The Evolution of Online Advertising Technology -- More Targeting, Less Privacy (Part One) |  | Visited: 2368 |
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| | by Scott Buresh September 24, 2008 |
| Scott Buresh |
 Scott Buresh is the CEO of Medium Blue Search
Engine Marketing, which was named the number one organic search engine optimization company in the
world in 2006 and 2007 by PromotionWorld. Scott
has contributed content to many publications including The
Complete Guide to Google Advertisingand Building Your Business with Google For
Dummies (Wiley, 2004), MarketingProfs, ZDNet, WebProNews,
DarwinMag, SiteProNews, ISEDB.com, and Search Engine Guide.
Medium Blue serves local and national clients, including Boston
Scientific, DS Waters, and Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center. Visit
MediumBlue.com to request a custom SEO guarantee based on your goals and your data. (Atlantic, 2008) |
| Scott Buresh
has written 42 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Scott Buresh... |
Please bear with me as I go through a brief history of basic
online advertising. The evolution of targeted online advertising is
interesting, because I believe the perceived harmlessness of early advertising
technology and targeting tactics lulled many people into a sense of complacency
or perhaps even false security.
In the beginning of targeted online advertising, there were
banner ads. As many people recall, these were supposed to drive the Internet
marketing industry in its infancy. Scads of publishers paid scads of money
based on a CPI (cost per impression) model or simply paid huge dollars for
banner ads and other targeted online advertising on well-trafficked sites.
Then something crazy happened – nothing. It turns out that
the banner advertising technology on the Internet was not the magic bullet it
was purported to be. The old way of making money based on providing content
(the way magazines and newspapers ran advertising) just didn't seem to work in
this context.
This new advertising technology was part of the reason for
the collapse of the dot-bomb era. All the talk was about "eyeballs," "stickiness,"
"bleeding edge," "cradle to grave," and several other terms
that, in retrospect, would have sounded more at home in a Wes Craven movie than
in an emerging industry. Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of business models
depended on a traditional marketing strategy working more or less the same as
it always had when introduced into a non-traditional setting.
All the while, one company, originally called GoTo, then
Overture, and finally bought by Yahoo!, actually formulated a targeted online
advertising system that worked – keyword advertising. Companies could bid on a
per-click basis for certain key terms, which sent valuable traffic to its website.
Obviously, the improvement in advertising technology had to
do with the model itself, which was perpetuated on relevance. By only bidding
on keyphrases that you wanted, you could only pay for visitors who had already
shown in interest in your products or services. This targeted online
advertising model was soon copied by Google, who tweaked it and made it
better.
There were not many raised eyebrows at this time, in terms
of privacy. After all, the user was the one entering the query, and nobody
suspected at the time that search engines might one day actually create
individual profiles on users. We were all just really enjoying "having the
information at our fingertips" without the potential hazards of ink stains
and paper cuts that traditional research required.
Google then took a similar idea a step further. Instead of
just serving up targeted online advertising on its home page, the company
created a content distribution network called AdSense. In this program, owners
of websites could sign up to have the ads placed on their sites. Google would
then use a "contextual" logic to determine which ads to place where.
In other words, Google would "read" the content on a page and then
serve up targeted online advertising in the area provided by the site owner
that were relevant to the content.
There were a few missteps with this new advertising
technology (one classic example was when the online version of the NY Post ran
a story in 2004 about a murder victim whose body parts had been packed into a
suitcase. Running alongside the story was an ad that Google served up for
Samsonite Luggage). Yet this targeted online advertising service also caught
on, with nary a cry from privacy people. After all, you don't have to visit the
sites. And the site owners don't have to sign you up for the service, right?
Suddenly, Gmail was offered and that raised some eyebrows.
Gmail, of course, is Google's free email-based platform. Gmail gave people an
(at that time) unprecedented 1 gigabyte of email space (Yahoo!, if memory
serves, offered 4 megs for free email accounts and charged people for more
memory). The only caveat – Gmail would use a similar advertising technology platform
as AdSense, but it would decide which ads to serve up by reading through your
emails.
Well, this new approach to advertising technology creeped
some people out, and privacy advocates were a bit more vocal about using
targeted online advertising by parsing through people's emails. A California
lawmaker tried to introduce some legislation preventing the practice.
International privacy groups chimed in with their own concerns. In the end,
however, the fact remained that one had to sign up for a Gmail account and
everyone that did was (presumably) aware of how the service worked before they
did sign up. So it was an opt-in system – If you didn't want Google parsing
through your email and serving up relevant, targeted online advertising, you
didn't have to use the service.
So there we all were, happily surfing away, not a care in
the world. What most of us didn't realize was that enough free cookies were
being distributed to each of us to turn the otherwise docile Keebler elves into
tree-dwelling Mafioso erroneously plotting a turf war.
These cookies, of course, are the ones that websites place
on your computer when you visit – little packets of information that record
your visit, and sometimes, your activity there. Certainly, there's a legitimate
reason for this. When you return to a website, it can help if it remembers your
last visit and you can pick up where you left off. Assume, for example, that
you were making multiple purchases from an e-commerce site and had a bunch of
stuff in your shopping cart but were forced to abandon the site before
completion. It's nice to go back and pick up where you left off without having
to do it all over again.
Digital advertisers, however, saw another opportunity for
targeted online advertising. They invented advertising technology that would
scour through the cookies on your personal machine, figure out what you liked
and disliked by looking at the types of sites you went to, and then feed up
highly targeted online advertising based upon your browsing history. These
companies included aQuantive, DoubleClick, ValueClick, and others. Of the companies I mentioned, only ValueClick
is still independent. Google snapped up DoubleClick, while Microsoft snapped up
aQuantive. Clearly, these companies believe in the future of Internet
advertising technology and also believe in the long-term legality of this
technology.
Now some real red flags were raised. I've
written about this advertising technology before, so I'm not going to go
over it all again here. Suffice to say that some government regulators were
pretty skeptical about this new form of advertising technology and there have
been numerous suggestions for regulation. The lack of uproar from the public,
however, has not really created any backlash for the companies in question. It
could be because there is widespread ignorance about Internet advertising
technology (and I believe there is, based on conversations with people of
average Internet experience). Perhaps a part of it is also that privacy has
been eroding on the Internet one incremental step at a time.
To be continued in part two….
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