Blick in das LC Gebäude

Research Talk by Garrett Johnson, Boston University (US)

16. Juni 2026

As part of the Marketing Research Seminar Series, Garrett Johnson presented joint work with Kobayashi and Gu on a topic that sits right at the intersection of advertising, privacy, and policy: how does retargeting hold up when the underlying tracking infrastructure changes? Partnering with an advertiser intermediary, the team ran an industry-wide field experiment across more than 2,000 advertisers, comparing traditional retargeting with Google's Privacy Sandbox, which lets advertisers reach past site visitors without tracking cross-site browsing by moving the ad selling logic onto the user's device. The headline numbers are striking: retargeting lifts baseline conversions by 4.6%, and while removing third-party cookies cuts ad clicks and click-through conversions sharply, Privacy Sandbox recovers about 46% of what was lost. Once you adjust for ad spend, the gap narrows even further, with Sandbox reaching around 86% of traditional retargeting on click per dollar. The team also makes a convincing case that part of the remaining gap likely reflects limited supply-side adoption rather than a fundamental weakness of the technology itself.

What I really enjoyed about Garrett's talk was how different it felt from many of the other MRSS sessions, both in methodology and in subject matter. I think this is one of the most valuable things about the series for PhD students: getting exposed to researchers who approach marketing from very different angles, whether that is behavioral lab work, structural modeling, or, in this case, a large-scale industry collaboration with real policy stakes. Each style of work asks different questions and accepts different kinds of evidence, and sitting through a talk that is far from your own methods is honestly one of the better ways to figure out what kind of researcher you want to become.

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