Navigating the Shift from Open Marketplaces to Walled Gardens
Anandhi Moorthy
Senior Content Marketer
July 28, 2025
Not long ago, advertising platforms were built on openness—a web of publishers, ad exchanges, and tools that gave brands flexibility, reach, and control. But that web is tightening. Today, the most valuable audiences are spending their time inside closed ecosystems, also known as walled gardens. These are platforms where everything from audience targeting to analytics is tightly controlled, often with little visibility for advertisers.
It’s no coincidence that by 2027, industry giants like Google, Meta, and Amazon are projected to account for 83% of global digital ad revenue, which is a staggering shift in influence. And yet, for many businesses, this move toward walled gardens also promises sharper targeting, deeper engagement, and simplified execution.
So while the doors to these gardens may be closed, what lies inside has marketers leaning in.
Walled Gardens Explained: Closed Ecosystems in Marketing
Walled gardens are closed digital platforms that manage everything within their ecosystem—from content delivery to user data. These platforms don’t just own the space; they control how marketers enter, how campaigns are delivered, and what insights are shared.
The Big Players: Walled Garden
The most well-known walled gardens include:
Google (Search, YouTube, Display Network)
Meta (Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp)
Amazon (E-commerce)
Apple (App Store and Search Ads)
Microsoft (LinkedIn and Bing)
Each of these players holds vast amounts of first-party data and proprietary technology stacks that marketers must utilize to engage their users.
Core Characteristics of Walled Gardens
Logged-in environments that provide consistent identity across devices
First-party data access exclusive to the platform
Proprietary tools with minimal third-party integration
Closed measurement systems that limit transparency
Limited or no data sharing with advertisers or external partners
Open Marketplaces vs. Walled Gardens
Open marketplaces such as programmatic exchanges and independent publisher networks offer broader access to ad inventory. They allow for greater flexibility, enabling marketers to use third-party measurement tools, negotiate placements, and build audience profiles across multiple channels.
Walled gardens, on the other hand, simplify much of this process by offering integrated solutions. But that convenience comes at a cost. Businesses must operate within the platform’s rules, with limited control and minimal portability of data or campaign insights.
The Rise and Dominance of Walled Gardens
The rise of walled gardens hasn’t been sudden. It’s been a long, deliberate shift shaped by changes in how users consume content, how platforms handle data, and how marketers chase performance. What started as a way to simplify user experience has evolved into an ecosystem of closed control. And with every scroll, search, or swipe, these platforms grow more powerful in hierarchy.
Below are the key dynamics that have fueled their dominance in recent years:
Captive Attention
User behavior has fundamentally changed, especially in how people engage with content online. Google now answers queries directly in search results, while social apps like Instagram offer endless native content loops. The more time users spend inside these environments, the more value they generate, not just in engagement, but in actionable data for advertisers.
Mobile Behavior Changed Everything
The dominance of mobile devices has further tilted the scales. Around 90% of mobile internet usage today happens within apps, most of which are owned by big tech platforms. These logged-in environments provide consistent identity signals, allowing for sharper targeting and cross-device tracking. In a mobile-first world, the closed-loop experience of walled gardens is simply more efficient for marketers.
Market Share of Marketing Spend
As platforms delivered stronger performance metrics, brands steadily shifted their budgets in that direction. In India, while users spend around 48% of their online time on walled garden platforms, those platforms receive more than 5.5 times the ad spend compared to the open internet. Globally, the gap continues to widen by 2027, and walled gardens are projected to account for 83% of total digital ad revenue. The combination of audience scale, performance predictability, and built-in tools makes these platforms difficult for marketers to ignore.
A Self-Reinforcing Ecosystem
What makes walled gardens so enduring is their ability to continuously improve.
Platforms keep improving their targeting, campaign formats, and self-serve tools, making it easier for marketers to get started. As reliance on third-party tech drops, businesses shift from simply advertising on these platforms to operating within them. That’s when convenience turns into dependency.
Why Brands Flock to Walled Gardens
Ask any marketer where the bulk of their marketing spend goes, and it usually points to the same few platforms. It’s not just the audience size; it’s how quickly these ecosystems turn ideas into outcomes. With built-in data, refined targeting, and end-to-end control, walled gardens have made marketing feel less like a maze and more like a fast lane.
So what keeps brands pouring in budget year after year? Below are some of the strongest pull factors that make walled gardens difficult to ignore:
Unmatched Targeting Precision
Platforms like Meta and Google collect deep behavioral signals — from shopping habits to search intent to video views.
Audience segmentation is highly granular — interests, life stages, and retargeting pools are built-in.
Lookalike and predictive modeling help scale campaigns beyond your existing customer base.
Massive Scale and Reach
Billions of users across Meta, YouTube, Amazon, and others mean advertisers don’t have to look far for volume.
Brands can activate global campaigns with ease, reaching new markets without building third-party publisher lists.
These platforms span discovery, engagement, and conversion moments all in one place.
Consistent User Experience
Native campaign formats (in-feed, stories, product listings) maintain the platform’s look and feel, reducing user resistance.
