The post Before the Gold Rush: A New Way to Reach Voters appeared first on Phunware.
]]>The Gold Rush was precipitated by a few lucky prospectors striking gold in the untouched wilderness, and a similar situation exists today—but in the digital world. The precious commodity isn’t gold; it’s data-based insight, and marketers who understand the value of data are in a rare position to capitalize on their foresight, just like those early prospectors.
Surprisingly, one industry that is beginning to experience on the power of data is politics. With countless news headlines about the dangers of political advertising on social media, the questionable value of TV and direct mail campaigns and the need to be more relevant to mobile-obsessed voters than ever, savvy campaign managers are turning to mobile advertising for the targeting and attribution capabilities legacy channels simply can’t provide.
Source: The Center for Public Integrity
What are they doing? How are they making this work? Here’s how some political campaigns are taking a cue from big brand marketers and using mobile data to target voters based on their interests, demographics and even physical location.
All political campaigns are familiar with what’s called their voter files, which are essentially profiles of registered voters with a known preference for the candidate’s political party. Voter files usually contain the voter’s address and election participation history, and may also provide other contact details, demographics or donation history information.
While voter files are extremely valuable, some campaign managers are beginning to realize that each voter’s smartphone is the ultimate voter file. Mobile data can tell them everything from the device operating system (iOS or Android) to what other apps are on the device, what Wi-Fi networks the device joins and much more. And that doesn’t even cover the information it’s possible to infer, such as gender, age, lifestyle preferences and so on.
Knowing who’s in their voter file, campaign managers can use mobile data and mobile advertising to identify and engage voters who give off similar digital signals to their identified supporters. In the cutthroat world of politics, campaign marketers now have access to more power and precision than they’ve ever had.
Download our eBook on Mobile Data to learn how to harness mobile data and turn it into actionable insights and successful strategies.
Beyond identifying coveted voters, mobile data can also be used to define ad targeting parameters with incredible accuracy. Ads can be targeted by time of day (day-parting), device carrier or operating system, Wi-Fi networks and even weather. But one of the most powerful—and uniquely mobile—targeting capabilities is location. Because mobile devices go everywhere with voters and have location-aware technology embedded in them, political campaign managers have an unprecedented ability to target voters based on where they are (or have been).
There are two main types of location targeting for mobile ads:
Source: Columbia University Study, 2016
Social media is powerful, but also risky. Context and brand safety are hard to guarantee. Mobile users spend a lot of time on social apps, but not all of their time, and they’re growing skeptical of what they see in their feeds. Social networks offer limited ad formats and few creative ways to reach voters. Campaign effectiveness is also compromised. Facebook, in particular, does not allow real-time campaign optimization.
It’s no wonder many political campaign managers are turning to hyper-targeted mobile display and video ads for their candidates. Campaign and user data are more important than ever, and plenty of it is available outside of social networks.
As we head into the 2018 election year, we’re in the digital age equivalent of 1848—the year before the Gold Rush. As soon as the first few political campaigns realize the value of mobile ad targeting for voter engagement, the floodgates will open. Which campaigns will get there first and strike it rich?
For more information about voter engagement, contact us.
The post Before the Gold Rush: A New Way to Reach Voters appeared first on Phunware.
]]>The post How Big Is Your Data? Glimpsing the Future of Audience Targeting appeared first on Phunware.
]]>Insurance isn’t the only place first-party data is important. It’s critical for audience targeting in mobile advertising as well. Lots of ad networks use the same third-party data sources (like BlueKai, Datalogix and others) to find and target the audience segments their clients are after. These data sources are rich and can improve campaign performance, but imagine how much more effective you could target your audience if you leveraged deeper insights that got at the core of a user. After all, sorta your audience isn’t your audience.
Over the years, Phunware has built thousands of apps that have amassed over a hundred million downloads worldwide. As users interact with those apps and Phunware’s platform, they create what we call “events.” Events include app installs and opens, content viewed, alerts set, beacons interacted with, even Wi-Fi networks devices connect to. Phunware’s big data infrastructure does not directly associate these events with the users creating them; it merely records that the events happened—for each of the 625 million monthly active device IDs on Phunware’s platform. (Side note: Here at Phunware, we make sure that our data gathering methods are 100% compliant with industry standard guidelines, and we are certified with TRUSTe who has a rigorous data/opt-out review process. So rest assured, everything is kept kosher!)
In fact, each device ID on our platform creates over 70 unique Phunware-specific events per month—which means that the platform is continually getting smarter about who users are and what they want. Our team is constantly extracting useful information and building valuable audiences that our customers can target with their mobile advertising campaigns. For example, if a user has an app that was either built by Phunware or leverages Phunware’s mobile analytics tools, the platform is able to see what Wi-Fi networks that device connects to over time. By gathering the device IDs that have connected to Starbucks’ free Wi-Fi at least 1-2 times a week, we can build a set of device IDs that represent Starbucks brand loyalists. Those users will probably convert better for Starbucks mobile ads than other audience groups segmented because they “look like” Starbucks customers based on demographics or other data.
There are infinite possible segments like this, and they don’t just benefit advertisers. Yes, advertisers see better campaign performance when their ads reach the right consumers, but consumers also have happier mobile experiences when the advertising they see contains products and offers that are relevant to them.
For more information about how you can start leveraging Phunware’s proprietary data from the biggest mobile apps, contact our Audience Engagement team.
The post How Big Is Your Data? Glimpsing the Future of Audience Targeting appeared first on Phunware.
]]>