Archive for the ‘Data’ Category

Bizo Partners With Ad Network Martini Media, Finds B2B Fit With B2C

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

BizoB2B ad targeting data company, Bizo, announced a partnership with online ad network Martini Media, which targets high net worth consumers.  Bizo will provide its B2B data segments to the ad network.  Read the release.

Bizo CEO Russell Glass discussed the new Martini Media partnership and its implications with AdExchanger.com.

Martini Media would appear to be a B2C opportunity for Bizo. Are you expanding beyond B2B?

RG: We’ve received a lot of interest from marketers coming to us asking if our executive and c-suite categories could be used as proxies for high net worth. After a few of these tests went well, we saw an opportunity to leverage our data in a new way. I would call it “prosumer” targeting – or reaching a business executive when they’re pursuing interests outside of work. Martini is one of the leaders in this category, so there was a natural fit to be working together.

As you re-sell the same cookies to different clients, are you getting any feedback regarding the rising cost of media as, potentially, different advertisers target the same user? Or is there so much inventory out there, advertisers don’t have to worry about rising costs?

We’re not seeing an increase in media costs based on the inventory – it’s more based on the audience and the limited number of impressions where you can find the audience. As more advertisers look to get in front of the same audience, the value of the impressions those audience members can be found on are going up.

How is business breaking out between ad network sales and direct advertisers? Any trends you can report?

Our business is 60% direct sales and 40% indirect where partners like Martini and others use our data to better target B2B audiences. We expect the indirect component of our business will outpace direct sales as we grow.

By John Ebbert

CRO Teresi On MTVN Deal And Quantcast's Cross-Digital Potential

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

QuantcastQuantcast announced a recent deal with MTV Networks in which Quantcast will offer “audience targeting capabilities on sites in MTVN’s domestic online portfolio, including MTV.com, VH1.com, ComedyCentral.com and Spike.com, as well as on partner sites in the company’s Tribes vertical ad network.” Read the release.

Quantcast CRO Todd Teresi discussed the announcement and its cross-channel, cross-digital potential with AdExchanger.com.

AdExchanger.com: MTVN contains some of the biggest brands in media today and this particular deal involves video inventory only. It would make sense that the deal expands into display or even marry to digital TV and the set-top box at some point giving buyers access to the same audience across all channels. How close is Quantcast to providing this type of cross-digital-channel buying and/or audience measurement service?

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Digital Element On Postcode Targeting And U.S. And Europe Tech Targeting Interest

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

Digital ElementIn a release yesterday, Digital Element announced that it would begin offering postcode-level (“zip code” in the U.S.) targeting capabilities.  (See the release.)

Digital Element’s Vice President Frank Bobo discussed the implication of European expansion and the market for IP targeting.

AdExchanger.com: Can you help us with the jargon? What does the phrase “postcode-level database” mean? And then, how is this different than other solutions?

FB: Postcode-level targeting is akin to zip code-level targeting in the United States. (In the United Kingdom, there are no zip codes, only post/postal codes). There have always been inherent limitations in tying zip/postcode-level information to IP addresses due to the way the Internet is architected, as well as the way IP Intelligence/geolocation information is derived. Digital Element creates a “map” of Internet topology: the way the Internet is routed, where end-point networking equipment is located, etc. As such, we can tie an IP address to an endpoint piece of network equipment, for example a DSLAM (a Digital Subscriber Line Access Multiplexer that allows telephone lines to make faster connections to the Internet. And, with great confidence we can now identify the country, state, and city where that IP address resides. However, that one piece of networking equipment may serve a 25- to 30-mile radius, which might include several zip/postcodes, making it hard to tie a 5-digit zip code to that specific IP address.

What is new and differentiating with NetAcuity Edge is that no other provider has been able to circumvent these limitations in either the United States or abroad. Because of Digital Element’s patented routing infrastructure analysis and the insight we glean from a network of global commercial partners, we are, for the first time, able to offer a highly accurate dataset of IP address-to-postcode data that complies with the highest standards of end-user privacy and anonymity. So now, online marketers, advertisers, publishers, e-tailers, etc. are able to further segment and target their online audiences at a “hyper-local” level (targeting online to a postal-code level) based on IP addresses-which brings more reach and relevance to online endeavors.

