It has been 20 years since the first banner ad appeared on a website. At the time, they were eye-catching! Innovative! Cutting-edge!

But as they proliferated, banner ads turned into a nightmare for companies. They disrupted sight lines, interrupted the user experience, and slowed website performance.

Fast-forward to today. A whole new marketing phenomenon has blossomed, enriching the user experience like never before: cloud technology. It is innovative! Mesmerizing!

And it's threatening to turn into its own unique nightmare for companies.

The Age of the Marketing Cloud

Welcome to the age of the marketing cloud! Today's most-visited websites in the US have on average 75 technologies in their marketing clouds, delivering anything a modern user could desire.

Here's the scary part: Although companies are adding website technologies to their marketing clouds at breakneck speed, only 13% of their IT people say they are "very effective" at managing those technologies, according to a survey conducted by Gigaom Research for Ghostery (my company, which provides marketing cloud management).

In fact, the 300 US IT decision-makers surveyed estimated they could gain an additional $50 million of ROI for their companies if they could better manage their digital marketing vendors.

In other words, IT departments are struggling daily to control the chaos of the mushrooming marketing cloud.

There Are Ghosts in That Machine

Here are the top three ways your marketing cloud could be housing ghosts that could haunt your nightmares—and cost you millions.

Threat 1: Security Gaps

Many sites have high security standards, with 42% of respondents to the Gigaom survey reporting their sites are 76% to 100% secured using SSL and HTTPS. But what keeps the IT people up at night is that any website is only as secure as its weakest link on its weakest page.

Every hour of every day, websites fall victim to security gaps as nonsecure code is placed indirectly onto them by third-parties such as advertisers, social engines, and analytics companies. The more security blind spots in your marketing cloud, the greater the threat of a security breach like a "Man in the Middle Attack."

If you think your site is safe 24/7/365, think again.

Threat 2: Poor Customer Experience

It's baaack. Just as banner ads began to interrupt the customer experience, so too is the marketing cloud threatening to push customers away when it's supposed to be pulling them in closer. A full 45% of Gigaom survey respondents cited poor customer experience as a potential risk and a cost of marketing cloud technologies.

The problem: third-party content can easily slow down a site and cause significant latency issues. The more embedded objects (like tags) on a site, the greater the impact on browsing. So, for many marketers, it's still a choice between gathering compelling customer data and providing a positive customer experience.

Threat 3: Competitive Data Leakage

Yes, they're out there: unscrupulous "competitors" just waiting for the chance to steal your customers. Any failure to control the technologies accessing your site's digital assets can lead to the loss of precious information to "partners" who also serve your competition.

For example, a marketing cloud vendor (e.g., an ad network) can easily cookie-bomb a retailer's site and then resell that audience to the competition. Suddenly a customer in the midst of making a purchasing decision can be lured away to a competitor's website for the exact same product.

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Three Threats Lurking in Your Marketing Cloud—and How to Bust Them

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Scott Meyer

Scott Meyer is CEO of Ghostery, monitoring consumer and business data challenges worldwide and driving solutions in website security, performance, governance, and privacy.

Twitter: @scottmeyer

LinkedIn: Scott Meyer