Personalized Advertising Methods in Digital Interactive Television
The ability to deliver personalized advertising messages has long been a major objective in marketing since
it allows marketers to meet heterogeneous consumer needs and target their messages more effectively (Arens & Bovee, 1994).
However, traditional one-to-many marketing approaches applied in mass media suffer from their inability to meet this objective
(Dibb, 1998; Hoffman & Novak, 1997). In order to increase the efficiency of their strategy, marketers identify homogeneous
groups of consumers (market segmentation) which they target according to their marketing objectives. Thus, market segmentation
has become the most important marketing tool for targeting purposes (McBurnie & Clutterbuck, 1998), also utilized in the TV
advertising domain in conjunction with domain-specific features such as time zones and/or program typologies. However, this
strategy has admittedly little to offer towards the ultimate goal of one-to-one communication, since the targeted unit is the
segment rather than the individual consumer, and therefore individual needs cannot be satisfied. In the broadcasting television
advertising domain, media coverage either exceeds the targeted market segment or leaves potential customers without exposure to
the message, thus reducing its cost effectiveness (Belch & Belch, 1995). At the same time, TV viewers have to deal with a
vast amount of available advertising information. The issue of information overload, typical in information theoretic terms, is
also experienced in the case of TV advertisements as advertising clutter, which has been identified as one of the significant
factors associated with the negative attitude of viewers towards advertising and can have a negative impact on television
advertisement recall or recognition (Mord & Gilson, 1985). Relevant surveys reveal that 80% of the viewers feel that
there is “too much advertising in television” (Elliott & Speck, 1998), while more than 75% of consumers are not happy
with the broadcasted advertisements (Hawkins, Best, & Coney, 1998 ). Current target marketing methods are limited in their
ability to efficiently target consumers at the individual level, particularly in mass media such as television. Thus,
personalization of advertisements provides marketers with the opportunity to increase advertising effectiveness by targeting
consumers who are most likely to respond positively to the advertising message. The present article investigates appropriate
personalization methods for the domain of digital television advertisements by examining relevant methods utilized for
personalized Web applications. In addition, it is concerned with the design of the interactive elements of a typical 30-second
advertisement in support of the personalization process. The two objectives of this article are interrelated: the selection of
a personalization technique affects the design of interactive advertisements since it indicates the type of interaction data
that should be collected in order to enable personalization. The next section of this article opens up the discussion on
personalization from a theoretical point of view and in the following section specific personalization techniques are compared.
Next, the types of interaction data required to achieve personalization are discussed and the article concludes with further
discussion and conclusions.
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DOI
Lekakos, G. and Chorianopoulos, K. 2009. Personalized Advertising Methods in Digital Interactive Television. In: M. Pagani, ed., Encyclopedia of Multimedia Technology and Neworking. IGI Press, 1142–1147.BibTeX
Lekakos, G. and Chorianopoulos, K. 2009. Personalized Advertising Methods in Digital Interactive Television. In: M. Pagani, ed., Encyclopedia of Multimedia Technology and Neworking. IGI Press, 1142–1147.