Industry News | In Practice | The Bigger Picture | Digital Marketing | Your Business | Latest Research

Latest Articles

How bookseller Blackwell used long tail search to increase sales

With keywords so keenly fought over on search engines, focus on the ‘long tail’ –more specific search term entries – has become a more profitable focus for many companies. UK bookseller Blackwell called in digital marketing specialists to help with its long tail search and New Media Knowledge got in touch to find out more. By Chris Lee.

more

The future’s bright for the social Web, say experts

The benefits of the social Web far outweigh the negatives, prominent research stated this month, and will continue to improve social relations over the next ten years. New Media Knowledge tapped up some social media commentators of its own to gauge their views. By Chris Lee.

more

Ecommerce Still Growing: Actinic Survey Confirms Robustness of SME Online Retail

Actinic survey shows SMEs’ orders up 39% and revenue up 15% in Q2 2010 over same quarter in 2009.

more

Related Articles

Behavioural Targeting: The Fire and The Fury


When: November 25th, 2008 18:00 to 21:00
Location: Bath House, 96 Dean Street, Soho, W1D 3TA
Price: £25.00
Reduced to £15.00 if you are eligible for a discount.
Bookmark this article with: Delicious Digg StumbleUpon

Behavioural Targeting - the saviour of internet publishing or the death of privacy? Our panel debates the benefits, drawbacks, options and threats created by this new path for advertisers.

Behavioural targeting. On the one hand, it means we should see advertising more relevant to us as individuals when we visit a website, and that can only be a good thing, both for consumers, the ad industry and advertisers. On the other, it also means that more of our data will need to be gathered to ensure advertising is targeted correctly, and a lot of consumers and privacy groups are concerned about the level of potential intrusion and what else the information might be used for.

There’s been a lot in the media about the Phorm behavioural targeting system trialled by BT and set to be tested by other major ISPs. Detractors believe it’s a privacy infringement (and the fact that BT trialled without informing subscribers has come in for a lot of flak, too), but proponents are confident that the data collected is sufficiently anonymous not to cause any privacy concerns. What’s the real deal?

So, what are the issues? How will greater behavioural targeting affect advertising, publishing, privacy and consumers? We've assembled a panel taken from varying sides of this debate to talk about the latest developments, concerns and successes of behavioural targeting in online advertising.

Chair

Guy Phillipson, CEO, IAB

http://www.iabuk.net

Panel

Nick Barnett, UK Commercial Director, Phorm

http://www.phorm.com

Baroness Sue Miller, Liberal Democrat Member, House of Lords

http://suemiller.org.uk

Rupert Staines, VP Europe, Specific Media

http://www.specificmedia.com

Ian Brown, Research Fellow, Oxford Internet Institute

http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk

Discount pricing is available for small businesses (<10 people), freelancers, students and the unemployed. Solo consultants with turnovers above £100K should consult their consciences. ;-)

Location

Bath House, 96 Dean Street, Soho, W1D 3TA

Upstairs Room

51.5164092 -0.1345404

Comments

You must be logged in to comment.

Log into NMK

Register

Lost Password?

Newsletter


For the latest news from NMK enter your email address and click subscribe: