Google and Mastercard Cut a Secret Ad Deal to Track Retail Sales
Google and Mastercard Cut a Secret Ad Deal to Track
Retail Sales
By Mark Bergen and Jenny Surane August 30 2018, 12:43 PM September
02 2018, 7:37 PM
(Bloomberg) -- For the past year, select Google
advertisers have had access to a potent new tool to track whether the ads they
ran online led to a sale at a physical store in the U.S. That insight came
thanks in part to a stockpile of Mastercard transactions that Google paid for.
But most of the two billion Mastercard holders aren’t
aware of this behind-the-scenes tracking. That’s because the companies never
told the public about the arrangement.
Alphabet Inc.’s Google and Mastercard Inc. brokered a
business partnership during about four years of negotiations, according to four
people with knowledge of the deal, three of whom worked on it directly. The
alliance gave Google an unprecedented asset for measuring retail spending, part
of the search giant’s strategy to fortify its primary business against
onslaughts from Amazon.com Inc. and others.
But the deal, which has not been previously reported,
could raise broader privacy concerns about how much consumer data technology
companies like Google quietly absorb.
"People don’t expect what they buy physically in a
store to be linked to what they are buying online,” said Christine Bannan, counsel
with the advocacy group Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC).
"There’s just far too much burden that companies place on consumers and
not enough responsibility being taken by companies to inform users what they’re
doing and what rights they have.”
Google paid Mastercard millions of dollars for the data,
according to two people who worked on the deal, and the companies discussed
sharing a portion of the ad revenue, according to one of the people. The people
asked not to be identified discussing private matters. A spokeswoman for Google
said there is no revenue sharing agreement with its partners.
A Google spokeswoman declined to comment on the
partnership with Mastercard, but addressed the ads tool. "Before we
launched this beta product last year, we built a new, double-blind encryption
technology that prevents both Google and our partners from viewing our
respective users’ personally identifiable information,” the company said in a
statement. “We do not have access to any personal information from our
partners’ credit and debit cards, nor do we share any personal information with
our partners.” The company said people can opt out of ad tracking using
Google’s “Web and App Activity” online console. Inside Google, multiple people
raised objections that the service did not have a more obvious way for
cardholders to opt out of the tracking, one of the people said.
Google and Mastercard Cut a Secret Ad Deal to Track
Retail Sales
Seth Eisen, a Mastercard spokesman, also declined to
comment specifically on Google. But he said Mastercard shares transaction
trends with merchants and their service providers to help them measure
"the effectiveness of their advertising campaigns.” The information, which
includes sales volumes and average size of the purchase, is shared only with
permission of the merchants, Eisen added. "No individual transaction or
personal data is provided," he said in a statement. "We do not
provide insights that track, serve up ads to, or even measure ad effectiveness
relating to, individual consumers."
Last year, when Google announced the service, called
"Store Sales Measurement," the company just said it had access to
"approximately 70 percent" of U.S. credit and debit cards through
partners, without naming them.
That 70 percent could mean that the company has deals
with other credit card companies, totaling 70 percent of the people who use
credit and debit cards. Or it could mean that the company has deals with
companies that include all card users, and 70 percent of those are logged into
Google accounts like Gmail when they click on a Google search ad.
Google has approached other payment companies about the
program, according to two people familiar with the conversations, but it is not
clear if they finalized similar deals. The people asked to not be identified
because they were not authorized to speak about the matter. Google confirmed
that the service only applies to people who are logged in to one of its
accounts and have not opted out of ad tracking. Purchases made on
Mastercard-branded cards accounted for around a quarter of U.S. volumes last
year, according to the Nilson Report, a financial research firm.
Through this test program, Google can anonymously match
these existing user profiles to purchases made in physical stores. The result
is powerful: Google knows that people clicked on ads and can now tell
advertisers that this activity led to actual store sales.
Google is testing the data service with a “small group”
of advertisers in the U.S., according to a spokeswoman. With it, marketers see
aggregate sales figures and estimates of how many they can attribute to Google
ads -- but they don’t see a shoppers’ personal information, how much they spend
or what exactly they buy. The tests are only available for retailers, not the
companies that make the items sold inside stores, the spokeswoman said. The
service only applies to its search and shopping ads, she said.
For Google, the Mastercard deal fits into a broad effort
to net more retail spending. Advertisers spend lavishly on Google to glean
valuable insight into the link between digital ads a website visit or an online
purchase. It's harder to tell how ads influence offline behavior. That’s a
particular frustration for companies marketing items like apparel or home
goods, which people will often research online but walk into actual stores to
buy.
That gap created a demand for Google to find ways for its
biggest customers to gauge offline sales, and then connect them to the
promotions they run on Google. "Google needs to tie that activity back to
a click," said Joseph McConellogue, head of online retail for the ad
agency Reprise Digital. "Most advertisers are champing at the bit for this
kind of integration."
Initially, Google devised its own solution, a mobile
payments service first called Google Wallet. Part of the original goal was to
tie clicks on ads to purchases in physical stores, according to someone who
worked on the product. But adoption never took off, so Google began looking for
allies. A spokeswoman said its payments service was never used for ads
measurement.
