Skip to content

Personalized Ads: A Love-Hate Relationship

April 4, 2019

Seen any personalized ads lately?blank vertical space, 16 pixels high

Of course you have.blank vertical space, 16 pixels high

Geoffrey James explains:blank vertical space, 24 pixels high

Unless you’ve been living under a rock on Mars, you know that your activity on (and off) the web is constantly monitored and evaluated so that applications and businesses can create a “personalized experience” for you.blank vertical space, 16 pixels high

That’s why you keep seeing online ads that match whatever you might have searched for in the past few days.blank vertical space, 24 pixels high

dog with smartphone robots hovering in air suggesting things he might like to buy personalized ads via bots online tracking

How do consumers feel about that?blank vertical space, 16 pixels high

Well, they’re conflicted– to put it mildly.blank vertical space, 16 pixels high

On the one hand, a lot of people find personalized ads a bit “creepy.” And more than a few of them tell their friends about those creepy experiences:blank vertical space, 24 pixels high

A new study by customer experience (CX) analytics firm InMoment found that at least 75 percent of consumers surveyed think most forms of ad personalization are at least “somewhat creepy.”

And consumers don’t keep this information to themselves: one in five respondents tells friends about marketing experiences that they consider creepy, and one in 10 shares “Big Brother-type experiences” on social media…

blank vertical space, 24 pixels highAnd then there’s the “ethics factor”:blank vertical space, 16 pixels high

According to a survey conducted by cybersecurity firm RSA, most people (83% of respondents) don’t think it’s ethical for companies to use their personal information for targeted ads.blank vertical space, 16 pixels high

Another finding from the RSA survey: when a company gets hacked, consumers blame the company, not the hacker.blank vertical space, 24 pixels high

So that must mean consumers don’t like personalized ads, right?
blank vertical space, 16 pixels high

Wrong.blank vertical space, 16 pixels high

A study by digital marketing performance agency Adlucent found that 71% of respondents prefer ads that are tailored to their personalized interests and shopping habits.blank vertical space, 16 pixels high

They see it as a way to discover new products, while reducing the number of irrelevant ads they’re subjected to.blank vertical space, 16 pixels high

Another finding from the same study:blank vertical space, 24 pixels high

Personalized ads also boost engagement. We found that people were almost twice as likely to click through an ad featuring an unknown brand if the ad was tailored to their preferences.

blank vertical space, 24 pixels highThe conflict about personalization comes down to this: people appreciate the convenience of targeted ads, but they don’t want personalized services at the expense of their privacy.blank vertical space, 16 pixels high

The key to solving this dilemma for brands: transparency. Telling consumers yes, we’re tracking you, here’s the personal information we’re using, and here’s where we get it.blank vertical space, 16 pixels high

A Harvard Business Review study found that when brands use highly sensitive data to track customers (sexual orientation, political beliefs, certain search topics), it makes people uncomfortable– like they’re being spied on.blank vertical space, 16 pixels high

However, they’re more willing to tolerate the use of general information: things like their name and shopping history.blank vertical space, 16 pixels high

The HBR study offered 5 suggestions for digital marketers who want to succeed with targeted ads:blank vertical space, 24 pixels high

1. Stay away from sensitive information (race, sexual orientation, medical conditions)

2. Commit to transparency (at least be willing to provide information about data-use practices upon request)

3. Exercise restraint (you lose customers when ads feel intrusive or inappropriate)

4. Explain why you collect data (“it will help us generate more appropriate and useful ads”)

5. Use traditional data collection, too (give people a chance to directly state their preferences)

blank vertical space, 24 pixels highBottom line: to maintain trust, brands have to respect the customer and the customer’s privacy.blank vertical space, 16 pixels high

Harvard Business Review puts it this way:blank vertical space, 24 pixels high

There’s still a lot we don’t know about how people respond to online data collection and ad targeting, and norms around privacy may change over time as young digital natives become consumers and technology further penetrates our lives….blank vertical space, 16 pixels high

(but) in the end, all ad targeting should be customer-centric—in the service of creating value for consumers.blank vertical space, 24 pixels highwoman asking dog what would make him happy right now dog runs off brings back lease and plastic poop retrieval bags wants to go for walkblank vertical space, 16 pixels high

    *       *       *       *       *       *       *       *       *       *       *       *       blank vertical space, 16 pixels high

blank vertical space, 16 pixels highAbout Mark: I’m an illustrator specializing in humor, branding, social media, and content marketing. My images are different, like your brand needs to be.blank vertical space, 16 pixels high

You can view my portfolio, and connect with me on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.blank vertical space, 16 pixels high

Questions? Send me an email.blank vertical space, 40 pixels highRecommendation testimonial for Mark Armstrong Illustration from Venetia de Blocq van Kuffeler editor The Diploma

blank vertical space, 32 pixels high

blank vertical space, 40 pixels high