A new era of personal data unlocked in an “Internet of Things”

Oct 13, 2014 | E-commerce and E-retailing, Mobile, Online advertising

Marketing in the 20th century was characterised by mass media, broadcast television, and the rise of direct marketing. Marketing today in the 21st century is about leveraging those mass market channels to deliver messages targeted with such precision that zero media wastage is within reach. The Internet of Things is unlocking a new paradigm in […]

Marketing in the 20th century was characterised by mass media, broadcast television, and the rise of direct marketing. Marketing today in the 21st century is about leveraging those mass market channels to deliver messages targeted with such precision that zero media wastage is within reach. The Internet of Things is unlocking a new paradigm in relevancy of messages, and for brands and agencies that get it right, the rewards will be rich.


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In the last decade, John Wanamaker’s challenge of a hundred years ago has been answered: “half the money I spend on advertising is wasted; the trouble is I don’t know which half”.
The combination of analytics for conversion tracking, with behavioural targeting and programmatic trading has unlocked a new level of precision that enables display advertising to be focussed on the devices of people with relevant interests.
For the last decade, the sites people visit and a few of their actions there have proved a rich source of insight to fuel targeting, but with hindsight it will look like nothing more than an early warm-up act, compared to what’s coming.
The arrival of an “Internet of Things” will unlock a new order of magnitude in volume and relevance, as rich data from the physical world flows into the same consumer profiling tools. Brace yourself for what’s coming.
After years of hype, the concept of an ‘Internet of Things’ is becoming real. From smartwatches and intelligent thermostats, to connected toothbrushes and eventually driverless cars, data is flowing to and from the physical world around us, and unlocking this type of messaging. This is technology people will love and readily opt into:
• When a fridge is out of milk, it will add some to your online retailer’s shopping basket
• When you miss a dose of medication, your drug company’s app will remind you
• When your kids cheat on brushing their teeth, you’ll be the one getting reminded, and if they wander away in a crowd your app will tell you where they are
• When your car is heading on a long journey, it will tell you what needs topping up, and book itself in for the next service
• When your gym pass shows enough points, your health insurance will fall
• When you’re away overnight, your pets will get fed, and if they’re unwell your vet’s app will tell you in a way they can’t

Google’s Nest ‘learning thermostat’
The home automation firm claims it can bring home energy prices down by up to 29%. The Nest thermostat connects to a user’s WiFi network and to the Nest controls in a boiler, talking to the thermostat and telling the boiler to turn on or off. The device is controllable from smartphones.
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Amazon turns the kitchen into a checkout
Amazon’s dash wand is the first barcode scanner for your groceries, simplifying the shopping process by filling the basket without leaving the kitchen. It’s part of the pilots for Amazon Fresh as the business evaluates taking on the grocery chains.
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As sensors spread into the objects of our lives, and as the phones in our pockets become the dashboards for our daily lives, the way we live will gradually change. All of these are already being tested and the information from each brand is a service people find valuable, while at the same time driving sales for the sponsor.
For marketers this is the one-to-one future you’ve been chasing. Use it wisely, treat the data responsibly, create value and trust among your customers. Direct marketing is at the dawn of a new era. The responsibility of agencies, brands and their marketers will decide whether it’s an era in which the direct marketing industry triumphs as a champion of the consumer, or is restricted because of abuse of trust to a small role on the side lines.
Danny Meadows-Klue is the founder of Digital Strategy Consulting, President of the Digital Training Academy, co-founder of the IAB trade associations in many countries, and ran the first major UK online media property, Telegraph.co.uk. At the DMC he has special responsibilities for digital direct marketing and has advised lawmakers in Whitehall and Brussels on data protection legislation. More about latest IoT trends is available at www.DigitalStrategyConsulting.com/intelligence/tag/internet-of-things

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