✕
Skip to content
Salesforce Ben
  • Events
  • Career
  • AppAssessor
  • Salesforce News
  • Articles by Role
    • Admins
    • DevOps
    • Developers
    • Marketers
    • Consultants
    • Architects
    • Business Analysts
  • Where to Start
  • Salesforce Certification List
  • How to Get Certified
  • Free Salesforce Practice Exams
    • Admin Practice Exam
    • Platform App Builder Practice Exam
    • Platform Developer 1 Practice Exam
  • How to Get a Job in Salesforce

Find us on:

Salesforce Ben
  • Events
  • Career
  • AppAssessor
  • Salesforce News
  • Articles by Role

      Articles by role:

    • Admins
    • DevOps
    • Developers
    • Marketers
    • Consultants
    • Architects
    • Business Analysts
    • Featured

      The Great Salesforce Job Market Reset

      By Sasha Semjonova

      December 09, 2024
      How to Avoid Bad Salesforce Partners: The Three-Question Test

      By Jon Cline

      January 08, 2025
  • Newsletter
  • user
    • Courses Login
  • Events
  • Career
  • AppAssessor
  • Salesforce News
  • Articles by Role

      Articles by role:

    • Admins
    • DevOps
    • Developers
    • Marketers
    • Consultants
    • Architects
    • Business Analysts
    • Featured

      The Great Salesforce Job Market Reset

      By Sasha Semjonova

      December 09, 2024
      How to Avoid Bad Salesforce Partners: The Three-Question Test

      By Jon Cline

      January 08, 2025

What's trending

Guide to Salesforce NPSP Soft Credits
Dynamic Interactions: Deep Dive Tutorial
Discover the New Sales Cloud Mobile Experience
Everything You Need to Know About Automated Document Generation in Salesforce
Monitor Your Product Consumption With Salesforce Digital Wallet

UPCOMING EVENTS

WITness Success

19
Aug

Louisville, KY

Community

Dreamforce 2025

14
Oct

San Francisco, CA

Salesforce Official

Florida Dreamin’ 2025

05
Nov

Clearwater Beach, FL

Community
See more
Share
Marketers / Account Engagement (Pardot) / Marketing Ops

Cookieless Future + Salesforce Marketing Data

By Timo Kovala

August 16, 2022

If you work in marketing, chances are that you already know that third-party cookies are being depreciated, soon to become a thing of the past. None of the major web browsers will store them for use any longer – in fact, Firefox and Safari already block them by default. A latecomer to the party, Google Chrome is scheduled to block third-party cookies by the end of 2024.

The bottom line: if your marketing relies on third-party cookies for targeting, it will no longer be possible after 2024.

When marketers are asked what their plans are in light of the third-party cookie sunset, you’d often be met with blank stares. This guide will discuss the impacts you can expect from this transition, other marketing options, and how to manage your tech stack accordingly.

What are Third-Party Cookies?

Third-party cookies are a text file that is stored in your browser used for identifying your device as you browse a website. That’s the simplest way to describe them but it also helps to compare them with first-party cookies.

Some cookies are essential to guarantee a smooth user experience, for example when you shop for clothes online, you expect your shopping cart items to stay with you as you browse through different pages. This is possible thanks to first-party cookies; a website places a cookie on your browser and links it to individual transactions, which ensures that your activity is tracked and saved appropriately.

“First-party” means that the cookies are placed on your browser by the same website that you are on, whereas third-party cookies are placed by a completely different website from the one that you are browsing.

Examples of third-party cookies include:

  • Marketing automation tools that place their tracking cookie to record engagement with marketing assets, such as page visits, etc.
  • Social media platforms that place their tracking cookie when you visit an online store which allows platforms to serve you targeted ads on Facebook, LinkedIn, etc.

Third-Party Cookie Sunset: Immediate Impacts

While the third-party cookie sunset is not the end of the world for marketers, it does fundamentally change some key dynamics. Online advertisers essentially lose the ability to target anonymous website visitors based on their behavior – there are two primary examples of this:

1. Retargeting

If you use retargeting to serve ads to previous website visitors, you may have to rethink your strategy.