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BlueKai CEO Omar Tawakol Discusses Recent Investment And Plans

Monday, February 1st, 2010

BlueKaiOmar Tawakol, CEO of BlueKai, discussed today’s announcement regarding a new $21 million round of funding (Read the release.) with AdExchanger.com.

AdExchanger.com: Obviously, this is a big round. What plans can you share regarding future areas of investment at BlueKai and where this round will be funneled?

OT: One area in particular will get a lot more focus:

Our partners currently use our interface to schedule data campaigns. To make it easier to embed BlueKai data everywhere, we will be releasing APIs, server-to-server capabilities, real time bidder support and other technologies. We have been impressed with the demand for data that our channel has displayed, so we are committed to support them. This will be particularly useful for networks, DSPs (demand-side platforms) and trading desks.

What’s the funding climate like these days? Was there any particular strategy to finding the right partner(s)?

The funding climate is definitely good. For us the right partner had to have two main attributes:

  1. You want to work with the partners – because they will collaborate with you for years to come.
  2. They get your business and are excited about its fundamentals.


Is the data exchange model ready to go beyond U.S. borders? Any thoughts regarding international expansion?

Yes, the data exchange model is ready for expansion beyond the US. I can’t give a timeline, but it is definitely something of interest to BlueKai.

By John Ebbert

Rapleaf Focusing On Social Data And Enabling Advertisers To Buy Audiences That Have Affinities With Their Brand Says CEO Hoffman

Monday, February 1st, 2010

Auren Hoffman is CEO of Rapleaf, a company which provides social data about a company’s audience.

RapleafAdExchanger.com: Tell us about Rapleaf’s history.

AH: Rapleaf’s vision is to understand people. Like Google understands URLs, we want to better understand people.

What problem is Rapleaf solving?

At our core, we’re about helping companies understand their existing customers and find new customers. We do this by analyzing the “social data” of people. Social media data (blogs, forums, social networks, discussion boards, etc.) is an emerging source of information on people. Rapleaf is helping organize the massive volume of public data being made available, and providing that to end users in meaningful ways that provide unique insight.

What is your core dataset?

We focus on social data – which includes the social graph, interests, affinities, and demographics.

AdExchanger.com: How are clients buying audience with Rapleaf’s help? And, do you work with demand-side platforms?

Today, Rapleaf is plugged into several DSPs, and we work with several ad networks. We offer unique segments like “Online Influencers”, “Active Twitter Users”, “Fans of X Brand”, etc. Advertisers come to us today to buy audiences that have affinities with their brand and also a high potential to spread a message online.

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eXelate Announces Invite Media Partnership; CEO Zohar Offers Insights On Data Marketplace

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

eXelate and Invite MediaOnline targeting data provider, eXelate, and Invite Media, a demand-side platform, announced an agreement in which “Invite Media customers gain both seamless access to eXelate data across multiple media exchanges including Right Media, Google DoubleClick’s Ad Exchange, AdBrite, AppNexus, AdMeld, PubMatic and others, as well as dynamic insight reporting indicating the audience characteristics that are driving results.” Read the release.

Meir Zohar, Chief Executive Officer of eXelate, spoke to AdExchanger.com about details of the release and the application of data in online advertising today.

AdExchanger.com: What do you mean by “multipoint performance analytics?”

MZ: Basically this process is all about providing advertisers with a new way to define who their audience is, and what members of that or any newly discovered audience segment are truly performing. It is based on “machine learning” in which each distributed creative looks at all potential segment identifiers, seeing which creates a lift, reporting that and then allowing impressions to be moved to the high performers. We have coined the term “behavioral optimization” for the process – and it is something I think you will hear a great deal more about in 2010 and beyond.

AdExchanger.com: Can you discuss the complexity of using eXelate data today? Do advertisers and agencies need to be adept with demand-side platforms, for example?

