See That Billboard? It May See You, Too
Pass
a billboard while driving in the next few months, and there is a good chance
the company that owns it will know you were there and what you did afterward. Clear Channel Outdoor Americas,
which has tens of thousands of billboards across the United States, will
announce on Monday that it has partnered with several companies,
including AT&T, to track people’s travel
patterns and behaviors through their mobile phones. By aggregating the trove of data
from these companies, Clear Channel Outdoor hopes to provide advertisers with
detailed information about the people who pass its billboards to help them plan
more effective, targeted campaigns. With the data and analytics, Clear Channel
Outdoor could determine the average age and gender of the people who are seeing
a particular billboard in, say, Boston at a certain time and whether they
subsequently visit a store. “In aggregate, that
data can then tell you information about what the average viewer of that
billboard looks like,” said Andy Stevens, senior vice president for research
and insights at Clear Channel Outdoor. “Obviously that’s very valuable to an
advertiser.” Clear Channel and its partners —
AT&T Data Patterns, a unit of AT&T that collects location data from its
subscribers; PlaceIQ, which uses location data collected from other apps to
help determine consumer behavior; and Placed, which pays consumers for the
right to track their movements and is able to link exposure to ads to in-store
visits — all insist that they protect the privacy of consumers. All data is
anonymous and aggregated, they say, meaning individual consumers cannot be
identified. Still, Mr. Stevens acknowledged
that the company’s new offering “does sound a bit creepy.” But, he added, the company was
using the same data that mobile advertisers have been using for years, and
showing certain ads to a specific group of consumers was not a new idea. “It’s
easy to forget that we’re just tapping into an existing data ecosystem,” he
said. In many ways, billboards are
still stuck in the old-media world, where companies tried to determine how many
people saw billboards by counting the cars that drove by. But in recent years,
billboard companies have made more of an effort to step into the digital age.
Some billboards, for example, have been equipped
with small cameras that
collect information about the people walking by. Clear Channel Outdoor’s move
is yet another attempt to modernize billboards and enable the kind of audience
measurements that advertisers have come to expect. Privacy advocates, however, have long raised questions about
mobile device tracking, particularly as companies have melded this location
information with consumers’ online behavior to form detailed audience profiles.
Opponents contend that people often do not realize their location and behavior
are being tracked, even if they have agreed at some point to allow companies to
monitor them. And while nearly all of these companies claim that the data they
collect is anonymous and aggregated — and that consumers can opt out of
tracking at any time — privacy advocates are skeptical. “People have no idea
that they’re being tracked and targeted,” said Jeffrey Chester, executive
director of the Center for Digital Democracy. “It is incredibly creepy, and
it’s the most recent intrusion into our privacy.” The Federal Trade Commission has brought a number of
cases related to mobile device tracking and the collection of geolocation
information. In 2013, the agency settled charges with the company behind a
popular Android app that turned mobile devices into flashlights. The agency
said the company’s privacy policy did not inform consumers that it was sharing
their location information with third parties like advertisers. Last year, the
agency settled charges against Nomi Technologies, a retail-tracking company
that uses signals from shoppers’ mobile phones to track their movements through
stores. The agency claimed that the company had misled consumers about their
opt-out options. For Clear Channel Outdoor, the goal is to give advertisers tools
to buy and measure the effectiveness of outdoor ads that are similar to those
they use for digital and mobile ads. It tested the suite of data and analytics,
which it calls Radar, with the shoe company Toms and said it found a rise in
brand awareness and purchases. Clear Channel Outdoor will offer Radar in its top 11
markets, including Los Angeles and New York, starting on Monday, with plans to
make it available across the country later this year.
Monday, August 28, 2017