How to build your anonymous user engagement strategy
Cookies will soon be a thing of the past. An anonymous user-engagement strategy will help you collect data, meet your goals, and protect visitor privacy.

No one enjoys going on a diet, especially when someone else says they have to.
For marketers, the cookie-free diet is officially happening in 2024. You might miss that sweet, sweet third-party dataâitâs great for identifying users on your website and tailoring your ads to their preferences. But, with the right anonymous user engagement strategy, you wonât need any cookies. Youâll have your cake and eat it, too.
See, with an intentional anonymous user engagement survey, youâll collect valuable zero-party data to build better relationships with your usersâno cookies necessary.
Zero-party data is built on trust and transparency. Users trade their information willingly, often for something of value, such as access to a tool or a discount. You donât have to rely on another site or organization to pass the data on to you and hope that itâs accurate. It comes directly from the source.
Take the first step and provide fun, on-brand, and intentional opportunities for anonymous users to give their information. Here are six steps to building your anonymous user engagement strategy.
1. Identify when to ask for data from your anonymous users
The first step in creating an anonymous user engagement strategy is identifying when you want to engage with these users. Get friendly too early, and you could scare them away. Wait too long, and well, you might just miss them entirely.
Itâs best to wait to ask for customer data until youâve piqued their interest. Bring them in, offer them something interesting, educational, or that just speaks to themâand then ask.
But how do you know when an anonymous user might be ready to hand over their data? Use your website analytics to set up triggers based on the userâs behavior. For example, you might have a survey pop up after a user visits several product pages without putting anything into their cart. Orâ you offer a white paper when theyâve read three-quarters of a blog post.
Regardless of when you ask for your anonymous userâs data, recognize the value of what they give you. If they provide their contact information, be prepared to give something of value in return, like a resource or a coupon code.
2. Prompt your anonymous users to take a survey
One of the first (and easiest) ways you can engage with your anonymous users is with a quick and fun market research survey. By simply asking for their opinionâand not their contact informationâyou can nudge them earlier in their site visit. This could be a pop-up survey on a popular product page or a sticky sidebar that travels down the homepage with the user.
Keep this survey shortâtwo or three questionsâand choose questions that' ll inform your strategy. Letâs say youâre toying with the idea of launching a popular product in a smaller size or a different color. You might ask your anonymous website users for their age range and which size or color they prefer. Compare that to the same questions posed on your social media channels or in your loyalty program to see if you might have an untapped market.
Make your survey engaging by using a casual, conversational tone that reflects your brand voice. Stay authentic to your brand, but donât be afraid to have a little fun with the style and framing of the questions.
3. Ask them to subscribe to your newsletter
If a user has found their way to your website and has browsed a few pages, there' s a good chance they' d want to continue learning from you. Newsletters are a low-pressure, non-salesy way to earn contact information while providing informative and educational resources.
Insert your newsletter sign-up as a call to action (CTA) on your blog or resource pages, or as a pop-up after a user has scrolled your site for a certain amount of time. Run a few tests to find the time frame that performs best with your anonymous users.
Improve your newsletter sign-up by being clear about what a potential subscriber will get when they enter their email address. Let them know how many emails they can expectâone a week or every other week, for exampleâand link to your archive so they have an idea of whatâs included. Use integrations to send an automatic thank-you email and add the contact to your CRM.
Plus, each newsletter sign-up you earn helps you collect valuable data to personalize your message for your audience later. As users engage with your emails, youâll learn more about their concerns and interests. That data helps you share articles, insights, or products that better match their goals.
4. Entice them to make a purchase
Use incentives or recommendations to move your anonymous users from âjust browsingâ to âhereâs my credit card.â With a purchase, you get their contact information, establish a purchase history, and get demographic data, such as where they are located.
If your user has visited a few product pages but hasnât added anything to their cart, try asking them to fill out a product recommendation quiz. Based on the information they provide, you can personalize a product recommendation. A specific recommendation from the quiz helps your customer avoid analysis paralysis. It could also introduce your anonymous user to a product they didnât know you had.
Then, offer a coupon code or discount for the product youâve recommended. You can also put a timeframe on the codeâit' s only good for the next 24 hours!âto encourage them to act quickly.
5. Highlight your loyalty program
Itâs tricky to know how general or specific to be in your language, or how hard you need to sell something, without knowing if someone is familiar with your brand or products. Until theyâve logged in or otherwise indicated that theyâre a returning user, you just donât know. As your anonymous user gets closer to making a purchase, like after theyâve added an item to their cart, show them the benefits of joining your loyalty program.
Highlight all the benefits theyâll get with a sign-upâwhether thatâs points towards savings on a future purchase or discounted shippingâand make sign-up simple. When they do, be sure to thank them generously, for example, with enough points to get them halfway to their first reward or a discount on their next purchase.
Another way to give your visitors a glimpse into what itâs like to be a customer is to invite them to join your user community. They can create a profile, hear from actual users, and see how you respond to questions.
Make your zero-party data collection simple
Any speed bump on the way to an anonymous userâs end goal might cause them to click âXâ instead of âNext.â Cut down on friction by making your forms fun, simple, and on-brand. Then tie your form to your CRM or other tech so it integrates smoothly with your communication strategy.
The cookie-free diet starts in 2024. Get started collecting your own zero-party data now so you have time to fine-tune your data collection process and create your workflow integrations.
Whether you are creating a survey, poll, or product recommendation quiz, Typeform provides beautiful and mobile-friendly templates that make filling out forms more fun. Try Typeform for free today.