MZ: A key differentiator of eXelate’s approach to the buy side of the market is our “open platform” position. Our philosophy is that data should be able to be applied in many different methods, delivered in multiple formats and priced by flexible business models. Targeting applications for branding campaigns demand a different business and technology model than media exchange based analytics reporting or campaign optimization does. It is not a one size fits all data world. Our technology supports this concept by offering an open API that’s very easy to integrate into various demand side platforms, a direct data buy interface and a flexible group of business models. In a nutshell, we want to make our partners’ data easily applied anywhere so they can find their audience everywhere!

AdExchanger.com: What do you see as key drivers to demand for display advertising by advertisers/agencies in 2010?

MZ: A few thoughts on what will drive the display business:

  1. General economic recovery (a rising tide . . .)
  2. Remaining scars from the last downturn (dollars shifting from inefficient offline to accountable online media)
  3. Further development of the “secondary channel” based on Real-Time Bidding (RTB) becoming fully operationalized which will drive the continued growth of ad exchanges. That will go side-by-side with the growth in quality and quantity of data that feeds second channel targeting.
  4. Growth of premium media channel based on (a) the opportunity for the agencies to start leveraging data from companies like eXelate to perform “audience buying” as opposed to strictly using content as proxy for audience (this will eventually move offline as well), and (b) explosion of the agency buying platforms such as Vivaki, Cadreon and MIG, who want premium environments, but can drive massive centralized volume (and targeting as noted above)
  5. Great data that will fuel display performance which will finally start to approach that of search!

CEO Jain Says JovianDATA Enabling Insights On Data For Ad Networks, Agencies, Advertisers And Publishers

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

Parveen Jain is CEO of data technology company, JovianDATA.

JovianDATAAdExchanger.com: On your site, you say: “The more dimensions, data sources, and KPIS – the better.” How can that possibly be true? Agencies, for example, are sitting on mountains of data. Are you suggesting they need to harness all of it.

PJ: JovianDATA technology creates multi-dimensional models with 10’s of dimensions and 10’s of measures (key performance indicators) on massive amounts of data (100’s of Terabytes) which processes multi-dimensional queries in seconds. As a result we can run expeditious and accurate analytics to any level of granularity without sampling the data with the lowest total cost of ownership (TCO). This allows us to invite our customers to send us “more data with more dimensions, data sources and KPI’s”, something that no other vendor can claim.

We know that once customers have to sample or aggregate the data, they lose the granular nuances that are critical to identifying and acting upon opportunities in the data, and thus prevent them from maximizing the return on their advertising spending. JovianDATA has removed this barrier, and our customers discover insights that allow them to take in-flight actions to optimize their campaigns, during the campaign.

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DoubleVerify CEO Netzer On The Verification Space And BrandShield

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

DoubleVerifyVerification technology company, DoubleVerify, recently announced its BrandShield product which it says “prevents and blocks ads from appearing next to inappropriate content.” Read the release.

AdExchanger.com spoke with DoubleVerify CEO Oren Netzer about the verification space and its growing product line.

AdExchanger.com: With the brand safety and verification products of DoubleVerify as well as your competitors, has the balance been tipped with brand marketers who may be more willing to spend online? If not, when?

ON: Keep in mind that the verification space is still brand new. We founded the company in 2008 and we were the pioneers in this space, but we really started seeing significant interest from agencies and marketers only in the past 6 months or so. Verification is now being adopted very quickly by all major agencies and brands. We certainly see many brands that are engaged in verification already and hear many brands that are planning on tacking on verification to anything they buy. There are also more than half a dozen new competitors that came running into the space in the past few months once they’ve seen that significant demands exists. The agencies are also doing their part in evangelizing verification with their clients, with the hopes of getting their clients to spend more online.

There are two key reasons why we are seeing a shift in the mindset and dollars.