Retargeting works by tracking anonymous visitors using a tracking pixel or – you guessed it – a third-party cookie. With browsers blocking both mechanisms in the future, retargeting is no longer possible.

2. Behavioral targeting

A more sophisticated form of retargeting that’s also becoming more difficult. With behavioral targeting you could create social media ad campaigns to target people who had browsed an item without completing the purchase. Airlines and travel agencies have used this method successfully for years, delivering personalized display ads of your favorite holiday destinations during those dark, cold winter months.

Resurgence of contextual advertising

We will most likely see marketers lean towards contextual advertising, where ads are shown based on other website content, rather than visitor activity.

From Anonymous Retargeting, to Identity-Based Marketing

Zoom out to the bigger picture, and we will see marketing shift focus from third-party data to first-party data. You should see that there are opportunities for you in the cookieless world.

First-party cookies aren’t going anywhere, however, first-party cookies alone do not allow you to create audiences for advertising. For this, we need to first convert our anonymous visitors into identified prospects. Once a visitor submits a web form, they are no longer simply a device with a cookie – they are a real person with a name, history, preferences, and attributes.

Identity-based marketing means using identified profiles instead of anonymous cookies as a basis for marketing. With a marketing automation system like Pardot/Salesforce Marketing Cloud Account Engagement (MCAE), you can easily segment, target, and deliver messages over email and other channels to your prospects. Combined with Marketing Cloud Advertising Studio, you can even retarget them in social media and search engine marketing.

The beauty of identity-based marketing is its transparency: you own the data, you are responsible for it, the prospect has full choice over how it is used, but you have the power to fulfill their wish instead of relying on external advertising platforms to manage that. As a marketer you need to first convince them to identify themselves and give consent.

Pardot First-Party Tracking

Marketing automation systems have too long relied on third-party cookies for tracking web activity. If you are using Salesforce Pardot (AKA. Marketing Cloud Account Engagement), you are in luck! Pardot first-party tracking means that Pardot’s web tracking is moved from the go.pardot.com domain to your specified tracker domain, e.g. www2.companyname.com.

This has two major benefits:

  1. Improves trust and transparency as your tracking moves from an external site to the one the visitor is engaging with (first-party site).
  2. Future-proofs your tracking and reporting by moving away from an outdated tracking method.

Pardot’s first-party tracking is definitely the way to go and there are no real downsides to it, except for some implementation work. Before you transition, there are some things to consider so that you avoid data loss or visitor duplication.

High-level, there are three steps for implementing Pardot first-party tracking:

1. Enable first-party tracking from Pardot Settings under “First-Party Tracking”. During implementation, I’d recommend checking all three checkboxes to avoid possible data loss. You can switch off third-party cookies and tracking once you have successfully completed all three steps.

2. Update the tracker domains you are using with a default campaign by navigating to “Domain Management” and clicking “Edit” for each tracker domain individually.

3. Update your new tracking code to your website. Under “Domain Management”, scroll to “Tracking Code Generator” and place it in the HTML source code of your website. You should also remove any older versions of the tracking code, so as to not generate duplicate visitor tracking. Note: if you are using Google Tag Manager or similar platform for managing tracking codes, you need to alter the tracking code before placing it in your container.

Supercharge Your Marketing With a CDP

If you have been running six-figure digital advertising campaigns, you need something in your tech stack that really packs a punch.

That something is a Customer Data Platform (CDP). CDPs give you identity-based marketing on steroids. No matter where the interaction takes place – whether on your own website, a partner’s website, in-store, or even a mobile app – any identified individual can be brought into the CDP and used for segmentation and omnichannel targeting.

