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Posts Tagged ‘behavioral advertising’

Creep Into Your Customers Life Without Creeping Them Out

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

candice-stewart_thumbnail.jpg Behavioral advertising, the anonymous or pseudonymous tracking of online activities for purposes of providing more targeted advertising and content, promises great potential for advertisers and publishers to build more relevant and trusting experiences for their users. But if you are thinking about using social or behavioral advertising because traditional display and email are yielding deplorably low response rates - don’t cross that fine line between creeping in and creeping out. Currently, consumers are unhappy with behavioral targeting practices, and now legislatures are getting involved. The New York State Assembly has plans to impose legal restrictions on the ways in which personal data is collected and used.

In line with the proposed New York State bill, a recent consumer poll conducted by TRUSTe and TNS Global indicates consumer demand for more transparency and user control around behavioral targeting. The survey provides insight into how marketers can make behavioral targeting more welcoming from a consumer perspective. Finding the right balance between wowing customers with superior customization and simply freaking them out will preserve consumer trust and help prevent state and federal legislation from curtailing your marketing plans for 2008.
Much of the evidence collected in the TRUSTe and TNS survey points to a consumer demand for more customized online ads and for an end to irrelevant, untargeted ads most commonly observed today.
• 87 percent reveal that fewer than 25 percent of the ads they see today are of any relevance.
• 72 percent of consumers find online advertising to be intrusive and annoying when ads are irrelevant to their interests.
• 64 percent say they would prefer to see only ads from online stores and brands they know and trust.
• 55 percent would be willing to fill out an anonymous survey about products, services, and brands they purchase in order to limit the online ads they see to those indicated in the survey.

But, according to survey results, two main obstacles threaten the promise of behavioral targeting: 1) the lack of consumer education and understanding, and 2) the lack of transparency and affirmative choice. Consumers indicate a high level of apprehension when it comes to tracking their browsing history and express little familiarity with the term “behavioral targeting.”
• 57 percent of survey respondents say they are uncomfortable with advertisers using their browsing history to provide relevant ads
• Only 40 percent of respondents are familiar with the term “behavioral targeting.”

While advertising based on anonymous information should be embraced by privacy sensitive individuals, there is still significant unease with behavioral techniques. This is not surprising when consumers are familiar with privacy mishaps such as the AOL search data disclosure, which allowed researchers to piece together several pieces of anonymous information to positively identify an individual. Seventy one percent of consumers said they were uncomfortable with third parties tracking their behavior for purposes of serving ads even when it couldn’t be tied with any PII.

Behavioral Advertising Dos and Don’ts

DO
- Matter-of-factly incorporate some disclosure of tracking and targeting as part of your product or service value proposition. Provide a “what is this” button to explain how your customization works.
- Make sure your service providers, agencies, and others are following industry standards for privacy notice and disclosure. The majority of serious complaints TRUSTe encounters are privacy breaches by marketing vendors.

DON’T
- Think you can get away with not giving your customers notice and choice. See Cathryn Harris v. Blockbuster.
- Undermine your investment in building your brand for a few response points. (more…)

Government Affairs: We’re All in This Together

Monday, May 5th, 2008

scott_0228.jpg Well, it’s getting to my favorite time of year! No, I’m not talking about the NHL and NBA playoffs, although they’re a bonus. I’m talking about an annual tradition where the cherry blossoms accent our nation’s capital and ERA members congregate to discuss with lawmakers important issues that affect the very vitality of our industry.

I was lucky enough to be embraced by the direct response community about 15 years ago. And, in that time, I’ve seen a lot of changes that have been mandated down to us by the very people we put into office to govern us. Most legislation I’ve applauded because it makes us stronger as an industry and solidifies our future. Some I’ve scratched my head at and wondered why they came to the conclusions they did. In the end, I determined that you and I are ultimately to blame for their poor decisions. WHAT?! YOU? ME?? How can one person or an individual be saddled with this blame? But, in reality, standing idly by and not participating in the legislative process is why.

ERA realized this fact three years ago and put together the Government Affairs Fly-In. It is an easy way to make our voices heard. I was fortunate enough to be a part of the first session. I was absolutely giddy to be a part of something so important. Upon arriving for the day’s events, we were broken up into teams and assigned a lobbyist that would serve as our guide through the halls and administrative offices of Capitol Hill. Each lobbyist caught us up to speed on the pending legislation. That year, it was net neutrality and online taxes, and how we could present our side of the issue in a uniformed and concise manner. We were also given a list of our congressional and senate members we had prearranged meetings with. Participation, so far, in the legislative process was as easy as getting on the waiting bus outside the hotel that took us to Capitol Hill.

Once on the Hill, our teams split up and headed for our perspective meetings. Standing on the front steps of the Capitol, I couldn’t help but feel dwarfed by the immenseness of what I was about to do. On the bright, sunny day, I reached the top of the stairs and took one last look down the Mall with its monuments and reflecting pools and knew this was going to be a special day. Entering the building I couldn’t help but feel that this is what our country is about. Hundreds of people swirled around me as they swept their way to their destinations at all levels of the rotunda. What struck me the most was how relatively quiet it was. I could hear every step I made on the marble floors echo through the labyrinth of hallways. It served as a comforting melodic beat as I moved to my meetings.

My first meeting was with a well-tenured congressman from Arizona. He and his staff were warm with their welcomes when we arrived. When we sat down, they listened respectfully as each one of us presented our part of the solution to pending legislation. It was an easy-going give and take of dialogue as the topics of our industry rolled on. Before I knew it, an hour had passed and our points were presented satisfactorily. Each meeting afterwards progressed in the same manner, with each party treating the other with respect and quite a bit of admiration for the task at hand. It was, to me, the democratic process at its best and as it was designed to be.

Getting on the bus to head back to the hotel, I took a last look back at the lit Capitol, shining outward into the night sky, and reflected. I realized then that we all made a difference that day because we came to voice our opinion on subjects that were important to this industry and to our livelihoods. I can remember a time when I thought I was a part of the legislative process by merely voting for my representatives. But, I now realize that checking a box (or hanging chad) is not the end of individual responsibility in the legislative process—it is only the beginning. The next step is as easy as joining hundreds of your fellow colleagues and me, on May 20th, on Capitol Hill for ERA’s GA Fly-In. I’m hoping to hear more than my own footsteps echoing through the halls, but rather the thunderous roar of all of us marching to ensure we influence those who influence us. After all, we’re all in this together!

Scott Swanson is vice president of sales for Motivational Fulfillment and Logistics Services

Have you been the GA Fly-In before? What was your experience like?