The first is the most visible, brand integrity. Obviously no one wants their ad placed around in appropriate content and verification puts and end to this and puts the brands mind at ease (some major brands are very very gunshy). Secondly, online media can and does enable companies to achieve their marketing goals, when the campaign is delivered the way it was intended (right audience, right section, in the US, in the correct DMA, etc…). When it isn’t delivered the way it was intended, the results go well beyond wasted budget, which we see an average of 30% in each campaign we verify. The real devastating results happen when marketing budget decisions are made based on campaign data that isn’t valid – i.e. basing pulling dollars out of online because the last campaign didn’t pull the results the company wanted, although nobody knew that the campaign targeted to the Southeast US, ran in the UK.

AdExchanger.com: In your opinion, do you think publishers should get rid of nested iFrames given the problems with discrepencies for advertisers? Or, are they still a service given third-party ad servers potential to slow down the page load of a site?

ON: I don’t think nested IFRAMES are going to disappear anytime soon. They are an important solution in helping publishers and ad servers protect themselves. Especially with more and more vendors popping up in the measurement, verification, optimization, data and analytics spaces and each of them placing their tags on the ads, publishers need a way to limit the potential security and latency issues arising from these tags. This was a main concern for us when launching BrandShield – make sure our tags are 100% secure and cause no latency to ad load. We are actually the only verification provider that had our tags tested and approved by the leading portals.

AdExchanger.com: Your recent BrandShield announcement seems to go beyond providing visibility into inventory. With DV’s ability to “see through” iFrames, are you getting into ad serving, discrepancy management similar to companies like Ad-Juster?

ON: This space is so new and publishers and marketers are just beginning to understand how to use verification. I think there are a lot of opportunities for us out there and it’s too early to tell how this will play out for us or anyone else.

By John Ebbert

BlueKai Releases Latest Pulse Index; CEO Tawakol Discusses Intent Capture and Its Time Value

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

BlueKaiYesterday, BlueKai announced the second edition of its BlueKai Pulse which looks at intent data across its data exchange through the end of November. The report offers insights on consumer buying trends much like the company’s new analytics tool, BlueKai In-Market Reports, which includes access to a a panel of 160 million unique users across online retail and comparison shopping sites according to the company.

Here are example results provided by BlueKai for video game equipment that you might expect during the run-up to the Holidays – and people want a Wii!…

online-intent

Get the latest BlueKai Pulse here.

So what is intent? According to the release: “Shopping intent is defined as search and shopping related activities by consumers on retail and price comparison sites.”

AdExchanger.com asked BlueKai CEO Omar Tawakol for more insights on the insights…

AdExchanger.com: Can you get in the weeds a bit and explain the technology side of how BlueKai generates “Pulse” observations?

OT: BlueKai captures commercial intent through pixels that are integrated into the largest commerce sites on the web. For example, when an anonymous consumer shops for a Sony Bravia flat panel tv, BlueKai, tags that consumer as in-market for a Bravia flat panel tv. That tag is captured in the consumer’s browser cookie, but it is also logged as an event on our back end. This shopping event is then captured and aggregated with billions of shopping interactions every month. This allows BlueKai to mine for patterns that provide insights into how consumer’s behaviors are changing. The BlueKai Pulse report is our way of sharing those high-level insights with the industry.

AdExchanger.com: Do you have any sense of the shelf life (time value) of intent data?

OT: Intent behaviors are most valuable when they are first created. Over time, a consumer will buy the item they are shopping for – so intent behavior is best served fresh before a competitor accesses that behavior and converts that customer into a buyer. You can visualize this with a conversion decay curve by graphing conversions against time. This curve will show the highest number of buy conversions very early and fewer conversions a month later. Given this dynamic, each vertical has a different decay curve. For example, the conversion curve for in-market auto decays much slower than the conversion curve for a smaller ticket purchase like an iPod. One of the advantages of an auction system like BlueKai’s is that buyers can set their own price depending on the granularity and freshness of the data.

By John Ebbert

Peerset Human Interest Data Providing Psychographic Targeting Capabilities Says CEO John-Baptiste

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

Mike “JB” John-Baptiste is CEO of Peerset, an advertising technology company.

Mike JB John-Baptiste of PeersetAdExchanger.com: What is Peerset?

