Eli Portnoy, CEO of ThinkNear, thinks the reason that mobile ads haven’t taken off is the lack of usable cookies — or the data that they collect — on mobile devices:
Eli Portnoy via TechCrunch
[…] why isn’t the money flowing to mobile?
Advertisers know that the golden ticket to performance is relevance, and by that I mean the ability to target and reach your potential customer base as accurately as possible. I live in Los Angeles, and you are going to have a tough time trying to sell me snow boots in the summer. The more you can target the ads, the more likely you can generate the desired action and the more successful the campaign. The current mobile eco-system allows almost no targeting criteria and demands that advertisers take a spray and pray approach to their campaigns. This leads to poorly performing campaigns and unhappy advertisers that are unwilling to keep pushing more money down the rabbit hole that is mobile.
Why are mobile campaigns so lacking?
The answer most people give is that cookies, which are the mechanism used in the online ad world, don’t work on mobile. Without getting into the technical reasons as to why this is the case, I challenge the argument because even if cookies did work I still don’t think you would see an advertising windfall. Fundamentally, cookie targeting lets advertisers build a profile about your browsing history and retarget you based on that data. However, in mobile the use case is different and this advertising paradigm starts to break. Using myself as a datapoint of one, when I am on a computer I tend to research specific items and create a browsing history that is rich with information and clearly paints a picture of my intents. However, on mobile my browsing and app history is sporadic and incoherent. I pick up my phone when I have time to kill, when I want to look something specific up, or as part of my everyday. Trying to create a profile from this activity would lead to few actionable insights.
So we use our mobile devices differently than desktops — at least at present — and as a result, mobile ads can’t be targeted as well.
But from my perspective the real problem is that advertisers don’t know that it’s me, on my phone, the same person browsing on my desktop ten minutes ago. What’s missing is a unified picture of the person, which could direct an ad to me based on a richer profile.
Notes
-
badbetchenduh likes this
-
something-orange reblogged this from emergentfutures and added:
Good article… How would you want ads delivered on your mobile?
-
something-orange likes this
-
davidzgarden likes this
-
mygenerate reblogged this from emergentfutures
-
sefton-iris likes this
-
emergentfutures reblogged this from stoweboyd
-
bricin reblogged this from stoweboyd and added:
This space will change soon. Either someone like Foursquare will do it well enough (doubtful), Facebook will own enough...
-
crazygm reblogged this from stoweboyd
-
ascratchpad reblogged this from stoweboyd
-
queuea likes this
-
stoweboyd posted this
About
Web anthropologist, futurist, author. My focus is the future, and the tectonic forces pushing business, media, and society into an unclear and accelerating future. more.
Working on longer format projects, Sign up for the newsletter.
GigaOM Research analyst and curator.
Also writing beaconstreets.com.
Contact me. or ask me a question.

My Vizify profile.
Socialogy
Hot Now
Oldie
Likes
-
(4-2013)
oil on canvas
190x150cm
-
The Mother Warns the Tornado
I know I’ve already had more than I deserve.
These lungs that rise and fall without effort,
the husband who sets free... -
That’s a ‘Depression’: Europe’s Double-Dip Is Officially Longer Than Its Great RecessionThe latest GDP numbers for the euro zone were brutal as...
-
I’m delighted to announce that we’ve reached an agreement to acquire Tumblr!
We promise not to screw it up. Tumblr is incredibly special and has a...
-
-
It was unusual to see Neil Gaiman and Bruce Sterling piling on to the same cover real-estate
-
Once Yahoo! forces integration of Tumblr and Yahoo! logins I’ll deactivate.
