Advertising in 2020 and beyond set for disruption. FILE PHOTO | NMG
While some believe the point is exaggerated, it’s hard to argue
against the idea in some basic form that increasingly, companies view
their customers as valuable data sources. That data is to be harvested
in lieu of, or in addition to, payment for products and services.
This
thought is made more convincing by the number of businesses that opt to
rely on consumer data and achieve spectacular economic outcomes by
putting it to use.
The reason that consumer data is so
valuable, and that companies are so keen to use it (even going so far as
to risk consumer privacy), is because they can use it to capitalise on
consumer preferences and more efficiently sell us their products and
services.
You can go a step further and argue that it’s not just about capitalising on behaviour but influencing habits.
This
is not anything new in advertising, and can be seen in just about all
forms of analogue advertising. At its core, it is about influencing
consumer behaviour.
However, we might pause to consider how consumers feel about their personal data being used to guide their choices.
The
digital identities that companies ascribe to consumers are an
amalgamation of the assumptions drawn from consumer behaviour online –
traditionally seen as highly effective for their purposes, and part of
what until now has been a reasonable value exchange.
However,
as we have seen over recent years in the political realm, we have
perhaps been naive to its potential to fuel some unforeseen and arguably
disagreeable outcomes.
For all the criticism thrown at
the use of data, it is, however, hard to argue with its ability to
improve the lives of consumers.
Few complain about the utility of better content personalisation, relevant recommendations and (on occasion) well-targeted ads.
None of this would be possible without the data trails consumers leave online.
Despite this, many consumers live in what Shoshana Zuboff describes as “The Age of Surveillance Capitalism”.
Amplifying
this sentiment, Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook attacked business models
relying on user data, taking specific aim at facilitating data brokers.
While
some may have read it as opportunistic, the idea that “consumer
information is being weaponised against them with military efficiency”
resonates, particularly in the wake of scandals such as Cambridge
Analytica and Russian involvement in the 2016 U.S. presidential
election.
The issue of privacy and exploitation of data
is among the most complex of our time. Even if consumer privacy is not
being unjustifiably violated, the monetisation of data by major
platforms has become a social, political and regulatory lightning rod.
Data
security and privacy go far beyond the world of online advertising. A
significant number of databases of huge enterprises have been
compromised in the last two years, including email providers, loyalty
schemes, retailer databases and credit rating agencies.
The
next decade could be even more dramatic than the last and will be
dominated by advances in Artificial Intelligence and the next wave of
commercial and social disruption.
In every sector the
innovation cycle will speed up, and in all fields there will be greater
scrutiny of the possibility of social harm — and hopefully an equal
focus on social good.
It seems clear that the ethical
and social ramifications of the change will be as important as the
economic implications that typically concern companies.
More
narrowly, in advertising, scrutiny of business models that depend on
the monetisation of data signals will increase, as will the penalties
associated with enabling bad actors. The rewards for actions that make
advertising more valuable will be significant.
In the media world, existing trends will accelerate.
The
role of data will continue to change, and for advertisers first-party
data will be of the greatest value for understanding customers.
They
will use it to create audiences that will be found inside the walled
gardens of the platforms, and that match with the context of publishers
and the data they have on user behaviour. Matching privacy and relevance
will be of great importance and value.
In advertising,
the “interruptive” model will persist, but delivery will be
increasingly programmatic and addressable. Decision-making will be both
automated and autonomous.
Over time, the pursuit of
mass reach via broadcast means will give way to in-target reach
assembled one person, one household or one device at a time.
Coupled
with enough creativity and variation in messaging to address the
varying needs and wants of the many customer cohort of each and every
brand, advertising has the opportunity to maximise efficiency,
effectiveness and relevance.
In other words, advertising will become more valuable.
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