Targeting ads on social networks
By Tessa Wegert
The Click Z
Network
November 8, 2007
An aunt of mine joined a
social network recently to keep up with her kids and
grandkids online. It didn't take her kin long to point
out she'd provided an erroneous birth year in her
profile. It wasn't an attempt to appear younger than she
was, she said. Unsure of how it would be used, she
didn't want to provide her real information to the site.
It was a valid point. Social networks continue to
introduce new targeting options that mark the first step
toward putting virtually all non-personally-identifiable
profile information into play for marketers. This week,
MySpace introduced advanced targeting capabilities
designed to improve ad performance, allowing advertisers
to more easily pick and choose their desired audience
groups.
As reported by ClickZ News, this second phase of
MySpace's HyperTargeting system, first introduced in
July, will let marketers target ad messages based on
hundreds of highly specific subcategories of interests,
such as types of horror movies, as expressed within user
profiles. The site says plans are also in the works to
provide access to other profile information, including
indicators of user life stages. I can almost hear the
buzz of anticipation among consumer packaged goods (CPG)
beauty brands, pharma products, and financial services
companies.
Just the other day, rival network Facebook launched a
new advertising platform that also delivers increased
targeting capabilities through a format called Social
Ads. When site members interact with a branded Facebook
page, their actions -- along with their profile photo --
can be featured in a Social Ad and distributed to their
Facebook friends based on targeting criteria, like
gender, geographic region, and, of course, age.
Contextual Perfection or Crossing the Line?
Every buyer and planner I've spoken with about the
MySpace development is palpably excited. Some question
why it took so long to arrive at what seems to be an
obvious and rational place. Yet there's some concern
about how social network users will react. Social sites
are all about its users. At first blush, HyperTargeting
seems to serve advertisers' interests first.
Interactive marketers have always struggled with the
issue of consumer privacy and the backlash that
invariably accompanies campaigns that cross the line.
Years of planning (and some convincing from behavioral
and contextual targeting firms) has led us to conclude
consumers respond better to relevant ads. If they must
be exposed to advertising (and, thankfully, many now
understand they must), at least make it contextually
relevant to their interests and needs.
MySpace has concluded the same thing, according to)
parent company Fox Interactive Media's (FIM's) Adam
Bain. Bain says a year was spent creating and studying
user panels in an effort to predict consumer response.
Sure enough, consumers indicated ads should be, at the
very least, relevant and engaging -- exactly what
HyperTargeting is designed to ensure.
Reports indicate that next year Facebook plans to use
algorithms to determine how receptive users are to ads
relating to specific interests and activities in
general, as well as those of their friends. The ads
won't necessarily be contextually targeted at first, but
they'll give the site an indication of how best to
target future messages.
In the meantime, let's not forget these are social
networks we're dealing with. They're online media
equalizers, delivering perhaps the greatest range of
demographics and psychographics of any Web-based medium.
Consumers shouldn't be surprised by these developments,
but then these aren't the type of consumers who are
familiar with what goes on behind the scenes, where
advertising is crafted and delivered. It should be
obvious that social sites are eager to profit from the
millions of users and scores of data they have access
to, and that advertisers, knowing the importance of
contextually relevant ads, are keen on locating
potential customers and delivering messaging that's of
interest to them. But convincing our target users of
these facts will surely take some doing.
We're much closer to the coveted image of the ultimate
contextual ad seen in "Minority Report" than most
consumers know. It will take some getting used to, but
ultimately technology that may initially be perceived as
intrusive could just become a site user's greatest ally.