Since 2014, Google has flagged for advertisers when
someone who clicked an ad visits a physical store, using the Location History
feature in Google Maps. Still, the advertiser didn’t know if the shopper made a
purchase. So Google added more. A tool, introduced the following year, let
advertisers upload email addresses of customers they’ve collected into Google’s
ad-buying system, which then encrypted them. Additionally, Google layered on inputs
from third-party data brokers, such as Experian Plc and Acxiom Corp., which
draw in demographic and financial information for marketers.
But those tactics didn’t always translate to more ad
spending. Retail outlets weren’t able to connect the emails easily to their
ads. And the information they received from data brokers about sales was
imprecise or too late. Marketing executives didn’t adopt these location tools
en masse, said Christina Malcolm, director at the digital ad agency iProspect.
"It didn’t give them what they needed to go back to their bosses and tell
them, 'We’re hitting our numbers,’" she said.
Then Google brought in card data. In May 2017, the
company introduced "Store Sales Measurement." It had two components.
The first lets companies with personal information on consumers, like encrypted
email addresses, upload those into Google’s system and synchronize ad buys with
offline sales. The second injects card data.
It works like this: a person searches for "red
lipstick" on Google, clicks on an ad, surfs the web but doesn’t buy
anything. Later, she walks into a store and buys red lipstick with her
Mastercard. The advertiser who ran the ad is fed a report from Google, listing
the sale along with other transactions in a column that reads "Offline
Revenue" -- only if the web surfer is logged into a Google account online
and made the purchase within 30 days of clicking the ad. The advertisers are
given a bulk report with the percentage of shoppers who clicked or viewed an ad
then made a relevant purchase. Mastercard's spokesman said the company does not
view data on the individual items purchased inside stores.
It’s not an exact match, but it’s the most powerful tool
Google, the world’s largest ad seller, has offered for shopping in the real
world. Marketers once had a patchwork of consumer data in their hands to
triangulate who saw their ads and who was prompted to spend. Now they had far
more clarity.
Google’s ad chief, Sridhar Ramaswamy, introduced the
product in a blog post, writing that advertisers using it would have "no
time-consuming setup or costly integrations." Missing from the blog post
was the arrangement with Mastercard.
Early signs indicate that the deal has been a boon for
Google. The new feature also plugs transaction data into advertiser systems as
soon as they occur, fixing the lag that existed previously and letting Google
slot in better-performing ads. Malcolm said her agency has tested the card
measurement tool with a major advertiser, which she declined to name.
Beforehand, the company received $5.70 in revenue for every dollar spent on
marketing in the ad campaign with Google, according to an iProspect analysis.
With the new transaction feature, the return nearly doubled to $10.60.
"That’s really powerful," Malcolm said.
"And it was a really good way to invest more in Google, frankly."
But some privacy critics derided the tool as opaque. EPIC
submitted a complaint about the sales measuring tack to the U.S. Federal Trade
Commission last year. A report in August that Facebook Inc. was talking with
banks about accessing information for consumer service products sparked similar
criticism. For years, Facebook and Google have worked to link their massive
troves of user behavior with consumer financial data.
And financial companies have plotted ways to tap into the
bounty of digital advertising. The Google tie-up isn’t Mastercard’s only stab
at minting the data it collects from customers. The company has built out its
data and analytics capabilities in recent years through its consulting arm,
Mastercard Advisors, and gives advertisers and merchants the ability to
forecast consumer behavior based on cardholder data.
Ad buyers that work with Google insist that the company
is careful to maintain the walls between transaction information and web
behavior, keeping any info flowing to retailers and marketers anonymous.
"Google is really strict about that," said Malcolm.
Before launching the product, Google developed a novel
encryption method, according to Jules Polonetsky, head of the Future Privacy
Forum, who was briefed by Google on the product. He explained that the system
ensures that neither Google nor its payments partners have access to the data
that each collect. “They’re sharing data that has been so transformed that, if
put in the public, no party could do anything with it,” Polonetsky said. “It
doesn’t create a privacy risk.”
Future Privacy Forum, a nonprofit, receives funding from
160 companies including Google.
Google’s ad business, which hit $95.4 billion in 2017
sales, has maintained an astounding growth rate of about 20 percent a year. But
investors have worried how long that can last. Many major advertisers are
starting to funnel more spending to rival Amazon, the company that hosts far
more, and more granular, data on online shopping.
In response, Google has continued to push deeper into
offline measurements. The company, like Facebook and Twitter Inc., has explored
the use of "beacons," Bluetooth devices that track when shoppers
enter stores.
Some ad agencies have actively talked to Google about
even more ways to better size up offline behaviors. They have discussed adding
features into the ads system such as what time of day people buy items and how
much they spend, said John Malysiak, who runs search marketing for the Omnicom
agency OMD USA. "We’re trying to go deeper with Google," he said.
"We’d like to understand more." Google declined to comment on the
discussions.
©2018 Bloomberg L.P.
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