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Morphing Banner Advertising

Author(s)
Urban, Glen L.; MacDonald, Erin; Bordley, Robert; Hauser, John R.; Liberali, Guilherme
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Abstract
Researchers and practitioners devote substantial effort to targeting banner advertisements to consumers, but they focus less effort on how to communicate with consumers once targeted. Morphing enables a website to learn, automatically and near optimally, which banner advertisements to serve to consumers to maximize click-through rates, brand consideration, and purchase likelihood. Banners are matched to consumers based on posterior probabilities of latent segment membership, which are identified from consumers' clickstreams. This paper describes the first large-sample random-assignment field test of banner morphing—more than 100,000 consumers viewed more than 450,000 banners on CNET.com. On relevant Web pages, CNET's click-through rates almost doubled relative to control banners. We supplement the CNET field test with an experiment on an automotive information-and-recommendation website. The automotive experiment replaces automated learning with a longitudinal design that implements morph-to-segment matching. Banners matched to cognitive styles, as well as the stage of the consumer's buying process and body-type preference, significantly increase click-through rates, brand consideration, and purchase likelihood relative to a control. The CNET field test and automotive experiment demonstrate that matching banners to cognitive-style segments is feasible and provides significant benefits above and beyond traditional targeting. Improved banner effectiveness has strategic implications for allocations of budgets among media.
Date issued
2013-10
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/90836
Department
Sloan School of Management
Journal
Marketing Science
Publisher
Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS)
Citation
Urban, Glen L., Guilherme (Gui) Liberali, Erin MacDonald, Robert Bordley, and John R. Hauser. “Morphing Banner Advertising.” Marketing Science 33, no. 1 (January 2014): 27–46.
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
0732-2399
1526-548X

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