With the recent announcements of Brave buying a search engine and Google changing how some of its targeting works (not using as much personal data?), I'm curious if anyone in the know has direct knowledge of evidence whether or not targeted ads really has an impact on clicks and actual purchases or not?<p>I had remembered reading about companies/advertisers suggesting that the extra $$ dumped into targeted ads on FB resulted in no extra revenue they could tie to that campaign. Sorry, I know that without links it's just a vague recollection that could be wrong.<p>Obviously this question has no bearing at all on whether or not personal data collection and mining has value (it does, even if not monetarily - e.g. at the state level).
Maybe off-topic, but I see there is a giant difference in how I feel regarding tv/radio/street advertisement vs Internet (mostly targeted) ads. In old media, there is a lot of variety in ads, to the point where basically no particular ad ever became too annoying to me (with few exceptions). And the specially cool ones give me good feelings.<p>But when it comes to Internet ads, I find it's the opposite. Take Youtube for example. It is often the case where Youtube will show me the same 2 or 3 ads over and over for quite a few weeks. That is <i>extremely</i> annoying, and makes me want to never ever have to deal with those brands. Seriously, fuck those two insurance companies, or that macho soap brand, also Google Pay, or that AOE clone game. It is <i>extremely</i> annoying. I know exposure to the brand leads you to become familiar to it so more likely to buy it, but the kind of extreme exposure that some internet (targeted) advertisement makes me associate those brands with negative feelings. That can't be good for their brand. </rant>
It's still very debatable whether advertising works at all, not just targeted but in general. And if it does, the extent is questionable too. Freakonomics had a very good episode on this a few months ago - <a href="https://freakonomics.com/podcast/advertising-part-2/" rel="nofollow">https://freakonomics.com/podcast/advertising-part-2/</a>
If you want to confirm something where others have an interest, you may easily find all sort of confirming results.<p>What you'd like to look for is those results proving it doesn't work. Personally, ads are simply an annoyance and sometimes even hostile at times.
Targeted advertising works and delivers better results than non-targeted advertising. This has existed for pretty much as long as advertising, way before the internet.<p>I am not expert in the field but I am sure that there are hard data from studies available on the subject.<p>A question is whether it is worth paying the extra money to run a specific campaign on a specific platform and the answer is, as often, "it depends".