MJB: Peerset is an ad targeting service focused on leveraging social psychographics to connect a marketer with a user. Social psychographics is a category of consumer data we are helping the market understand and embrace. Think about it most simplistically as user generated content that is most reflective of people’s interests (better than polls and better than tracking web visits). Core to our IP is that our software understands the relationship between human interests(i.e. based on 5 things someone says, we can predict their other likely interests). Our first product, Peerset Advertising, can be used by marketers, agencies, social networks and ad networks to predict the likelihood that a specific user’s interests are matched well enough to a specific advertisement to recommend that ad to them. Peerset can either deliver the ad or deliver the user and have other services deliver the ad.

Discuss your competitive set.

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NetSeer On Concept-Based Advertising

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

John Mracek is CEO of advertising technology company, NetSeer. NetSeer announced a new offering today called “concept-based” advertising. Read the release (PDF).

NetSeerConcept-based advertising sounds a lot like semantic or contextual. Is the “secret sauce” the real-time identification of concept categories like “Italian food” or “headphones”?

The secret sauce is the ability to algorithmically, and therefore scalably discern concepts on a page as well as determining related concepts “off page.” Categorization is just a crude approximation of what NetSeer’s technology does. Unlike first generation contextual, which is largely keyword-driven based on the page being analyzed, or semantic which tries to leverage Natural Language Processing (NLP), NetSeer’s concept-based approach takes a top down approach to analyzing concepts in the context of how they are used in the entire web. One of the issues with keyword-based classification approaches is that they require meticulous updating and management of keywords and how they map to various categories. Semantic also involves a lot of hand-holding that limits its scale. In fact, some semantic providers boast about the dozens of linguists they use to build out their semantic dictionaries. In addition to making it costly to support, the knowledge about the page is limited to purely what is on the page. NetSeer’s approach is almost purely machine based and therefore scalable and always up to date. Concept-based advertising goes beyond both first-generation contextual and semantic by unambiguously determining the most relevant concepts on the page as well as related concepts that the user is likely to be interested in.

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Demdex CEO Nicolau Says Ad, Data Exchanges, And Data Management Solution As Key To Mining Data

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

Randy Nicolau is CEO of Demdex, a behavioral data management company.

Randy Nicolau of DemdexAdExchanger.com: What challenge is Demdex looking to solve in behavioral advertising data?

RN: Demdex gives its clients the speed and flexibility to understand and adapt to that rapidly changing “audience data” marketplace. We help our clients better understand the value of the behavioral and demographic data that is either purchased from third-parties or harvested directly from their website(s). We maximize the value of that data by making it easy to understand and available for use in all their online efforts rather than being tied to a specific platform or technology. To achieve this we provide our clients with a variety of tools and technologies that facilitate the efficient collection, organization, segmentation, and analysis of their behavioral data. Additionally, we integrate this data with all the platforms used by our clients (like ad servers and buying platforms) so their technology teams don’t have to deal with this, all the while enforcing the rights of the data owners and the consumer.

What is a “behavioral bank” and “TraitWeight”? Can you share some of the technologies tracked traits?

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Peer39 Leveraging Semantics to Help Publishers and Ad Platforms Capitalize on Display Ad Inventory Says CEO Solomon

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

Amiad Solomon is CEO of Peer39, an online semantic advertising technology company.

CEO Amiad Solomon of Peer39AdExchanger.com: Please describe momentum in 2009 for Peer39.

AS: This has been a breakout year for us as we have been recognized as the leading innovator in the field of semantic advertising and targeting. Early in 2009 we started working primarily with publishers that have a bulk of unclassified content – mainly news and general interest – enabling them to classify the content and sell it at higher CPMs. We found a sweet spot here in helping publishers to capitalize on a secondary premium class of inventory. Now, as our business has grown, we see a huge emergence in the role ad exchanges are playing in the buying and selling of non-guaranteed inventory. That has pushed our market expansion beyond just publishers, with a trend toward deals with buying platforms, where we are able to provide semantic attributes to assess and increase the value of each impression.

In that there is a shift toward buying audience and addressable media by buyers, how can semantic/contextual targeting remain relevant?

