RNC’s Voter Data Now Available Directly through Several Ad Platforms

The Republican National Committee’s exclusive voter data provider, Data Trust, is set to announce a slew of new partnerships with digital ad firms, part of an effort to make the party’s voter information more readily available to candidates and allies after years of lagging Democrats.

Data Trust has formed relationships with Google, Facebook, Rocket Fuel, Collective, Quantcast, Resonate, TubeMogul, Targeted Victory and Yume, according to the company, that will let right-leaning organizations go directly to those companies and target video, display, mobile and social ads using the RNC data managed by Data Trust.

The data in play is the RNC’s core information on voter history, Data Trust said. It will not include proprietary strategic information such as voter scores that individual campaigns might feed into their databases at Data Trust.

Other digital ad firms have offered targeting using voter data for years, but this is the first time since Data Trust was formed in 2013 as the RNC’s exclusive data provider that the party’s information has become available through wide distribution with ad tech firms.

“This is the first time that the foundational data and the millions and millions of historical data points has been so readily accessible,” said John DeStefano, president and CEO of Data Trust.

Last August, the Democratic National Committee began a program with data services firmExperian and political data company TargetSmart Communications to turn its voter file into data that can be used to aim video ads, addressable TV spots and mobile and desktop display ads at specific voters. The data matching was streamlined for ads on Facebook, Yahoo, MSN, AOL, addressable TV platforms including those of DirecTV and Dish Network, and digital ad exchanges through RocketFuel and BlueKai.

Using voter data to steer direct mail or digital ads requires first transforming it from offline to online form, a process often called onboarding.

“We found that when we were doing a lot of the one-off onboarding projects with different agencies there became a greater appetite,” said Mr. DeStefano. “As we head into the general election, we wanted to make sure we were well ahead of the prime buying season.”

This column by  originally appeared in Ad Age.

Categorized as: Blog Page, News & Press

Ready to Put Resonate to Work?

Hundreds of consumer brands, ad agencies, and political and advocacy organizations are using Resonate’s consumer insights to make better connections with their customers and yours. Don’t let your competition get ahead.

Request a Demo