Nearly everyone attached to a microphone at a conclave having anything whatsoever to do with advertising feels somehow compelled to say at some point that their mission in life is to "serve the right
ad, to the right person, at the right time." It has become the industry mantra for the 21st century, with the underlying assumption being that if you do that, people will buy your product. But to
actually do this right requires a considerable amount of data collection that leaves audiences feeling a little queasy.
An assistant professor of integrated marketing communications at Ithaca
studied reactions to targeted Internet ads and found most users thought they were "really creepy." Some in the study felt targeted ads were too personal because they used data that consumers had not
agreed to provide, such as search and browsing history. "You think you're discreetly buying condoms online," said one participant, "then you're on Facebook and there's an ad for condoms, and people
are like, 'Hey dude, what have you been looking for online?'"
Amusingly, the professor conceded that targeted ads have a "direct, positive effect" on intent to purchase — presumably
after you factor in the “creepiness,” which has the negative effect of up to a 5% reduction in intent to purchase the advertised product.
Like you, I have mixed feelings
about targeted, personalized ads. I find the ones for hotels or restaurants in London that show up right after I have booked my flight to the U.K. to be pretty cool and helpful. On the other hand,
when that pair of shoes you looked at and decided not to buy follows you around the Internet for a few weeks afterward, you think, "Okay, enough already."
While in the proper environment, say
when I am ON an ecommerce site, I am happy to get recommendations based on prior browsing, search or purchase behavior. But once I leave, to be retargeted by those same recommendations is more
tiresome than helpful.
Anyone who has seen them knows the profiles of "who you are" based on online data collection have historically been wildly off base, often getting basics like gender and
location dead wrong. But as data collection has gotten far more sophisticated (much of it going on without consumer knowledge — much less permission), profiles have improved. Much of what I see
is at least remotely appropriate for my demographic (if not for me).
Still, as more and more of our lives — like banking transactions and medical records — move online or to
mobile, there’s little doubt that consumers burned by inappropriate data deployment will decide that the only complete protection is ad blockers and other technology that keep legitimate ad
companies from executing on their promises to brands.
The privacy wonks are more than happy to lump all data collection together, having decided that online and mobile tracking is at its roots
bad for humanity. They rightfully claim that all of online is subject to hackers (so, too, are in-store credit-card transactions, as we have all experienced at one time or another) and that even if
there is some legitimacy to the free-content-thanks-to-ads paradigm, the public remaining willfully unaware of what is "good" data collection and what is "bad" is an almost irresolvable problem.
The industry has stepped up its efforts to try and explain data collection and provide op-out opportunities, but I suspect that, as the ability to "serve the right ad, to the right person, at the
right time" gets ever closer, the rain will fall on the just and the unjust alike.