A: We aimed to create a theoretical framework that could shed light on the economic forces arising from privacy regulations in the advertising industry. One major hurdle was integrating a nuanced consumer utility model that accounts for privacy choices and advertising preferences into the already complex online advertising ecosystem, which involves intricate strategic interactions among various stakeholders. Fortunately, we received valuable feedback from the [peer review] team that helped us address this modeling challenge.
To avoid this, companies can utilize ad tracking data to infer a consumer’s stage in the purchase funnel and reduce ad intensity accordingly.
The authors of the study gave us further insights in an interview:
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A: The primary motivation was the shift in data ownership and control brought about by strict privacy regulations (e.g., the EU’s GDPR and California’s CCPA).\xa0Before these regulations, firms could freely collect and utilize consumer data for marketing purposes; but now, consumers have more control over their data. This shift poses a substantial risk to major stakeholders in the advertising industry because having less data affects the targetability of advertising. For instance, Facebook suffered an estimated $12 billion loss due to Apple users disabling app tracking. It is crucial for managers to understand when consumers are willing to share their data and how they should adapt their advertising strategies to this new business landscape.
Q: What was the primary motivation behind investigating consumer opt-in choices in the context of digital advertising? Why should managers in the advertising industry pay close attention to this topic?
Q: What is ad wearout, and how do privacy regulations affect it?
A: One surprising finding of our research is that increased overall ad effectiveness can negatively impact ad networks that sell ads. This counterintuitive insight revolves around consumers exercising their privacy rights. If ads are highly effective in driving sales, firms will show more ads to opt-in consumers than to opt-out consumers. The reason is that the targetability afforded by tracking further boosts ad effectiveness. In this case, however, wearout-sensitive consumers who dislike seeing ads, even if the ads are effective for firms, may opt out of tracking. The resultant shrinkage in consumer data compromises targetability, which, in turn, exerts downward pressure on ad prices, ultimately hurting ad networks. This research could extend into various areas of digital marketing by highlighting the interplay between consumer privacy, ad effectiveness, and advertising network dynamics.
Q: Were there any results from your study that genuinely surprised you or went against the conventional wisdom in the field? And how do you see this research influencing or extending to other areas in digital marketing?
نویسنده: تیم تحریریه فیلیپ کاتلر