Advertisers Must Learn How To Use Data

by , Staff Writer @lauriesullivan, September 29, 2016



The future of brand advertising and targeting resides in data, but too many companies still struggle with learning how to use it. That topic hung like fog over Advertising Week in New York, according to some executives Data and Targeting Insider spoke with.


Most advertisers “understand the potential power, and a very small number are figuring out how to build a group of data scientists and use the latest technologies to drive their business,” said Jason Seeba, BloomReach head of marketing and the company’s former chief of marketing technologies. “Even at BloomReach, we’re really early in the way we use data.”


“There’s data for data sake, data for reporting, and data that helps to change behavior to help consumers take action,” he said. “They are very different. People struggle to determine which is which. Finding those nuggets that change and influence behavior are a huge deal.”


IBM seems to have found nuggets in location and weather.


The Weather Company, an IBM business, develop Watson Ads that integrate cognitive learning into ads that can listen, think and respond, enabling one-to-one communication between brands and consumers.


At Advertising Week, The Weather Company demonstrated its first cognitive ads, as the company prepares to roll out the first campaigns since announcing the project in June.


“We’re going into auto and then into insurance and retail,” Jeremy Steinberg, Weather Company’s global head of sales, told Data and Targeting Insider. “We’ll learn with our partners and then scale the platform outside of weather.”


The companies will eventually take the technology to display ads on publisher sites, but for now it lives on The Weather Channel mobile app.


In June, The Weather Company announced it had signed on Campbell Soup, Unilever and GSK Consumer Healthcare, and on Tuesday Steinberg said Toyota became the first automaker to take the leap. 


 


MediaPost.com: Search Marketing Daily

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