Big Data, Trust and ‘You as The Product’

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If you’re not paying for it, you’re the product. Most people know this. The basis of the business model is that your personal data is mined and shared with all kinds of companies that can use this data for their benefit. Mostly this data is used to sell advertising space or intelligence to improve advertising efficiency.

The Death of Direct Marketing
What I have always found strange is that this business model was able to grow so rapidly and even ‘produce’ two of the largest online companies of the world. I think this is strange because at the same time, at least in The Netherlands, the end of what used to be Direct Marketing was already clear:

We have seen a massive adoption of the “no-no”-mailbox sticker in the nineties and the rise of the “don’t call me register” in the years 2000 with over 8 million phone numbers registered (for comparison, The Netherlands has somewhere around 7,6 million households). Whom has been working in Direct Marketing saw the rapid decline of conversion rates that, regardless of the new channels used, have now stabilized to levels where it’s safe to say that > 97% of all Customers are ignoring efforts and more likely have been annoyed by them.

The Missing Link
With the rise of available data, and more specifically contextually relevant behavioral data, companies are seeing the gold. Marketeers, but not just them, believe that now they will be able to build contextually relevant offers for the right Customer/prospect at the right price, place and time. How can it not be? Adding real (time) behavioral data to existing transactional, interactional and personal data, will surely result in better outcomes from (analytical) marketing efforts. It’s the missing link, isn’t it?

How Big Data Backfires
In The Netherlands ING launched a plan last week to sell Customer data so that buyers could make relevant offers to the ING Customer base. That news caused quite a stir even though ING explained it would ask explicit Customer approval to do so. And still 1/3rd of Customers say they are considering moving their business elsewhere (many probably won’t in the end, because the are continuing with their busy lives; but the signal is there, not to be ignored).

ING clearly struck a nerve. People are accustomed to the idea of being the product. They accept it every day in the context where their benefit is clear to them. Usually it is the benefit of use. In return they will bear the “costs” to them in shape of “contextually relevant ads” and some privacy. But when “contextually relevant ads” becomes the return for giving up your (financial) privacy that is not a very compelling offer, is it? And there is more to it.

Empowered With Little Trust
Trust is a very important factor in relationships. We know this. Yet somehow the Big Data (in marketing) promise seems to be at odds with it. There is a huge lack of transparency (what data is shared with what companies and with what benefit) and even if there was, Customers are in lack of tools, knowledge and skills that help them keep control of what’s out there and what it’s used for. Let alone that they can control the level of benefits they gain from sharing it. Yes, Customers are more empowered than ever before to raise their voices. When it comes to their data they have little to voice. This must change. And yes, we can! 😉

An Improved Promise
Vendor Relationship Management as a concept has been around for a while. To me this has been compelling thinking with little practical stuff to back it up. Until a little over a year ago when The Hub Of All Things was founded by Irene Ng (a.o). The Hub Of All Things (HAT) – project approaches opportunities that arise from Big Data from a multi-sided market perspective, building a personal data-vault for Consumers and a platform for companies to build new business models on. I strongly believe this is the way to move forward. As always the really good stuff takes time, a lot of time before these initiatives bring forth use-cases that work.

In the meantime companies that are looking to develop Big Data initiatives should really consider what it brings to their Customers. If we accept lessons from the past, we know that using it the way we have used Customer data to improve one to one marketing wil only bring us diminishing returns. And harvesting data, as if it is crops on a field to be sold for the highest bid, is not the right way to go either. At least not when it’s your sole aim to enrich your Company, not your Customers lives.

Using insights from Big Data analytics to enhance the Customer experience, to enable Customers to grow their own skills and knowledge to get their jobs done better, probably is a better route to explore.

Big Data holds a big promise. For companies and for Customers. Only If we choose so though. If not, Customers will refuse to be the product and the return of trust will too remain a promise. 

Republished with author's permission from original post.

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