Privacy regulation and online advertising
Author(s)
Goldfarb, Avi; Tucker, Catherine Elizabeth
DownloadTucker_Privacy Regulation.pdf (346.3Kb)
OPEN_ACCESS_POLICY
Open Access Policy
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike
Terms of use
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Advertisers use online customer data to target their marketing appeals. This has heightened consumers' privacy concerns, leading governments to pass laws designed to protect consumer privacy by restricting the use of data and by restricting online tracking techniques used by websites. We use the responses of 3.3 million survey takers who had been randomly exposed to 9,596 online display (banner) advertising campaigns to explore how privacy regulation in the European Union (EU) has influenced advertising effectiveness. This privacy regulation restricted advertisers' ability to collect data on Web users in order to target ad campaigns. We find that, on average, display advertising became far less effective at changing stated purchase intent after the EU laws were enacted, relative to display advertising in other countries. The loss in effectiveness was more pronounced for websites that had general content (such as news sites), where non-data-driven targeting is particularly hard to do. The loss of effectiveness was also more pronounced for ads with a smaller presence on the webpage and for ads that did not have additional interactive, video, or audio features.
Date issued
2011-01Department
Sloan School of ManagementJournal
Management Science
Publisher
INFORMS
Citation
Goldfarb, Avi, and Catherine E. Tucker. “Privacy Regulation and Online Advertising.” Management Science 57.1 (2011) : 57-71.
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
1526-5501
0025-1909