Home Privacy How This Kid-Focused Content Company Uses First-Party Data To Reach Households With Children

How This Kid-Focused Content Company Uses First-Party Data To Reach Households With Children

SHARE:

It’s a challenging time to be a kid-focused media and production company like Driver Studios.

The FTC is proposing changes to the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) Rule, which would require online companies to turn off targeted ads to children under 13 by default.

US state laws, meanwhile, are introducing new measures to protect children online and, in some cases, raising the threshold for the age of consent.

Driver Studios is grappling with the limitations being placed on marketing to children. The company produces YouTube content for kids as well as TV commercials and custom digital ads for brands.

It also has what it calls a COPPA-compliant ad network that only serves ads contextually, meaning based on broad age groups or content category across mobile games, YouTube and streaming.

Most of Driver’s clients have child-focused products or services, including entertainment brands like Disney and Nickelodeon and toy companies such as Hasbro and Moose Toys.

Now, one of its main objectives is to reach and target adult audiences with an interest in these brands, said Diana Horowitz, Driver’s CRO and co-chief operations officer. This includes parents and “kidults” who have overlapping interests with children (e.g., Disney movies or action figures).

Hey, kids

Driver Studios already delivers impressions to tens of millions of adults, many of which are parents co-viewing with children.

But it’s difficult to know for sure who’s on the other side of the screen: a parent, a child or both. And Driver can’t collect any data without being sure it isn’t identifying a child.

To reach households with children, but without overstepping, Driver Studios partnered with privacy tech startup Qonsent last month for help collecting first-party data that can be used to target ads to a broader adult audience.

Subscribe

AdExchanger Daily

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

Through its integration with Qonsent, Driver Studios can prompt users to share information, such as their email and phone number, via interstitial ad units that also offer brand promotions or discounts.

Once users respond, Qonsent validates their information through a partnership with TransUnion to make sure it matches a real adult. Once their identity is verified, Driver Studios sends a link via email or text for users to answer security questions (e.g., last four digits of the user’s social security number) to confirm they’re the adult in the room and not a child entering their parent’s information. Then, users can redeem their offer, while Driver Studios gets to use that household’s data for targeting and retargeting purposes.

Driver Studios can then also collect additional information, such as the IP address associated with the parent’s mobile device.

Age appropriate

But to be clear, this process “doesn’t mean we’re going to start collecting data [about] kids,” said Jesse Redniss, CEO and co-founder of Qonsent.

There are no browser cookies or tracking pixels involved, and household data, such as an IP address, can’t be used to identify children, Redniss said.

And for any consented data collected through the ad unit, including email or phone number, Qonsent allows brands to generate alternative identifiers, including UID 2.0 and LiveRamp’s RampID.

But Driver Studios can use an IP address to retarget households that seem most likely to make a purchase based on engagement, Horowitz said, and help advertisers target similar households to widen their reach.

A more precise targeting approach is also “an opportunity for direct response advertising,” Horowitz said, which normally isn’t an option for kid-focused brands because of COPPA restrictions.

For example, once Driver Studios verifies an adult’s identity, it can retarget that person’s device with ads not meant for children (such as for an alcohol brand) at times when kids are unlikely to be co-viewing, such as during sessions of Words With Friends or Sudoku.

Let the playtime begin?

Must Read

Scott’s Miracle-Gro Is Seeing Green With Retail Media

It’s lawn season – and you know what that means. Scott’s Miracle-Gro commercials, of course. Except this time, spots for Scott’s will be brought to you by The Home Depot’s retail media network.

Walled Garden Platforms Are Drowning Marketers In Self-Attributed Sales

Sales are way up; ROAS is through the roof across search, social and ecommerce. At least, that’s what the ad platforms say.

Comic: Working Hard or Hardly Working?

Shadier Than Forbes? Premium Publishers Are Partnering With Content Farms To Make A Quick Programmatic Buck

The practice involves monetizing resold subdomains jammed with recycled MFA articles produced by notorious content farms.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

Adalytics Claims Colossus SSP Is Misdeclaring IDs In Its Bid Requests

Colossus SSP, a DEI-focused supply-side platform owned by Direct Digital Holdings (DDH), is the subject of Adalytics’ latest report released Friday. It’s a doozy.

The Trade Desk Reframes Its Open Internet Vision As ‘The Premium Internet’

The Trade Desk is focusing beyond the overall “open internet” and on what CEO Jeff Green calls the “premium internet.”

Comic: Welcome Aboard

Google Search’s Core Updates Are Crushing Sites And Reshaping The Web

Google Search, the web’s largest traffic and revenue generator for two decades, is in the midst of sweeping overhauls that have already altered how users are funneled around the internet.