“There’s an app for that,” something Apple filed to trademark in December 2009, is a humorous yet accurate way to
describe the random wants of smartphone wielders.
When it comes to the online world, “there’s an algorithm for that” is becoming applicable to the random wants of
online advertisers.
Okay -- so it’s not exactly fair to call all wants of online advertisers “random.” Take fraud, for example -- a legitimate issue that is best
dealt with before it occurs because, well, any time after that and it's too late. You wouldn’t want to find out about potholes in the road only after driving over them, would you?
That’s the approach Versium, a Washington-based data technology and “predictive analytics” company, is taking. The company on Tuesday announced the launch of its
Predictive Fraud Score solution, which is meant to help companies find fraudsters looking to steal consumer identities.
“It allows a company to be proactive versus
reactive,” stated Chris Matty, Versium CEO.
Proaction versus reaction. Isn’t that the general concept that gave birth to real-time bidding (RTB)?
What
Versium is doing for financial services and ecommerce companies, others are doing for advertisers in the RTB space. Some have started to only trade in-view ads, while others, like Integral, have begun to integrate real-time fraud prevention technology into ad
exchanges. It’s all in the name of doing it better the “first” time.
But why stop there? A few months ago, Fast Company Labs wrote a story about a company with a predictive algorithm of its own, Growth Science, which
purpotedly predicts whether or not startups will fail.
I’m of the belief that the term “predictive analytics” is oxymoronic. I’m okay with “predictive
modeling,” because I think creating models is the best you can do when peering into a crystal ball.
Maybe that’s why Jeff Sporn, SVP and general manager of digital
solutions of IXI Services, told RTM Daily last month that it makes him laugh when people talk about algorithms like they are a “magical elixir.”
“There’s nothing new about [algorithms],” Sporn said then.
That’s true -- but there is something about new algorithms. And as predictive models
improve, so too will the overall flow of advertising, especially in an online space that is so eager to be one step ahead of consumers instead of one step behind.
"Math" photo from Shutterstock.