Faster load times and integrated CTAs (like “Buy Now” or “Sign Up”) improve conversion performance.
Creative guidelines ensure that paid content blends well with organic posts, enhancing engagement.
Advanced Analytics (in Silos)
Dashboards provide robust insights into reach, frequency, clicks, and conversions, all within the platform.
AI-driven recommendations allow for real-time optimization of bids, creative, and audience segments.
Clean room integrations offer privacy-safe analysis of campaign effectiveness, but only within that ecosystem.
But There’s a Catch! The Hidden Costs of Closed Ecosystems
What looks efficient on the surface can sometimes hide layers of complexity underneath. Walled gardens deliver performance, yes, but they also limit freedom, transparency, and long-term visibility. For businesses relying too heavily on them, these trade-offs can quietly add up.
Here is a table that showcases how those hidden costs show up in practice:
Hidden Trade-Off Table
Hidden Trade-Off
What It Means for Marketers
Opaque Measurement
Performance data is controlled by the platform, leaving little room for independent validation.
Fragmented Insights
Each platform provides isolated reporting, making cross-channel performance nearly impossible.
Rising Ad Costs
High competition and lack of pricing transparency often lead to inflated CPCs and CPMs.
Brand Safety Risks
Ads may appear next to objectionable or controversial content without granular controls.
Limited Integration
Marketers can't control placements fully or integrate their own tools.
Data Privacy in a Walled Garden Model
As privacy laws tighten and third-party cookies edge toward extinction, one thing’s become clear — data hasn’t disappeared. It’s just been locked inside a few powerful vaults.
Walled gardens like Google, Meta, and Amazon are built on first-party data. They don’t need to chase users around the web — they already have the logged-in behavior, purchase intent, and cross-device visibility within their ecosystem. And now, with GDPR and CCPA redrawing the rules, these platforms wear the badge of privacy compliance, while quietly setting the rules for everyone else.
But that control cuts both ways. Brands get access to targeting, but not the raw insight. You can see the performance, but only through the platform’s lens. Want to bring that data out and connect it with your CRM or attribution stack? That’s where the wall holds firm.
To bridge the gap, clean rooms have entered the scene, allowing brands to match audience data without ever handling it directly. It’s a useful workaround, but still platform-bound. Every clean room is built by the same ecosystem that controls the media spend, meaning collaboration happens on their terms, not yours.
So while the open web scrambles to rebuild around consent and anonymized IDs, the walled gardens are already operating in a world that rewards closed data and calls it privacy-first.
How can D2C Brands Crack the ‘Walled Gardens
For D2C brands and marketers, walled gardens fundamentally restrict your access to customer data, limit long-term relationship-building, and make it harder to unify the customer journey. Instead of focusing only on outbound tactics, here’s how D2C brands can crack these closed ecosystems and reclaim customer data:
Use Feedback Surveys Post-Purchase: Go beyond basic transaction data by reaching out with feedback surveys after the sale. These can help you capture valuable insights—like purchase motivations or product preferences—that major platforms don’t share at checkout.
Leverage Warranty, Support, and Registration Touchpoints: Invite customers to register purchases, activate warranties, or engage with support via digital forms. This enables you to collect verified contact details (email, phone) for ongoing nurture and support, independent of the platform.
Bring Customers to Owned Channels via QR Codes and Coupons: Place QR codes or special offers in product packaging that incentivize buyers to visit your site. This helps migrate marketplace customers into your own data environment, giving you richer behavioral analytics and direct engagement opportunities.
Unify Order Data Using ERP Integrations: Sync transaction and support data from all sales channels through your ERP system. This creates a single view of each customer, allowing more personalized follow-up, loyalty programs, and lifecycle marketing beyond platform limitations.
The Next Walled Gardens: AI’s Expanding Role
Major tech companies are rapidly building "AI walled gardens", closed ecosystems where user data, product discovery, and customer interaction increasingly stay within proprietary platforms.
Both Perplexity and ChatGPT are at the forefront of this shift, each offering shopping agent features that enable users to ask for product recommendations, compare prices, view images and reviews, and receive direct purchasing links—all within a conversational interface. These capabilities enable consumers to research and purchase products without leaving the AI-driven environment.
For marketers, this evolution presents both opportunities and challenges. While these platforms offer the chance for well-optimized brands to gain visibility at the point of decision, they also mean fewer clicks to owned websites and greater difficulty in collecting first-party customer data. However, LLM models source and reference information from retailer and brand websites, so marketers can still influence outcomes through robust GenAI optimization, ensuring content is clear, up-to-date, and accessible to these AI models. Without this proactive approach, brands risk being excluded from these next-generation discovery and shopping experiences.
ZEPIC: Orchestrating Across Ecosystems
The rise of walled gardens doesn’t have to mean surrendering your control or visibility. ZEPIC empowers brands to connect data across closed ecosystems and the open internet, creating a unified view of your customer journey.
