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This article explores the conflicting public trends in internet marketing and their impact, discussing issues such as disintermediation, data mining, privacy concerns, and the implications for family dynamics. It highlights the need for monitoring and social discussion on the trajectory of internet marketing.
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Tensions Around Internet Marketing to the Family Joseph Turow University of Pennsylvania
The main point Two conflicting public trends and their institutional implications The Revolt Against Advertising
An historical perspective • Newspapers & magazines • Radio & television
The issues with the web • Enduring media issues: • Selling violence • Selling sex • Commercialism • Disintermediation of parents
New issues with the web • New form of disintermediation • New interactive ways to get to kids when parents aren’t around. • Data mining an important rationale for web marketers
The issues with the web • Release of family Information • Passively (e.g. chat rooms, IM) • Purposefully (e.g. to register)
The issues with the web • “I sometimes worry that members of my family give information they shouldn’t about our family to websites.” • 36% agree or agree strongly 2000 APPC survey
The issues with the web • “My concern about outsiders learning sensitive information about me and my family has increased since we’ve gone online at home” • 59% agree or agree strongly 2000 APPC survey
Pubic Concern/Industry Response • Expert and parental concerns • Industry push-back • COPPA only for under 13 years old • Even with COPPA, data not linked to PII can be taken and disintermediation can be carried out.
What people tell us re 13+ • “I worry more about what information a teenager would give away to a website than a younger child under 13 would.” • 61% agreed or agreed strongly 2000 APPC survey
What people tell us re 13+ • “I am nervous about websites having information about me.” • Parents: 72% agree or strongly agree • Kids (10-17): 63% agree or strongly agree 2000 APPC survey
What people tell us re 13+ • “Teenagers should have to get their parents’ consent before giving out information online.” • Parents: 96% agree or strongly agree • Kids (10-17): 79% agree or strongly agree 2000 APPC survey
But what kids say they would do is different from what parents would want them to do.
Kids and parents • Much higher percentage of kids consistently said it is OK or completely OK for a teen to give out family information in return for a free gift. 2000 APPC survey
Kids and parents • Is the reason generational or maturational? • Either way, it’s a wedge for disintermediation
Marketers have tried to make commercialism on the web seem natural. Dominant theme is that the tensions are internet growing pains.
Growing pains • The agenda then turns to questions such as informed consent and opting in or out. • Privacy policies part of the problem, not the solution.
Marketers have insisted that teens are adults when it comes to privacy issues. They also have emphasized throughout society the idea that personal information is barter, not “body.”
Teens as market • Both these ideas are furthered in the huge amount of market-driven research on youngsters. • Primary view of youngsters as consumers colors development of web and discourse about it.
The panic over commercialism seems to have subsided. • On one level, parents and the press seem to accept notion that web is just another sales territory. • But there is a counter-trend.
Counter-trend • Annoyance regarding pop-ups and spam has sparked subversion of commercials. • Entry of ISPs and technologists into the fray. • Various forms of filters, including Bayesian
Marketers, in turn, are working hard to find new ways to naturalize the situation. The internet disruption links to similar problems in other parts of the DIME.
Naturalization attempts • Product placement Converging with • Direct marketing and CRM To create • Customer Relationship Media
Customer Relationship Media • Sponsorship embedded/highlighted • Specially discounted or free media and related goods • Available “everywhere” • Tailored content
Customer Relationship Media Driven by: • Explicit & implicit transaction databases • Continual data mining of legacy and external systems • Following targets “everywhere” • Pushing non-targets away
Customer Relationship Media • This type of activity has new implications for audiences and media. • Family tensions over possible release of information • Increased anxieties and division over social privilege and discrimination.
It’s a trajectory that needs monitoring and social discussion.