Navigating the CDP Noise: Composable sleight of hand
In part one of this two-part series, mParticle CEO and co-founder Michael Katz explores the debate between "composable" vs "packaged" CDPs, offering guidance for organizations trying to understand which type of solution is right for their needs.
In 2013, when we launched mParticle — the mission was clear. Create a win/win by simplifying the process to connect customer data to the various marketing tech applications used by teams across the organization, while reducing engineering overhead simultaneously. The value created was in removing friction around operationalizing data to the full set of marketing, advertising, and analytics tools.
Fast forward ten years, and a lot has changed. Notably, with the rise of the cloud data warehouse (CDW), many organizations are centralizing data management by leveraging the CDW at the center of their data architecture. In 2013, cloud data warehouses were in their infancy and adoption was very early. Most companies, mParticle included, who built data solutions also built proprietary data stores out of necessity — a means to an end.
A warehouse-centric architecture makes sense for many organizations, a single universal data store comprising all of the data created across the org, made available for future use.
While there has been a debate about “packaged” vs “composable” CDPs, the heart of the argument centers around the role of the data warehouse as the universal storage layer. Contrary to the current narrative, I would argue that the rise of a universal data store further cements the value that CDPs bring, which is the intelligent activation of customer data.
mParticle has come to embrace the cloud data warehouse ecosystem as a viable data storage option for customers, having recently announced data warehouse sync and value-based pricing to focus on value maximization for our customers.
That said, much of the argument is based on sleight of hand product marketing designed to trick the uninformed. They are: