Consumers say they want relevant advertising but don’t want to be tracked in order to get it: 57 percent say they are not comfortable with behavioral tracking even if it’s done anonymously, according to a TRUSTe study conducted by TNS, writes MarketingCharts.
(View consumers’ level of comfort with the use of browsing history to serve relevant ads.)
Marketers use behavioral targeting to deliver a more customized experience (i.e., relevant ads) and to improve their marketing metrics, but they run up against consumer privacy concerns and calls for greater transparency around techniques.
Online consumers indicated a high level of awareness of behavioral targeting and tracking methods:
Some 96 percent of respondents say privacy is at least somewhat important to them. Accordingly…
“Education once again appears to be the key to finding a constructive balance between behavioral targeting and consumer privacy, because no matter how much we assure anonymity, there is still significant discomfort with the idea of tracking,” said Fran Maier, executive director of TRUSTe.
“We have a solid indication that consumers want us to find a way to get them the advertising that is relevant to them. In order to do this, behavioral targeting is one of the most promising methods, but at the very least it has to be made more transparent, provide choices, and deliver real value.”
About the study: TNS conducted an online survey among a randomly selected sample of American adults whose households belong to TNS’s online consumer panel. In total, 1,015 interviews were completed, Feb. 1-5, 2008. Data were weighted by region, market size, age, gender and household size, composition and income, to reflect the demographic composition of the online adult population in the continental US.
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