What is First-Party Data?
First-Party Data is the customer data a brand collects directly through its own channels website, app, email list, CRM, purchases, quizzes, events, and product usage.

Notch - Content Team
Dec 12, 2025, 2:33 PM
Table of contents
It is the most reliable, privacy-safe, high-intent data source available to performance marketers because it comes directly from real interactions with your brand.
In a world where third-party tracking is disappearing, First-Party Data drives the future of targeting, optimization, attribution, and personalization.
How does First-Party Data help me improve targeting, performance, and ROAS?
First-Party Data answers the most important marketing question:
“How can I target users who actually want what I sell?”
Here's how it improves performance:
1. Builds High-Intent Custom Audiences
With First-Party Data, you can create audiences from:
purchasers
add-to-cart users
product page visitors
email subscribers
app users
high-scrollers
quiz takers
repeat buyers
These audiences outperform interest targeting by a huge margin.
Related term: Custom Audiences
2. Improves Lookalike Audience Quality
Lookalikes built from first-party signals are:
more accurate
more stable
higher converting
Compared to generic pixel-based signals, first-party seed audiences give platforms richer context.
3. Strengthens Optimization Signals
Platforms optimize better when fed:
high-quality purchase data
offline conversions
repeat purchase behavior
enriched customer attributes
The more complete the data → the smarter the algorithm.
4. Enables Better Attribution and Tracking
With cookies disappearing, First-Party Data ensures:
more reliable tracking
fewer lost conversions
more accurate revenue attribution
stronger CAPI performance
5. Powers Personalization Across Funnels
First-party signals enable:
personalized emails
personalized retargeting
dynamic product recommendations
tailored landing pages
lifecycle marketing
Personalization boosts CVR significantly.
6. Reduces Dependence on Paid Traffic
Owning the customer relationship allows you to:
nurture via email/SMS
reacquire without paying again
build loyalty loops
increase LTV
What counts as First-Party Data?
1. Website Interactions
product views
quiz answers
form submissions
2. Purchase & Transaction Data
items bought
purchase frequency
order value
subscription status
3. CRM & Email Data
email opens
click behavior
segmentation attributes
4. App Activity
logins
feature usage
session length
5. Zero-Party Data (User-Provided Preferences)
Quizzes, surveys, preference selectors.
6. Customer Support Conversations
Questions reveal pain points and objections.
Best Practices for Using First-Party Data
1. Capture Data at Every Touchpoint
Use:
popups
quizzes
lead forms
email opt-ins
checkout data
account creation
2. Pass Data Into Ad Platforms Through CAPI
Ensures accurate:
attribution
optimization
audience building
3. Build Segments, Not Lists
Examples:
high-intent cart abandoners
repeat buyers
window shoppers
high AOV segments
churn-risk customers
Segments → personalization → better performance.
4. Connect First-Party Data to Landing Pages
Tailor messaging based on:
what users browsed
what they purchased
which funnel stage they are in
5. Use First-Party Data for Incrementality Testing
You can isolate real lift by comparing:
exposed vs control groups
retargeted vs non-retargeted groups
Common Mistakes to Avoid
collecting data but not segmenting it
relying only on pixel data
not using CAPI to enrich events
over-targeting stale email subscribers
capturing too much info → form friction
not syncing CRM with ad platforms
using incomplete purchase data
The value of First-Party Data is in activation, not collection.
Examples of First-Party Data Optimization
Example 1: Weak Retargeting
→ Build segment of 7-day PDP visitors
→ BOF conversions increase
Example 2: Low ROAS at TOF
→ Feed CAPI purchase values → improve lookalikes
→ TOF CAC drops
Example 3: High Repeat Purchase Revenue
→ Create segment of past buyers → launch cross-sell funnel
→ LTV improves
Example 4: Email Nurture Underperforming
→ Add quiz data → segment by customer needs
→ Open rates and CVR rise
What should you learn after First-Party Data?
From your glossary list:
Zero-Party Data (user-provided preference data)
Third-Party Data (external audience sources)
LTV (maximizing long-term value of first-party segments)
