Our Approach to First-Party and Business Data Collection

Created by Todd Belcher, Modified on Mon, 26 Aug at 2:57 PM by Todd Belcher

A key distinction we make when working with a client on tracking is that between first-party data and business data.


First-party data relates directly to an identifiable individual or device-- whether a known customer or anonymous consented user. 


Business data is a broader category that includes first-party data, and may include stripped down versions of the same information. 


All business data is not personal data, subject to privacy regulations.


A count of sessions per day does not require first-party data at all. 


Recording the number of total sessions sourced through a specific utm_campaign parameter-- for example "Branded Campaigns - Facebook"-- also does not require first-party data.


And, if a conversion event happens within that session, personal data is not a requirement for tracking and optimizing off that information.

We help clients achieve business goals. Personalization is a terrific tactic and part of the overall strategy, but it generally requires consent. In order to include all customers in the analysis, perform these exercises in a uniform, business metrics approach to supplement strong first-party datasets.


Obtaining consent and winning customers is the ultimate goal, but that can only be maximized through optimization that is able to perceive the customer base as a whole.

Was this article helpful?

That’s Great!

Thank you for your feedback

Sorry! We couldn't be helpful

Thank you for your feedback

Let us know how can we improve this article!

Select at least one of the reasons
CAPTCHA verification is required.

Feedback sent

We appreciate your effort and will try to fix the article