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Showing posts with the label first-party data

Why Your SaaS Growth is Stalling at the Data Layer

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Every SaaS company says it values customer trust. Very few of them build the infrastructure that earns it. Trust is talked about as a brand quality — something you build through messaging, transparency in communication, and responsive support. Those things matter. But there is a more fundamental layer of trust that most SaaS businesses overlook entirely. It happens the moment a user realises whether or not a company is honest about data. Why Data Trust Is Now a Revenue Variable The relationship between data practices and SaaS revenue used to be indirect. Today it is direct. Enterprise buyers now routinely audit vendor data handling as part of procurement. They ask how user data is collected, stored, and protected. They want documentation. They want audit trails. If those things are not ready, deals slow down or fall apart. Individual users are also more aware. Studies show that users actively choose products based on perceived data honesty — and abandon products when they feel their da...

What Is Server-Side Tagging and Why Marketers Are Switching

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  Marketers everywhere are switching how they track visitors. The old method stops working. The new method solves problems you didn't know you had. Let me explain server-side tagging in simple terms. What Server-Side Tagging Actually Means Traditional tracking puts code directly on your website pages. When someone visits, their browser runs this code. This is client-side tagging. Server-side tagging works differently. The tracking happens on your server before the page reaches the visitor. Think of it like this: client-side tracking is like asking guests to sign a book when they enter your house. Server-side tracking is like you writing down who came before opening the door. Why Marketers Are Making the Switch Three big reasons drive this change: Ad blockers can't stop server-side tracking. Privacy laws are easier to follow. Data becomes more accurate and complete. When Apple and Google started blocking third-party cookies, client-side tracking broke. Marketers lost 30-...