Surfacing information is the future of mobile personalization, says Google

The face of personalization on mobile is changing. Surfacing information to the user, rather than having the user search for it, is the next step in the evolution of mobile personalization, says Ian Carrington, EMEA managing director for Google’s performance solutions.

Personalization was one of three big consumer shifts that Carrington described to Beet.TV at the Mobile World Congress, but its evolution as a marketing tactic has been limited.

This information might take the form of appointments, meetings, photos, all surfaced to the home screen without the user demonstrating interest via search. This information might not even be based on email or calendar events, says Carrington. The future of personalization will put the onus on Google to decide which information is relevant and which is not, hopefully without spooking users in the process. Carrington uses the example of his mobile device sending him a reminder about a football game, without any emails for Google to draw from. This example glosses over the fact that this information would be gleaned by geolocation.

This is a great boon for advertisers. The mobile phone is the medium for many of our daily tasks and interactions, so taking personalization beyond apps and into assistance by surfacing relevant information without the user asking for it meets a new consumer need and most important of all, further embeds the mobile device into our lives.

Google’s precarious position in Europe, from antitrust allegations to the “right to be forgotten” ruling, should make European advertisers wonder how effective this surfacing approach will be in the long run. But Carrington is optimistic that this is an opportunity for advertisers, not a roadblock waiting to happen.

https://staging.digiday.com/?p=166032

More from Digiday

Sliders test article

Amazon bulldozes into new markets, upending the status quo and challenging rivals. Today, it’s the turn of the ad-supported streaming world, and Amazon is coming out of the gate strong.  Why, you ask? Because Amazon is serving marketers an opportunity beginning today to reach a whopping 115 million monthly viewers in the U.S. alone, courtesy […]

How CTV and DOOH are growing this political season for smaller agencies

Connected TV and digital out-of-home are playing a bigger role in upcoming elections and politics – especially for smaller agencies looking to place clients’ dollars.

CMO Strategies: Advertisers identify the top attributes on ad-supported streaming platforms

This is the third installment in Digiday’s multi-part series covering the top ad-supported streaming services and part of Digiday’s CMO Strategies series. In this report, we examine which ad attributes matter the most to marketers on streaming platforms.