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Americans Reject Tailored Advertising and Three Activities that Enable It

By Annenberg School for Communication, UC Berkeley School of Law, and the Annenberg Public Policy Center

Personalization/Targeted Ads

 

"The desire by a majority of Americans not to be followed for the purpose of tailored content comes at a time when behavioral targeting is a fast-growing advertising practice."


Date: 2009

Authors:  Joseph Turow, Jennifer King, Chris Jay Hoofnagle, Amy Bleakley, Michael Hennessy

Type of Promotional Material/Activity Tested:  Americans’ opinions about behavioral targeting by marketers.  Behavioral targeting involves following users’ actions and then tailoring advertisements for the users based on those actions.

Sample population: 1,000 U.S. adult Internet users. A combination of landline (n=725) and wireless (n=275) random digit dial samples was used to represent all English speaking adults in the continental United States who have access to either a landline or cellular telephone.

Methodology:  Telephone interviews were conducted from June 18 to July 2, 2009 by Princeton Survey Research Associates International. The interviews averaged 20 minutes. The overall response rates were a rather typical 18% for the landline sample and 22% for the cellular sample. Statistical results are weighted to correct known demographic discrepancies.  The margin of sampling error for the complete set of weighted data is ±3.6% at the 95% confidence level. The margin of error is higher for smaller subgroups within the sample.

Top Line Results:

 
 
Take Away: "The desire by a majority of Americans not to be followed for the purpose of tailored content comes at a time when behavioral targeting is a fast-growing advertising practice upon which many content providers have staked their businesses ... Americans’ widespread rejection of relevant tailored advertising is particularly startling because it flies in the face of marketers’ consistent contention that Americans desire for relevant commercial messages justifies a variety of tracking activities. When three contemporary forms of behavioral tracking are highlighted, rejection of tailored ads is even more widespread. The finding applies across all age groups, including young adults, a cohort that media executives have insisted cares little about information privacy."

Complexity rating: 1 out of 3  (Complex statistical analysis scale: 1= none, 2= moderate, 3 = difficult)

 

Source: Americans Reject Tailored Advertising and Three Activities that Enable It