Home Content Studio Match Rates Are The Real Addressability Crisis

Match Rates Are The Real Addressability Crisis

SHARE:

Every conversation about addressability eventually lands on the same word: fragmentation. But the real symptom of that fragmentation isn’t just operational complexity; it’s also declining match rates. That single number explains why marketers are struggling to make their data work.

Match rate is the percentage of users you can actually recognize and reach when data moves between systems, from onboarding to activation to measurement. And it’s getting worse. According to a recent study from Go Addressable, CIMM and Truthset, IP match rates are dismally inaccurate, with IP-to-email matches accurate only about 16% of the time on average.

The industry’s signal loss problem is actually a match rate problem, and it’s costing advertisers scale, accuracy and efficiency.

The cost of too many partners

Here’s the uncomfortable truth: The more partners you involve, the lower your match rate will be. Every handoff between systems creates another sync point, another data loss event.

The industry has increasingly focused on supply-chain optimization, reducing intermediaries, cutting inefficiencies and streamlining media flows. Yet, while media supply chains are being optimized, match rates have been largely neglected. The industry has simply accepted the status quo.

When a brand onboards its data, it often passes through multiple ID systems: emails, cookies, device IDs, DSP identifiers and publisher IDs. Each translation creates friction and sacrifices a portion of the audience. What started as a strong first-party file ends up reaching only a fraction of its potential audience.

Fewer hops, higher match rates

Solving this problem requires more than supply-chain simplification; it demands identity optimization. Offline data onboarding, cross-device activation, measurement and planning all depend on consistent, high-quality identifiers.

Privacy regulation adds another layer of complexity. GDPR, CCPA, LGPD and APPI all define personal data and consent differently. Yet most identity providers haven’t built the legal and technical infrastructure to navigate these differences across jurisdictions.

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

Get our editors’ roundup delivered to your inbox every weekday.

A unified partner with global coverage, privacy compliance and end-to-end control of the graph and activation layer keeps your data connected, maximizes match rates and ensures campaigns deliver measurable impact.

One identity layer

This is why ID5 acquired TrueData: to improve match rates and reduce fragmentation by unifying a comprehensive identity graph with the most scaled alternative ID. The graph connects signals across devices, households, partners and channels, providing continuity and accuracy.

The ID5 ID then carries that unified identity through the bidstream, making it actionable for activation and measurement. Together, they preserve more audience throughout the campaign life cycle.

This is visible across common use cases, including:

Offline data onboarding: The graph translates more signals between systems, while the ID ensures those matches persist across platforms, turning a larger share of first-party data into addressable reach.

Cross-device activation: The graph links devices and channels, and the ID maintains recognition as insights move from mature, data-rich environments such as the web into CTV or gaming, enabling scale without duplication.

Measurement and planning: The graph allows efficient connection to conversion data, while the ID ensures the same user is recognized at the impression and outcome level. This allows results to be attributed reliably, even when signals are limited on the converting device.

Identity only delivers value when it’s built on an end-to-end connection. By maintaining that link while respecting consent and data protection standards, the industry can preserve reach and continuity, so that more of the audience stays addressable and performance can be measured reliably across channels.

For more articles featuring Mathieu Roche, click here.

Must Read

John Gentry, CEO, OpenX

‘I Am A Lucky And Thankful Man’: Remembering OpenX CEO John ‘JG’ Gentry

To those who knew him, John “JG” Gentry wasn’t just a CEO. He was a colleague who showed up with genuine care and curiosity.

Prebid Takes Over AdCP’s Code For Creating Sell-Side AI Agents

The group that turned header bidding software into an open standard is bringing the same approach to publisher-side AI agents.

Meta logo seen on smartphone and AI letters on the background. Concept for Meta Facebook Artificial Intelligence. Stafford, UK, May 2, 2023

Meta Bets That Its Ad Machine Can Fund Its AI Dreams

Meta is channeling its booming ad revenue into a $135 billion AI drive to power its “personal superintelligence” future.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters
Comic: Header Bidding Rapper (Wrapper!)

Microsoft To Stop Caching Prebid Video Files, Leaving Publishers With A Major Ad Serving Problem

Most publishers have no idea that a major part of their video ad delivery will stop working on April 30, shortly after Microsoft shuts down the Xandr DSP.

AdExchanger's Big Story podcast with journalistic insights on advertising, marketing and ad tech

Guess Its AdsGPT Now?

Ads were going to be a “last resort” for ChatGPT, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman promised two years ago. Now, they’re finally here. Omnicom Digital CEO Jonathan Nelson joins the AdExchanger editorial team to talk through what comes next.

Comic: Marketer Resolutions

Hershey’s Undergoes A Brand Update As It Rethinks Paid, Earned And Owned Media

This Wednesday marks the beginning of Hershey’s first major brand marketing campaign since 2018