The debate between contextual advertising and digital identity has become increasingly important as businesses seek more effective ways to engage consumers while respecting privacy. While contextual advertising focuses on understanding a consumer’s immediate intent or situation, digital identity provides a deeper understanding of who the consumer is and whether they are a legitimate participant in a transaction. For marketers, context may be sufficient to influence purchasing decisions. However, for merchants, financial institutions, and payment providers, digital identity plays a critical role in managing fraud, authenticating users, and ensuring secure transactions.
As advertising technology becomes more sophisticated, the distinction between context and identity is becoming increasingly blurred. Understanding how these two concepts complement rather than replace one another is essential for organizations seeking to balance personalization, privacy, security, and profitability in the digital economy.
In this article Holler CEO Travis Montaque makes a fascinating statement:
“I believe that the future is context, not identity,” he said. “Because I don’t really need to know about Anthony, I just need to know someone is in need of lunch.
The statement can be perceived as true or false based on the perception (dare I say context) of the reader. The ad agency may perceive this as accurate, but as a payments market researcher I say its dead wrong and may indicate Travis doesn’t fully perceive the value of the data Holler has.
In the old days advertisers only cared if an ad would sway a broad spectrum of people that have traits similar to Anthony’s, to buy a product. In that case why care about identity? But now we advertise to the individual and yet it appears we still don’t care if that individual is a legitimate buyer or not.
It appears advertising has ignored the fact that after convincing Anthony to buy jewelry, Anthony needs to pay for it. To the retailer identity is suddenly far more important than context and retailers pay handsomely to make that determination. If Holler cared more about identity it could begin the process of separating the wheat from the chaff and lower the effort merchants go through for fraud prevention, which would help drive higher margins. It appears to me that ad agencies that profit from the click are in a race to the bottom:
“So Holler works with partners like PayPal-owned Venmo and The Meet Group to bring more compelling content into the messaging side of their apps — or as Montaque put it, the startup aims to “enrich conversations everywhere.”
There’s both an art and a science to this, he said. The art involves creating and curating the best stickers and GIFs, while the science takes the form of Holler’s Suggestion AI technology, which will recommend the right content based on the user’s conversations and contexts — the stickers and GIFs you want to send in a dating app are probably different from what you’d send in a work-related chat. Montaque said that this context-focused approach allows the company to provide smart recommendations in a way that also respects user privacy.
“I believe that the future is context, not identity,” he said. “Because I don’t really need to know about Anthony, I just need to know someone is in need of lunch. If I know you’re in the mood for Mexican food, I don’t need to know every aspect of the last 10 times you went to a Mexican restaurant.”
Holler monetizes this content by partnering with brands like HBO Max, Ikea and Starbucks to create branded stickers and GIFs that become part of the company’s content library. Montaque said the startup has also worked with brands to measure the impact of these campaigns across a variety of metrics.
Holler’s content now reaches 75 million users each month, compared to 19 million users a year ago, while revenue has grown 226%, he said. (Apparently, last year was the first time the company saw significant revenue growth.)”
While contextual advertising offers powerful opportunities to deliver relevant content and improve customer engagement, it does not eliminate the importance of digital identity. Context may help identify a consumer’s immediate needs, but identity remains essential when transactions involve trust, payment authorization, and fraud prevention.
As digital commerce continues to evolve, businesses that effectively combine contextual advertising with strong digital identity capabilities will be better positioned to improve customer experiences while reducing risk. Rather than viewing context and identity as competing concepts, organizations should recognize that both play distinct and increasingly interconnected roles in the modern digital marketplace.
Overview by Tim Sloane, VP, Payments Innovation at Mercator Advisory Group








