Marketing to teens online
By Anastasia Goodstein
Business Week
November 7, 2007
With Facebook's decision to
allow advertisers to display ads based on information
users post on their profiles, the debate over online
privacy has gained new momentum, especially since
today's teenagers are living out a big chunk of their
lives on social networking sites. Advertisers can now
target underage consumers with relative ease, raising
obvious ethical questions. But even if there were no
such worries, marketers would need to be aware of
pitfalls in trying to reach young consumers online.
Privacy advocates fret about marketers abusing the rich
treasure trove of very personal data being posted by
teens these days. At present, the only law that
regulates online marketing to children is COPPA, the
Children's Online Privacy Protection Act, which requires
parental permission before any commercial entity can
collect personal information from a child under 13. But
there's no law that governs marketing to older teens.
Privacy groups are also advocating for a "Do Not Track
List." This would give consumers of all ages the right
to opt out of marketing efforts wherein a Web site
places "cookies" on a user's computer to monitor their
surfing habits and deliver ads deemed appropriate to
that behavior. But again, there are no special
protections here for teens.
Yet while there's little to stop marketers from
targeting the young, there are practical reasons why
these efforts may backfire with teens. And with these in
mind, there are practical ways for marketers to find and
target a more receptive audience of young consumers.
The Lying Game
First and foremost, marketers need to grasp one basic
reality that can turn their "targeted" ads into
scattershot: Lying on the Internet is rampant. Just ask
Tom Anderson, a MySpace (NWS) founder who was recently
outed for lying about his age to make himself a couple
of years younger. Adults lie on Internet dating sites
all the time to make themselves a few pounds lighter or
a few inches taller.
There are many reasons kids and teens lie when they go
online. Here are just a handful:
• Kids are exploring their identities. This is a natural
part of growing up—you try on different identities as a
way to see how people respond and see what fits. Part of
it is just playing, too. Remember pretending you were
someone else and acting out different scenes in the
backyard or playing Dungeons & Dragons in the basement?
Likewise, the ease with which anyone can open multiple
accounts on a Web site or create different avatars makes
this type of exploration and play a natural part of a
teen's digital life, just as it remains a stage of
growing up in the offline world.
• Children yearn to join "cool" sites even if they're
too young. Take a quick poll of middle schoolers
(without their parents around) and ask if they have a
MySpace or Facebook profile. Many will say yes —and that
they've listed their age as 100, or at least much older
than 11 or 12. Know any teens who buy or sell on eBay
(EBAY), where you're supposed to be 18 to do so? I
thought so. Tweens are aspirational. They want what
older teens have, and if it's as easy as fudging their
ages online to get it, they're going to lie.
• Children also don't want to be forced to make their
social network profiles private. By default, MySpace
makes private all profiles of users age 15 and under as
a protective safety measure. Naturally, since some 14-
and 15-year-olds want their profiles visible to the
world, they'll lie to change the default setting.
• Kids also lie on the Web to avoid creepy predators.
One parent told me her 13-year-old son's MySpace profile
says he's 26 and married with two kids. Teens, sometimes
with parental encouragement, will give this type of
false information because they don't want to be bothered
by adults looking to chat it up with children.
• Since they've grown up being marketed to since birth,
many children like to mess with marketers. Teens are
pretty savvy about the reality that registration
information they give online will be used for marketing
purposes. Some of them will intentionally provide false
information just to thwart those efforts.
Remember that since most teens use social networks to
hang out virtually with the same friends they see at
school all day, it doesn't matter if they lie because
their friends are all in on the conceit. It's just
something teens do for the reasons stated above.
With all this lying going on, there will be a lot of
behavioral targeting of ads that completely misses the
mark, with hordes of teenage "100-year-olds" getting
pitches for cholesterol drugs and incontinence products.
Teens Want More Control
While teens may mess with advertisers as a way to fight
back against the onslaught of marketing they are exposed
to, they are not averse to all marketing. This is
especially true if they love a product, the marketing
offers some extra value, or it's simply funny and
creative. As they're used to controlling their online
experience, they strongly dislike pop-up ads or spam in
the form of instant messages and text
messages—particularly when the communications are out of
context.
When Facebook first launched its newsfeed feature,
allowing your entire network to see your every action,
its users were outraged. Facebook remedied the situation
by allowing users to control exactly who gets to see the
newsfeed, photos, or other aspects of your profile.
Notably, in addition to its new targeted marketing
effort, Facebook also announced on Nov. 6 that it plans
to let advertisers create their own profile pages so
that users can identify themselves as fans of a product.
MySpace has been doing this for a while now , and the
response has been strong. Droves of teens have "friended"
the MySpace page set up by Wendy's (WEN) for a square
hamburger named "Smart." Similarly, Condé Nast's teen
site Flip.com asks its users which ads they want to be
displayed on their profiles when they register.
Approaches like these offer multiple benefits: They make
teens understand that advertising pays for a Web site,
get them to think about the products being offered, and
let them consciously choose to align themselves with a
specific brand. By giving younger users more control and
choice over what ads they'll see, they may have more
respect for the service and for the advertisers. This in
turn may lead to word-of-mouth recommendations, a major
force behind teen purchasing decisions.
The lesson here is that the real way to reach younger
users on social networking sites is to be transparent
about the need for advertising to support a free
service. Then allow them to actively participate in
determining what kinds of advertising they receive
through a series of questions. Reward them for filling
out the whole survey with a cool prize.
Instead of scraping their profiles and hoping your ads
hit the right target, are noticed, and then actually
clicked on, why not engage users to find out what kinds
of ads would appeal to them? By allowing them to
deliberately opt in and share information with you, they
can maintain a comforting sense of control, and you can
serve ads that will hit their target.
