In an ironic turning of the media planning tables, online advertisers and agencies are about to get access to one of the primary methods used by their offline counterparts to target consumers based on
their lifestyles, media usage and purchasing patterns. In a deal with Nielsen Co., online targeting firm DataLogix will begin offering online planners and advertisers the ability to target users based
on Nielsen's PRIZM segmentation system, which clusters every American household into discrete consumer lifestyles and purchase intents.
The deal, which is not exclusive, is the latest in
progression of online targeting firms that are incorporating offline databases and segmentation systems that correlate online users to offline consumer behavior.
"We've built a bridge that will
start a new phase of online targeting," boasts Justin Evans, senior vice president-marketing and strategy at Nielsen Co., who struck the PRIZM deal with DataLogix. "The way marketers manage consumers
in the offline world can be ported online."
The progression is ironic, because endemic online advertisers and media planners have always prided themselves on the ability to target users based on
their actual behavior, albeit those exhibited online, via behavioral and contextual targeting techniques. By adopting systems like PRIZM, they are effectively utilizing surrogate data to define the
behavior of online users, clustering them into cute-sounding lifestyle descriptors such as "Blue Blood Estates," "Young Digerati," and "Country Squires" that might make them the ideal targets for
certain products or categories.
The method used by PRIZM, known as geo-demographic segmentation, has been popular among offline marketers and agencies for decades, because it enabled them to
fine-tune their targeting based on the likelihood that specific households would fall into desirable consumer lifestyle groupings based on their geography. The PRIZM system divides American
households into 66 segments based on their neighborhoods and can get as granular as zip codes-plus six, or even household level.
Nielsen's Evans says this is an important "bridge" between the
online and offline worlds, because it will enable marketers and agencies that might be less familiar and comfortable with online targeting techniques to utilize the same ones they use to plan offline
media such as TV, radio, print, outdoor and direct mail media.
Ideally, he said, media planners will utilize the PRIZM data to "complement" behaviorally-based online targeting data to gain more
of a "360-degree view of the consumer."