READ MORE: Complete Guide to Customer Data Platforms (and Salesforce CDP)

Final Thoughts

All this discussion about tracking and cookies can lead to information overload. Don’t let this stop you from taking practical steps to ensure that you are covered. To help you get started in transitioning cookieless marketing, you would do well to ask yourself the following questions:

  1. Which third-party cookies does your website use currently? You can check this by navigating to the site and checking your browser for cookies. In the list of cookies, if you can see domains other than the one you are on, you’ll know that they are third-party cookies.
  2. Are the third-party cookies relevant for your business? If the cookies no longer play an important role in your marketing pipeline, you can remove the respective tracking codes from your website.
  3. Is your advertising reliant on third-party cookies? If cookie-based advertising plays an important role in demand generation, you should consider different alternatives. You may be satisfied with transitioning to contextual advertising instead. If you’d prefer to continue tracking and retargeting visitors, identity-based marketing is the way to go.
  4. Are your reports based on third-party tracking? Before adopting new tracking methods, you should always first examine your analytics and reporting to see if they are utilizing third-party tracking data. If so, you need to update them as well. Otherwise, you could experience discrepancies and data loss.
  5. Do you need to update system preferences to enable first-party tracking? As mentioned in the case of Pardot, you may need to manually update a platform’s system preferences to switch on first-party tracking. Go through all the platforms that you know are utilizing web traffic data.

The Author

Timo Kovala

Timo is a Marketing Architect at Capgemini, working with enterprises and NGOs to ensure a sound marketing architecture and user adoption. He is certified in Salesforce, Marketing Cloud Engagement, and Account Engagement.

More like this:

Marketers

Your Guide to Daylight Saving and Time Zones in Marketing Cloud Engagement

By Alina Makarova

June 25, 2025
Marketers

Salesforce Marketing Cloud Next (vs. MCE, MCAE, MCG, MCA)

By Lucy Mazalon

June 16, 2025
Marketers

8 Takeaways from Salesforce Connections ’25

By Lucy Mazalon

June 16, 2025

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Comments:

    Susan Baird
    August 23, 2022 3:11 pm
    Timo, this post is exactly what I've been needing! I've heard the dire warnings of cookies going away, but I wasn't sure what that would look like, so thank you for your clear and thorough explanation! I am confused about one part, though. You said "Update the tracker domains you are using with a default campaign by navigating to “Domain Management” and clicking “Edit” for each tracker domain individually." Update the domains with what? If the tracker domains (CNAMES) are already set up and verified, do you just mean associate them with a different campaign?
    Reply
    Timo Kovala
    August 24, 2022 6:33 am
    Hi Susan! You are correct, no need to update the DNS, simply editing the entry within MCAE by adding the campaign is enough. Sorry for the confusion!
    Reply
    Robert
    December 09, 2022 9:01 am
    Hey Timo, I appreciate your document but i do have some improvements, if you have created your own domains within Pardot for first party tracking you'd know that you'd need to; - buy the domain you're going to add, so that you can configure it to belong to the corporate website of the company you are working for. (example: to use first party tracking script from Pardot for domain info.salesforceben.com you would need to make sure that the Cname is verified and belongs to salesforceben.com) this doesn't happen automatically. - Once domain is bought and configured, you can go ahead and add it, then you need to extract the validation key and add it via IT department to your website hosting as well. Next to this, this tells us about first party tracking scripts, but not about a cookieless future, as first party tracking still drops cookies mate. Would you btw know of any ways in which a pardot form could be iframed, or any other medium that does not drop a cookie?
    Reply

Newsletter:

    By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

    Find us on:

    Salesforce Ben

    Salesforce Ben
    Third Floor Library Building
    Sun Street
    Tewkesbury
    Gloucestershire
    United Kingdom
    GL20 5NX

    • Where to Start
    • Salesforce Certification List
    • How to Get Certified
    • Free Salesforce Practice Exams
      • Admin Practice Exam
      • Platform App Builder Practice Exam
      • Platform Developer 1 Practice Exam
    • How to Get a Job in Salesforce
    • Events
    • Career
    • AppAssessor
    • Salesforce News
    • Articles by Role
    • Admins
    • DevOps
    • Developers
    • Marketers
    • Consultants
    • Architects
    • Business Analysts
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Write For Us
    • Influencer Program
    • Advertise With Us
    • Pledge 1%
    • Privacy Policy
    • Change Cookie Preferences
    • Log in to Courses

    © 2014-2025 SalesforceBen.com