With ZEPIC, you can:
Collect and centralize first-party data from every touchpoint, including e-commerce and payment platforms
Build dynamic audience segments enriched by behavioral, transactional, and engagement data.
Run orchestrated campaigns across email, SMS, WhatsApp, and email platforms—all from a single hub.
Measure performance holistically, closing the attribution gap between walled gardens and the rest of your marketing stack.
Strategic Takeaway
Walled gardens aren’t taking over marketing by chance; they’re doing it by design. As marketers adapt to a privacy-driven world, these platforms offer stability, reach, and results. But they don’t offer everything. What you gain in ease and precision, you often lose in visibility and flexibility.
So the smart move isn’t choosing one side, it’s learning how to work both. Use the open internet to build reach, context, and control. Use walled gardens for scale and targeting. Push for better integrations, clearer measurement, and flexible data strategies. The walls are high, but they’re not the whole market. And brands that know how to work both sides will shape what comes next.
Ready to bridge the gap between closed ecosystems and your own data-driven marketing? Learn how ZEPIC empowers D2C brands to unify customer insights, orchestrate campaigns across channels, and reclaim control. Get a demo today.
FAQs
What defines a walled garden?
A walled garden refers to a closed digital ecosystem where the platform controls user data, ad inventory, targeting tools, and measurement. Brands must operate entirely within that environment using their native systems. Platforms like Google, Meta, Amazon, and Apple are key examples.
Why are brands investing more in walled garden platforms?
Brands allocate more budget to walled gardens for their scale, accurate targeting, and privacy compliance. These platforms offer consistent performance using first-party data and simplify campaign execution across mobile and desktop environments.
What limitations do marketers face inside walled gardens?
Walled gardens restrict data access, third-party integrations, and independent measurement. Marketers rely on the platform’s reporting and can’t unify performance across ecosystems or build a complete view of the customer journey.
Desperate times call for desperate Google/Chat GPT searches, right? "Best Shopify apps for sales." "How to increase online sales fast." "AI tools for ecommerce growth."
Been there. Done that. Installed way too many apps. But here's what nobody tells you while you're doom-scrolling through Shopify app reviews at 2 AM—that magical online sales-boosting app you're searching for? It doesn't exist. Because if it did, Jeff Bezos would've bought (or built!) it yesterday, and we (fellow eCommerce store owners) would all be retired in Bali by now. Growing a Shopify store and increasing online sales isn’t easy—we get it. While everyone’s out chasing the next “revolutionary” tool/trend (looking at you, DeepSeek), the real revenue drivers are probably hiding in plain sight—right there inside your customer data. After working with Shopify stores like yours (shoutout to Cybele, who recovered almost 25% of their abandoned carts with WhatsApp automation), we’ve cracked the code on what actually moves the needle. Ready to stop app-hopping and start actually growing your sales by using what you already have? Here are four fixes that will get you there!
The Painful Truth: You're probably losing about 70% of your potential sales to cart abandonment. That's not just a statistic—it's real money walking out of your digital door. And looking for yet another Shopify app for abandoned cart recovery isn't going to fix it if you're not getting the fundamentals right.
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Fix #2: Reactivate past customers today
The Painful Truth: You're probably losing about 70% of your potential sales to cart abandonment. That's not just a statistic—it's real money walking out of your digital door. And looking for yet another Shopify app for abandoned cart recovery isn't going to fix it if you're not getting the fundamentals right.
The Quick Fix: Everyone knows you need multi-channel recovery that hits the sweet spot between "Hey, did you forget something?" and "PLEASE COME BACK!" But here's the reality—most recovery apps are a one-trick pony. They either do email OR WhatsApp, not both. And don't even get us started on personalizing offers based on cart value—that usually means toggling between three different dashboards while praying your apps talk to each other.
Enter ZEPIC: This is where we come in. With ZEPIC's automated Flows, you can: Launch WhatsApp recovery messages (with 95% open rates!) Set up perfectly timed email sequences (or vice versa) Create personalized recovery offers not just on cart value but based on your customer’s behavior/preferences Track and optimize everything from one dashboard
Offering light at the end of the tunnel is Google’s Privacy Sandbox which seeks to ‘create a thriving web ecosystem that is respectful of users and private by default’. Like the name suggests, your Chrome browser will take the role of a ‘privacy sandbox’ that holds all your data (visits, interests, actions etc) disclosing these to other websites and platforms only with your explicit permission. If not yet, we recommend testing your websites, audience relevance and advertising attribution with Chrome’s trial of the Privacy Sandbox.
Top 3 impacts of the third-party cookie phase-out
Who’s impacted
How
What next
Digital advertising and acquisition teams
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Review all cookie-based audience acquisition. Sign up for Chrome’s trial of the Privacy Sandbox
Digital Customer Experience
Customers are not served relevant, personalised experiences: on the web, over social channels and communication media
Multiply efforts to collect first-party customer data. Implement a Customer Data Platform
Security, Privacy and Compliance teams
Increased scrutiny from regulators and questions from customers about data storage and usage
Review current cookie and communication consent management, ensure to align with latest privacy regulations