Getting Back to Basics with Location-based Marketing

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Learn how the different types of location-based marketing tactics work so you can utilize them efficiently for your brand.

Location-based marketing is becoming an increasingly popular campaign strategy for brands to attract both new and loyal customers. A recent study stated that Australia’s online advertising market for Q2, 2020 represented $2.03 billion in spending. It is essential for brands to understand the different types of location-based marketing tactics. The reason is so brands can utilize them efficiently and stay ahead of the curve. They should also have a baseline understanding of how the privacy of consumers remains protected with location-based marketing.

There are four primary methods of location-based marketing: geofencing, geotargeting, geoconquesting, and proximity marketing. Many times, marketers will interchange some of these terms for one another. However, this is how we coach companies on the terminology.

Geofencing

Geofencing refers to serving advertising or content to a consumer based on their real-time location.

Sometimes, a person may opt-in to share their location with a brand’s app and enter the designated geofenced area. When that happens, they may receive a push notification from an app, a text message, or see location-based content and advertising while using an app in that location. To achieve this, brands use one of many existing technologies to set parameters around the locations where consumers will receive notifications, ads, or content.

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The most prominent companies providing this type of targeting are Facebook, Instagram, and Google. Snapchat also provides location-specific geofilters. Any brand can use them to promote their location, an event they’re supporting or hosting, or raise awareness of their company at an event. Most push notification providers, such as Urban Airship, also provide tools to support location-based alerts.

Geotargeting

Geotargeting refers to serving advertising and content to audiences that visited specific locations in the past. By using historical data, marketers can build campaigns that will reach much more relevant audiences. It is also accompanied by location data that serves as an indicator of an audience’s real-world preferences.

An example of this approach is a shopping mall that wants to increase their foot traffic this past Black Friday. They built a campaign to reach the audience that visited their location over 90 days to drive return visits. The campaign ran across the mobile advertising ecosystem and was successful enough. Because of that, they’re adding geotargeting as an ongoing campaign strategy.

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Automotive dealers can also make great use of geotargeting. However, they should refine their approach. Instead of building audiences over longer periods, their most relevant audiences are seen on their lots within a narrower time frame. It is because once someone shows up at a dealer’s physical location, they’re typically in the final stages of their buying cycle. Marketers shorten their look-back window for building car shopping audiences, looking back two weeks, one week, and sometimes less.

In contrast, a ski resort wouldn’t want a geotargeted audience over such a short time frame. One of their most relevant audiences is last season’s visitors. It’s crucial for brands and marketers to adapt their location-based marketing strategy to fit their business and their customers.

Geoconquesting

Brands use the geoconquesting tactic to reach audiences that visit their competitive locations. For example, Burger King utilized geoconquesting to run a campaign offering the one cent whopper to audiences that had their app open when they visited a McDonald’s location.

This tactic can be used when an audience is nearby at the moment. However, it also works very well when applied to reach historical audiences.

Proximity marketing

This tactic uses technology such as beacons, near-field communication (NFC), or augmented reality. The functions are to trigger ad delivery, alerts, or content to a smartphone that is within just a few feet of a specific location. One of the most common use cases is making a payment with a smartphone. When activated, the phone quickly detects the presence of the credit card terminal, enabling a fast and easy payment. There’s also a growing trend for beverage companies to blend this tactic with augmented reality. A shopper in a wine store can use a specific app, such as the Living Wine Labels app, to bring the wine or beer label to life. The camera on the phone views the label, while the app turns the label on the screen into an animated display that educates and entertains the person.

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Privacy and location-based marketing

Brands and agencies using location-based marketing should understand how these audiences are created, and how consumer privacy is protected. A critical step is ensuring that the location data used, whether it’s derived from GPS or some other signal, is opted-in. Moreover, the consumer has to know that they’re opting in to share location to help serve advertising. Most, if not all, of the location-based marketing companies in this space, follow this practice today and adhere to codes of conduct from various industry groups. The data should always be aggregated and anonymized, to prevent any individual tracking. This is also a common practice as there is no incentive to build a campaign around reaching a single person. Marketers prefer to reach tens to hundreds of thousands within their target market. Another way to ensure privacy is by not using location-based audiences built from “sensitive” locations. One example is anything related to healthcare unless the consumer has given explicit consent for this specific use case.

Any successful campaign will rely on multiple different strategies and tactics to be successful. While data will continue to play an important role, the ad copy and creative can be just as important, if not more so. Location-based marketing allows brands and agencies to leverage new technology. Additionally, it ensures that their creativity finds the right audience more frequently, and at the right time.

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Source: marketingland

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About the author

Michael Doyle

Michael is a digital marketing powerhouse and the brain behind Top4 Marketing and Top4. His know-how and over 23 years of experience make him a go-to resource for anyone looking to crush it in the digital space. To get the inside scoop on the latest and greatest in digital marketing, be sure to read his blog posts and follow him on LinkedIn.

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