It’s easy to assume there’s an inherent conflict between privacy and performance; between customers’ preferences and advertisers’ desire for clicks. But when Google commissioned Ipsos to interview 7,200 people across Europe about their data concerns, that’s not what we found.
Our research revealed that, when done in the right way, digital marketing can respect people’s data choices while delivering value to brands and customers. We found that people are happy to provide personal information to companies they trust, as long as they know how it will be used and what they’ll get in return.
Unfortunately, many companies fail to meet people’s basic expectations. This has led individuals to become increasingly sceptical about giving brands their data. To build customer confidence, brands should be focused on exceeding expectations rather than just meeting legal requirements for data handling. Brands that surpass expectations will likely gain a competitive advantage over those that consider privacy an afterthought. Brands that don’t give privacy the attention it deserves risk losing the trust and respect of their customers.
The ask used to be optional. A client might mention they'd "love" compostable cups or…
Most event managers treat post-event content as an afterthought, a recap post, maybe a thank-you…
For years, event social media has followed the same playbook: announce, hype, sell, repeat. But…
The events industry has entered a new phase of maturity. After years of experimentation and…
Artificial intelligence is no longer a futuristic concept reserved for Silicon Valley boardrooms. For event…
The event industry has always been about creating memorable human connections, but the tools we…
This website uses cookies.