Is ad tech in trouble because the industry’s ad targeting is failing?
Outside of the undeniable efficacy of Facebook’s and Google’s
targeting, some think this is a major reason for the problems the industry is facing. We note:
- Telemetry shutting down;
- Layoffs at AudienceScience and Rocket Fuel;
- A report from Pinsight Media that 60% of age data on mobile exchanges is inaccurate.
We talked this past week to Kevin Jennison, chief technology officer at Gladly,
who has a lot to say on this subject. Because ad tech targeting is so off base, Jennison thinks that one solution is to let users target their own ads. Of course, that’s what Gladly does. As
they put it on their Web site: “Gladly monetizes your content with engaging and nonintrusive ads that users opt in to see every time they want to support your site.”
“The key is that ad targeting is failing users. Ad Tech has expanded, but users aren’t feeling any benefit,” Jennison says. “The user experience is still pretty
bad. Most online ads are frustrating or not relevant. How can we let users have more control over what kind of ads they are seeing?”
Jennison wants ad tech to move towards
systems that “let users have direct control” not only over what ads they see, but also how often they see them.
We mentioned last week a recurring ad we are subjected
to online from a Jacksonville plumber, Metro Rooter. If I have seen this ad once, I have seen it 200 times. After a while, the last thing I’m going to do is reach for the phone to call Metro
Rooter for our plumbing needs, even if its jingle is catchy. Actually, that’s part of the problem, I can’t get it out of my head.
Jennison wants opt-in options that
allow users to limit the amount of times an ad will be shown them. We heartily approve of that concept.
He also points to Facebook’s ad preferences options as another type
of opt-in option that users should have across the board online. This is an interesting point. One has to really look for this.
We found the Facebook Ad controls by clicking on
the Privacy link. It wasn’t evident until we knew were to look. Then, another click is required to “Manage the preferences we use to show you ads.” Cleverly, when we pursued this, we
were offered the option of seeing ads for the Antiquarian Booksellers' Association of America (ABAA). As we are antiquarian booksellers, we were impressed that we had that option. Better ABAA ads than
those from Metro Rooter. Another option was also book-oriented, for writer or “novelist” ads.
And Jennison says that with ad blocking on the steep rise, not moving
towards these kind of options is more or less suicidal for ad tech.
Bolstering Jennison’s point is the survey by Pinsight, a subsidiary of Sprint. It reports that 72% of ad
requests on exchanges omit age date, and 60% of that info is wrong.
“Inaccuracies tend to compound each other,” Matt Habiger, a Pinsight data executive, told
Ad Exchanger.
“And then hitting soccer moms of a certain age in suburban America suddenly becomes really difficult.”