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Piotr Prędkiewicz, Senior Marketing Analyst at FORMEL SKIN, exposes the myth of ‘perfect data’ and charts the future of privacy-centric analytics in mobile growth. With a career spanning fintech, dating and health tech, Piotr unpacks how to track users legally, ethically, and creatively before they even register. He also discusses why device data is always noisier than you want, and where most marketers go wrong on privacy, attribution, and fraud. The episode blends practical strategies for data-driven marketers with a clear-eyed critique of the industry’s alignment failures, fraud incentives, and the inescapable limitations of tracking in the GDPR era.
Questions Piotr answers in this episode:(0:00) – Introducing FORMEL SKIN, Piotr’s role, and Germany’s digital dermatology
(1:18) – Marketing analytics in dating, fintech, health
(2:50) – Why ‘perfect data’ is a myth
(5:00) – Assigning pseudo-user IDs, device-based tracking
(6:00) – Aggregated data, ‘chasing ghosts,’ and its pitfalls
(8:00) – Combining front-end and back-end data; challenges in stitching
(9:36) – Device vs. user: confusion, mismatches, and noise
(11:13) – Balancing privacy vs. marketing needs; legal and business conflicts
(12:30) – Device fingerprinting: what’s legal, what’s risky, and why
(14:22) – The end of one-to-one attribution; rise of aggregated, top-level analysis
(16:05) – Marketing fraud: what’s changed, sneaky affiliate/network tricks
(19:08) – Incentives, alignment failures, and why fraud persists
(21:40) – Filtering fraud: long onboarding, compliance, and technical vigilance
(23:38) – ‘Success’ in mobile marketing and why responsibility must be shared
(32:08) – Wrap up
(2:50) “Don’t expect perfect data – especially in marketing where different data sources are being combined.”
(5:10) “You try to anchor it to the device…within all the data security and the privacy setup and anchor it to this entity and create one entity.”
(15:26) “We can use aggregated data for strategic decisions, like how to shift budgets from channel A to B.”
By Remerge5
1212 ratings
Piotr Prędkiewicz, Senior Marketing Analyst at FORMEL SKIN, exposes the myth of ‘perfect data’ and charts the future of privacy-centric analytics in mobile growth. With a career spanning fintech, dating and health tech, Piotr unpacks how to track users legally, ethically, and creatively before they even register. He also discusses why device data is always noisier than you want, and where most marketers go wrong on privacy, attribution, and fraud. The episode blends practical strategies for data-driven marketers with a clear-eyed critique of the industry’s alignment failures, fraud incentives, and the inescapable limitations of tracking in the GDPR era.
Questions Piotr answers in this episode:(0:00) – Introducing FORMEL SKIN, Piotr’s role, and Germany’s digital dermatology
(1:18) – Marketing analytics in dating, fintech, health
(2:50) – Why ‘perfect data’ is a myth
(5:00) – Assigning pseudo-user IDs, device-based tracking
(6:00) – Aggregated data, ‘chasing ghosts,’ and its pitfalls
(8:00) – Combining front-end and back-end data; challenges in stitching
(9:36) – Device vs. user: confusion, mismatches, and noise
(11:13) – Balancing privacy vs. marketing needs; legal and business conflicts
(12:30) – Device fingerprinting: what’s legal, what’s risky, and why
(14:22) – The end of one-to-one attribution; rise of aggregated, top-level analysis
(16:05) – Marketing fraud: what’s changed, sneaky affiliate/network tricks
(19:08) – Incentives, alignment failures, and why fraud persists
(21:40) – Filtering fraud: long onboarding, compliance, and technical vigilance
(23:38) – ‘Success’ in mobile marketing and why responsibility must be shared
(32:08) – Wrap up
(2:50) “Don’t expect perfect data – especially in marketing where different data sources are being combined.”
(5:10) “You try to anchor it to the device…within all the data security and the privacy setup and anchor it to this entity and create one entity.”
(15:26) “We can use aggregated data for strategic decisions, like how to shift budgets from channel A to B.”

112,840 Listeners