A PR guy wrote an opinion piece for an ad trade this week that outlines the opportunities for marketers to invade the self-driving car experience with commercials. "Not only will self-driving cars
start to transform our infrastructure, they'll fundamentally change our culture -- something that translates to a big opportunity for marketers," he writes breathlessly. He mentions displaying content
on car windows, using AR to supplement the "view" of the landscape, and bombing cell phones with geo-specific offers as "drivers" get near your establishment.
This, of course, fails to
take into account how the consumer who just spent somewhere in the neighborhood of $50K to $100k will feel about having ads served into his auto environment. I expect you can guess: ("Or, Mr.
Smith, you can buy the ad-free model for $125k...").
And this underscores a big problem we have in the marketing business, thinking that because we can do it, we should. The usual
rationalizations — like that the ads will "improve the user experience because they will be more appropriate" or "the spots will be so entertaining, the driver will have an orgasm" — are
complete bullshit and are figments of the ad industry's wishful thinking.
Without reviewing the litany of ways that consumers are bombarded by ad messages every day, you have to wonder if
anyone at any level in this business stops and asks, "how would I feel about this as a normal person, whose compensation is not directly tied to coming up with yet more technology and places to serve
ads?"
If you listen carefully, the consumer tells you. A new Sprout Social study finds that 60% of consumers are annoyed with how brands conduct themselves in the social
space. YouGov research shows that in both the U.S. and U.K., between a third and a half of online news users use software that blocks the most popular forms of display advertising. And that
"consumers expressed feelings of fatigue and distrust."
An Associated Press and Context Based Research Group report finds "there is just too much of it. It seems that if an ad can be
served somewhere, it will be, whether consumers want it or not. And how does this leave consumers feeling? Taken advantage of."
Basically, consumers have a victim mentality about advertising
now. They feel like they are being stalked.
At the same time, I can find scores of reports that say when consumers get an ad they think is appropriate for them, served in a place where they
expect it (think print or TV), where they understand the content/value exchange, their opinion of adverting moderates from loathing to mere annoyance.
Yes, serving ads in toilet stalls is
clever. So are electronic billboards that change their message to what they think I might like as I walk by, etc., etc. — but they are all considered individually by the inventor, the martech
company, the investor and the agency — and not as another image on a fabric that looks increasingly to the consumer like a Lumascape diagram.
Some cable news nets have come late to this
understanding and are in the process of cutting back on the number and length of their ad pods. Some of the more annoying, interruptive ad units are evaporating from digital screens. That is a
start.
But a better beginning is stopping to ask, "How will consumers feel about this in the context of their overall relationship to advertising?"