent management platform (CMP), allows an individual to opt-in or out of purposes such as advertising and analytics, while also educating them about how and why their data is being collected.
Once your CMP is up and running, the next step is to evolve your program to implement a full end-to-end consent and preference management system. What’s the difference? Moving from basic CMP to a modern consent and preference management solutions enables responsible data acquisition and activation. It enables businesses to collect and connect the dots between consent, preferences, and durable identifiers such as email addresses, collected across a range of user journeys. This data is then integrated and activated across your business, leveraging pre-built integrations and connectors to enforce and govern consumer privacy decisions. This allows businesses to focus on driving data-driven innovation while automating the compliance elements of data capture and activation.
Here are three ways you can meet evolving customer expectations for personalized experiences:
Sharing this data with your marketing tech stack and activating this consented data through first-party data strategies is how consent and preferences can bring the most value to your organization and your organization.
Design an effective consent and preference strategy for the retail journey
Developing your consent and preference strategy requires analyzing how consumers interact with your brand throughout their journey and identifying how to deliver the best possible experience. To ensure consistent customer experiences and delivery of personalized marketing campaigns, you must aggregate data collected from websites and in-store visits into a single repository. Here’s a look at how you can engage with customers across four stages of the retail journey:
Create personalized touchpoints encouraging customers to interact with the preference center to help build loyalty, lower opt-out rates, and keep customers engaged with your brand for initial sales and product add-ons. Doing this also strengthens compliance with data collection, privacy, and protection regulations, helping avoid penalties and fees.
How can a consent and preference management system help?
Each stage of the consumer journey requires specific types of communication from retailers. Customers must provide their consent and indicate preferences for what communications they’d like to receive and how. Further, companies need a way to automate and streamline how they comply with data privacy and protection laws. When companies deploy a consent and preference management system, they can expect to see an impressive ROI. In 2022, the estimated ROI for consent and preference management was just over $46 for every $1.21 spent.
Deploying a consent and preference management system provides retailers with numerous benefits:
Learn more about OneTrust Consent and Preferences
OneTrust Consent and Preference Management helps companies use customer data to drive personalization, segmentation, and higher-performing campaigns. Real-time dashboards and analytics inform customers how to measure, report, and improve data-driven decision-making.
Learn more about how you can meet compliance requirements while building consumer trust and loyalty in retail with the white paper – Transform retail experiences: Building trust in the age of modern privacy.