Best Practice

Products

Personalised advertising: The pros and cons

Shopping cart on blue background. Shop trolley at supermarket as sale, discount, shopaholism concept with copy space for text or design.

29. June 2021

Theres Baumgartner

Anyone who places advertisements on the Internet, on social media & Co. hopes for good results - whether new leads, up-selling opportunities or the sale of products. Personalized advertising is an efficient way. But does it really work?

Personalised advertising operates on the basis of the behaviour of people on the Internet – what are their preferences? What are they interested in? Which products do they look at, which ones do they buy – and most importantly, which ones do they not? It is based on data collected from different places. This includes browser, cookie, social media and tracking data, which can be demographic or transactional, among other things.

Data as a basis for personalized advertising

The different data are then used as the basis for personalised advertising – they are processed and analysed automatically. Ads are then defined and adapted for the different target groups. This is to ensure that only people who are interested in the ads see them. This can increase the conversion rate, since the target group is addressed specifically – at the same time, companies save time and money.

Disadvantages and criticism

What are the disadvantages of personalised advertising? On the one hand, care must be taken to ensure data protection and compliance with the GDPR. However, it should be noted here that this is also true without the use of personalised advertising. Another criticism that often comes up is personalisation – why am I seeing athletic shoe ads when I just talked to my girlfriend about wanting to start running again? Many people then think that smartphones are “eavesdropping”. Of course, these ads do not come from there, but rather from our (search) behaviour. At the same time, some customers also get annoyed when they see ads that don’t interest them at all – such as pregnancy products, even though they’re not pregnant or don’t want to have children. We would like to point out that errors can sometimes occur – even an algorithm is never 100 per cent perfect.

Benefits of personalized advertising

The advantages of personalised advertising for customers are that they receive relevant recommendations, which also strengthens loyalty to the company. An example: a person has problems with dry skin, orders corresponding products from a company and is also registered for the newsletter. If this company has a new product for dry skin, they can target that information at the person perfectly – this not only gives them coordinated information, but also makes them feel advised and valued. Without personalisation, the person would receive a newsletter telling them about an acne product, for example – something they will not buy as they do not have this skin problem. Another advantage for customers: personalised ads can help them make decisions. Think of Amazon inserting the “Customers who viewed this item also viewed” bar under the product the user clicked on.

A conclusion

All in all, personalised advertising offers more advantages than disadvantages – especially because customers are now used to receiving offers tailored to them. It is important to gain people’s trust and to offer them real added value through personalised advertising. Only then will both sides win – companies and customers.

From our INSIGHTS ON AIR podcast (in German):

Theres Baumgartner and Anne Marchal talk about the handling of personal data.

More posts

Best Practice

MS Dynamics CRM

20. November 2023

Ina Baltes

Energie Steiermark x gorelate: Digitalisation of customer service and planned use of AI for increased customer satisfaction.

MS Dynamics CRM

31. July 2023

Nikolaus Matejka

Dynamics 365 release-wave-2/2023

MS Dynamics CRM

13. July 2023

Nikolaus Matejka

Enterprise AI: Microsoft 365 Copilot für Sales, Marketing und Service

MS Dynamics CRM

Products

04. July 2023

Nikolaus Matejka

Efficient customer support as a team: The synergy of Teams integration and swarming in Dynamics 365 Customer Service

Best Practice

MS Dynamics CRM

21. April 2023

Ina Baltes

MYFLEXBOX x gorelate: Visualisation

Best Practice

MS Dynamics CRM

22. December 2022

Theres Baumgartner

VERBUND x gorelate

Best Practice

MS Dynamics CRM

24. October 2022

Theres Baumgartner

GBTEC x gorelate: Unified Dynamics 365 & harmonised sales process

Best Practice

MS Dynamics CRM

19. October 2022

Theres Baumgartner

Heel x gorelate a CRM project

Best Practice

15. April 2022

Theres Baumgartner

goUse Case: Event check-in app with QR code scanner

Best Practice

MS Dynamics CRM

19. November 2021

Theres Baumgartner

Kinderhospiz Netz x gorelate - Patient data management, MS Teams integration & time registration

Best Practice

Products

Shopping cart on blue background. Shop trolley at supermarket as sale, discount, shopaholism concept with copy space for text or design.

29. June 2021

Theres Baumgartner

Personalised advertising: The pros and cons

MS Dynamics CRM

great idea concept with crumpled office paper and light bulb

29. June 2021

Theres Baumgartner

A successful customer insights project in 6 (+ 2) steps

Best Practice

29. June 2021

Theres Baumgartner

Customer Insights: Data privacy and GDPR

MS Dynamics CRM

gorelate

12. May 2021

Theres Baumgartner

Glossary: Do you speak Insights?

gorelate

Products

30. April 2021

Theres Baumgartner

MS Catalyst: How to learn digitisation and transformation

MS Dynamics CRM

Products

25. March 2021

Theres Baumgartner

Mixed Reality: Between 'HoloLens' and science fiction Bond

MS Dynamics CRM

24. September 2019

Tina Zembacher

Artificial intelligence in CRM: How smart is it really?

Best Practice

MS Dynamics CRM

12. June 2017

Tina Zembacher

TWONG x gorelate: gomigrate: Rapid CRM migration during ongoing business operations

MS Dynamics CRM

Best Practice

12. January 2017

Tina Zembacher

Auer Signal x gorelate: CRM consulting with handshake quality