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Akamai Pixel-Free Audience Targeting Now Available Says CTO Afergan

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Akamai CTO Mike AferganAs retailers prepare to enter their busiest season – Q4 and the holidays -  Akamai has announced its ADS predictive segments solution for online retailers who want to reach in-market consumers and drive incremental sales.  The new product is part of Akamai’s Advertising Decision Solutions (ADS) line.

How big is the in-market opportunity? According to Akamai’s press release, there is significant scale:

“Akamai data shows that there are 30 million shoppers typically in-market at any given time.  This data also reveals that every three weeks, roughly 80 percent, or 24 million new users, will come into market, replacing consumers that have exited the market.”

Akamai’s CTO and senior vice president of Advertising Decision Solutions, Mike Afergan, says this product builds on the technology and products of Acerno (acquired in late 2008), and particularly on the ability to cross-sell the solution to existing Akamai partners.  Afergan believes the data cooperative shared among its retailer clients has lent to a more effective solution for the marketer, also.

The final piece to the predictive segments announcement is the “pixel-free” feature which was under development prior to the Acerno acquisition.  So rather than 1×1 transparent pixels which can slow down a site or may not cover it completely as well as other issues,  Akamai’s pixel-free technology means faster “time-to-live” for customers and less impact on site performance in addition to driving better ROI for marketing programs according to the company.

AdExchanger.com spoke to Afergan about the details of the announcement.

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Brilig Resembles Advertising Data Version of Bloomberg Terminal Says CEO Cimino

Monday, August 10th, 2009

BriligPaul Cimino is CEO of Brilig, a data optimization platform.

AdExchanger.com: What is Brilig? Do you consider it a technology or services company? Gotta ask – what does the name mean?

PC: Brilig is a technology company with a patent pending process for data integration that provides advertising data and analysis capabilities to online publishers, marketers and targeters. Our platform enables marketers and targeters (be they contextual, behavioral, retargeters) to assess response rates of past campaigns using segmentation data provided by web publishers. For instance a travel ad directed not only to someone who has a browsing interest in travel, but who has some confirming travel propensity, might get a much higher response. So the behavioral targeters would purchases this travel measure, updating its own records with the individual travel propensity field. It now has a better segment. When we have enough data we will be able to assess what works for an audience, or an audience member. prospectively. This is where the term TruePropensity(sm) comes from.

When you get down it we resemble an advertising data version of Bloomberg. As characteristic of many innovative companies, our business represents a new way of thinking about the industry more than any breakthrough technological achievements.

The name Brilig comes from the Lewis Carroll poem, Jabberwocky. It represents the idea that every word has meaning and value when placed in the proper context. We realize the brillig from the poem has 2 L’s but that URL was taken so we dropped one L’s for expediency sake.

On your website, you say that Brilig’s TruePropensity is “a next generation online advertising optimization solution.” So are you a buying platform like a Media Math or Invite Media? Or a data optimizer like Aggregate Knowledge?

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BlueKai Data CEO Tawakol On New Certification Program

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

BlueKaiOmar Tawakol is CEO of BlueKai, an online data exchange.

AdExchanger.com: Regarding your new BlueKai Certification Program, ad networks and buying platforms must be excited – you’re performing lead gen for them, are you not? What is BlueKai getting?

OT: Yes, the new program is definitely designed to drive agency leads directly to our partners. It’s a win-win situation because not only are we making it easier for agencies to adopt, we are also minimizing channel conflict and driving data-ready leads directly to our partners. BlueKai still gets paid for the data transaction – with the new process, agencies streamline their media and data buying through the media partners, who in turn, pays us for the data portion of the campaign.

What challenge were marketers running up against that prompted the program?

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Let Them Eat Privacy

Friday, July 31st, 2009

Web Advertising and the ConsumerAnother privacy piece on the behavioral ad network business has been launched – this time by The New York Times’ Stephanie Clifford. In her piece entitled, “Ads Follow Web Users, and Get Deeply Personal,” web ads are considered “Orwellian.” Good god. That’s over the top and reminiscent of other recent pieces in the media (like here).

There remains a significant need to explain PII and what anonymous cookie tracking is, and the Chinese Wall between them – and that the sky is not falling on consumers.

