The Top 7 Blogs Marketers Couldn’t Stop Reading in 2025
2025 kept marketing teams on their toes.
H.R. 2808 rewrote acquisition rules for lenders, the FCC’s consent debate stirred discussion, and privacy stayed at the center of every conversation. And still, consumers researched and compared their options long before filling out a form or calling.
Three priorities kept coming up:
- Spot real intent earlier so you are not waiting for late-stage buying signals.
- Treat compliance and consent as performance inputs instead of side constraints.
- Strengthen identity and data foundations so every interaction connects back to the same person.
We rounded up seven of our blogs that spoke to these recurring priorities in 2025. If you’re heading into 2026 with growth on your mind, start here.
1. Spot Real Intent Earlier: “Identify Customer Behavior Early to Drive Results”
Problem: Many teams wait for a form fill or bureau trigger, reaching people only after they have made key decisions.
This strategic take argues that a form fill often marks the end of the intent cycle. By that point, shoppers have already compared options and shared more of their information elsewhere. Small clues appear as people begin to shop, opening earlier chances to engage. The article highlights specific signals in lending and insurance: increased credit use before a balance transfer request, homeowners with equity researching HELOCs, or life events that spark new coverage needs.
Verisk Marketing Solutions helps you connect identity data with observed behavior. This allows targeting and segmentation based on active signals that honor consumer privacy while driving results.
Why it mattered in 2025: It gave marketers a practical way to think about intent without relying on late, shared signals.
2. Fix Identity Once: “Finally, a Persistent Identity Standard for Performance Marketing”
Problem: Treating every click, call and form fill as a separate person makes it difficult to see which partners actually drive customers. Recycled leads and channel-specific IDs drive up costs and obscure true attribution.
This guide introduces the Persistent Identity Framework from Verisk Marketing Solutions, which leverages just a single person or household ID to track individuals across posted leads, inbound calls, and clicks. LeadiD certifies the event, while PIDs and HHIDs organize identity to ensure every interaction points to the same record. This standard impacts the ecosystem at large. Publishers can prove their traffic converts, buyers can identify duplicates in real time, and CRM teams work from a consistent customer view rather than disconnected data points.
Why it mattered in 2025: It offered a clear path out of fragmented identity and into person-level reporting across vendors.
3. Stop Paying for the Wrong Leads: “Eliminate Ping Post Waste with Ping Attributes”
Problem: If you buy shared ping-post insurance leads, you often bid with almost no context about the person behind the ping.
This post describes using a LeadiD token to reveal consumer and household attributes well before bidding. Attributes include age, marital status, estimated income, geo-credit scores, and property data like homeownership or vehicle details. Duplicate detection flags those leads you have already bought to prevent double payment. Using hashed lead data helps buyers avoid poor-fit leads and bid accurately while maintaining compliance.
Why it mattered in 2025: It showed lead buyers a concrete way to cut ping-post waste without reworking their entire tech stack.
4. Respond Fast to H.R. 2808: “H.R. 2808: Credit Trigger Leads Are Changing
Problem: Many lenders still rely on credit trigger leads and need to know exactly how H.R. 2808 changes that playbook.
This post explains the changes coming March 4, 2026, when bureaus will face stricter limits on selling these leads to unaffiliated lenders.
Trigger files lacked transparency. Signals arrived late, competitors targeted the same names, and connecting outreach to actual consumer behavior proved difficult.
The article points to behavior-based options. Activate monitors customer files for observed shopping activity, while TCI InMarket Scores indicate who is likely to be in-market soon. This piece highlights the inherent flaws of the old model and proposes behavior-based signals as a replacement or enhancement.
Why it mattered in 2025: It gave financial services marketers a fast, practical overview of H.R. 2808 and a place to start planning around it.
5. Rebuild Your Prospecting Strategy: “Prospecting After HR 2808: A Guide for Financial Services Marketers”
Problem: Knowing H.R. 2808 is coming is one thing. Replacing trigger-led prospecting with a full behavior-based framework is another.
This guide covers H.R. 2808 and focuses on replacing trigger leads entirely rather than finding temporary workarounds. It clarifies what the law permits—such as using your own customer data—and what it restricts regarding trigger lead resale. The proposed model involves three steps: detect, connect, and scale. Activate detects real shopping activity in first-party files, identifying mortgage interest before the credit pull.
You can then connect these signals to relevant audiences and prioritize prospects using TCI InMarket Scores. Finally, you’ll be able to scale these tactics across paid media, email, direct mail, and CRM. The paper compares the reach and timing of this approach against traditional trigger files.
Why it mattered in 2025: It helped teams move from short-term fixes to a complete, compliant prospecting strategy after H.R. 2808.
6. Rethink Consent Flows: “The FCC’s 1:1 Consent Rule Is Vacated – Time to Refocus on Clear Consumer Consent and Choice”
Problem: When the FCC dropped the 1:1 consent order, many teams were unsure how to adjust their workflows.
This post explains that the order is gone, but TCPA and consumer obligations remain. Clear, written consent for calls and texts is mandatory. Reverting to previous standards still requires visible, understandable consent rather than vague disclosures. Explicit consent generates leads that convert at higher rates, commanding a premium from some buyers. Note that in health insurance, CMS rules still mandate one-to-one consent.
Marketers should review their lead flows: Do consumers see who will contact them? Is the number of calling brands visible? Are follow-up expectations clear? The post argues that transparent consent practices reduce the risk of future regulatory scrutiny.
Why it mattered in 2025: It cut through confusion after the FCC announcement and refocused teams on real consumer choice, not loopholes.
7. Level Up Your Data Stack: “Verisk Marketing Solutions Recognized as One to Watch in Snowflake’s 2026 Modern Marketing Data Stack”
Problem: Data and marketing leaders planning a warehouse-centric data approach need to see where external signals fit in a modern stack.
This summary of Snowflake’s 2026 report highlights the shift toward warehouse-centric marketing, focusing on capabilities like identity resolution and activation. Snowflake named Verisk Marketing Solutions “One to Watch” in the Data & Data Enrichment category for its identity resolution and enrichment capabilities delivered natively in the Snowflake AI Data Cloud.
This piece helps teams justify integrating external data, like identity and behavior, into a warehouse-driven architecture. It confirms the value of bringing identity resolution closer to the cloud infrastructure.
Why it mattered in 2025: It validated the role Verisk Marketing Solutions plays in modern data stacks and helped teams justify bringing identity resolution and enrichment data closer to their warehouse.
Get Ready for 2026
These posts reflect the defining themes of 2025: earlier intent signals, stricter compliance, and robust identity resolution. Use them to align your team on these changes as you plan for 2026.
For more detail, the Resource Center and The Marketing Rapport podcast feature conversations with leaders facing similar challenges. We appreciate you taking the time to read this recap, and look forward to growing with you in 2026.









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