Are we going to start “outing” restaurants and gas stations for taking credit cards? I mean what goes on behind the counter, anyway? Aren’t they handling even more potentially threatening, “Orwellian” information? Is the world supposed to be an open and transparent barter system in the eyes of privacy advocates?

  • “Here’s my sack of wheat. I’d like to buy a laptop, please.”
  • “Sir, we don’t offer laptops. We offer the parts. You wouldn’t be able to see inside the laptop after all. We could have a Lo-Jack in there or something.”

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Online and Offline Data Used Together Yield Best Results Says Datran Media SVP Of Display Knoll

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Scott Knoll of Datran MediaScott Knoll is SVP of Display Media for Datran Media, a digital marketing technology company.

AdExchanger.com: What trends is Datran Media seeing from its digital media clients in 2009?

SK: Datran Media monitors and reports on trends across media clients and advertisers, including responses to our annual industry survey. One of the biggest trends we have seen this year is the need for campaign-based measurement. Media clients have understood the importance of targeting for a while, but now they are demanding ways to measure and verify targeted audiences on a campaign by campaign basis. Rather than just knowing the number of unique users and click rates, marketers need insights into the makeup of their audience and responders. This becomes increasingly important as marketers shift from targeting specific sites to targeting users on exchanges based on recent behaviors, characteristics or third party data.

Can you describe momentum for Datran Media this year?

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TARGUSinfo Sees Momentum In Creating Online Audience Segments With Offline Data Says McLenaghan

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

TARGUSinfoPaul McLenaghan is VP of Interactive Markets for TARGUSinfo.

AdExchanger.com: What insights can you provide on current momentum at TARGUSinfo as it relates to your online services?

PM: We are seeing a great deal of momentum around our AdAdvisor solution, which we launched out of private beta in February.  AdAdvisor is a unique online targeting and optimization platform that leverages our vast repositories of verified offline data on every US household to build predictive audience groups and demographics segments and bring them to the online advertising industry in a privacy-friendly way.

In our sixteen years in business we have demonstrated again and again that rich, deep data is the lifeblood of successful marketing and advertising businesses.  So we are not surprised that interest in AdAdvisor is coming from all facets of the online advertising industry: agencies, ad networks and exchanges, publishers, media buying platforms, data exchanges, etc.

How does TARGUSinfo differentiate from the many other data providers available in the digital marketing space?

AdAdvisor is a new predictive-targeting solution that stands apart from other data providers by leveraging the industry’s largest repository of verified offline lifestyle and demographic information.

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CIO Goldberg Says ClearSaleing Is Seeing Benefits of Marketers Being Held More Accountable

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

ClearSaleingAdam Goldberg is Chief Innovation Officer and co-founder of ClearSaleing.

AdExchanger.com: What trends are you seeing in your ClearSaleing clients in 2009? Can you describe momentum for ClearSaleing this year?

AG: Our clients are not reducing their online ad spend—in fact, it’s increasing in many cases. ClearSaleing is helping clients tie their ad buys to their profits. If an ad is creating profit, it makes sense to buy as many clicks/impression of that ad as possible. The fact that so many companies have dropped out of the action also means our clients can spend more because there is less competition for those same clicks and impressions.

As marketers are being held more accountable to achieve profit goals, and not just higher return on ad spend numbers, we’re seeing more people turn to 3rd party data sources so that they can learn even more about the types of customers they’re attracting from different ad buys and technologies. For example, one of our current clients is tying applicant credit scores from online loan applications to the ads that drove the application in the first place. The fact that our technology can integrate all of this standalone data makes these types of measurements and insights possible.

ClearSaleing’s business is growing this year as clients see the need to adopt technology that can track profit across media, grow leads and increase ROI results. With our technology, clients are now confidently buying ‘top of the funnel’ types of ads because they can use attribution management modeling to measure the performance of each marketing element. It is the evolution beyond ‘last click’ reporting which does not take into account the purchase path a customer follows from initial search to conversion.

How do you differentiate from other attribution management companies in the space such as Atlas or DoubleVerify?

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