
In the fast-paced advertising world, collaboration is crucial to keep up with the flux in consumer behaviors. Samsung Ads and Experian have joined forces to address this challenge. This partnership aims to equip marketers with the necessary tools and insights to create compelling and impactful content that resonates with the right audience at the right time. By combining our expertise and precision, through this new partnership, we promise to maximize the reach, effectiveness, and efficiency of advertising campaigns. This collaboration ensures that marketing messages get noticed and strike a chord with the intended audience, leading to meaningful engagement and measurable outcomes.
The Samsung Ads and Experian collaboration
The powerful integration between Samsung Ads and Experian brings together Samsung Ads’ industry-leading viewership data and massive device scale with the detailed data insights of Experian. This combined effort enhances the effectiveness of advertising campaigns by merging scale with precision. Advertisers can now reap the benefits of a comprehensive solution that delivers customized content to a wide audience with unparalleled accuracy.
“Navigating the dynamic landscape of digital advertising requires innovative solutions and strategic collaborations. This partnership with Samsung Ads exemplifies our commitment to empowering advertisers with data-driven insights that reach and resonate with audiences. With Experian Marketing Data directly accessible within the Samsung DSP, advertisers are equipped to orchestrate campaigns with unprecedented precision and impact, marking a significant stride in personalized advertising.”
chris feo, svp, sales & partnerships, experian
Samsung Ads: Orchestrating reach and precision
Samsung Ads’ suite of advertising solutions uses Samsung’s massive global scale to bring advertisers unmatched opportunities to engage consumers across every screen, during every moment that matters, delivering quantifiable results on a massive scale.
Samsung DSP: Key features and benefits
Samsung Ads believes that smarter advertising doesn’t need to be more complicated. With Samsung DSP, every intuitive feature is engineered to make media simple again, offering advertisers the ability to reach their audience more effectively, across every screen.
Addressable TV
Transforms traditional viewing experiences by delivering personalized content to specific households, enhancing engagement and connection.
Contextual targeting
Nurtures audience engagement by placing ads in relevant content environments that amplify their relevance and impact.
Global reach
Navigate the digital expanse with agility, delivering content to millions of consumers across devices and platforms, in brand-safe environments.
Data-driven targeting
Combine Samsung Ads’ unrivaled proprietary device data with Experian’s insights, to translate global reach into personalized consumer engagement.
“The new partnership between Experian and Samsung Ads is an exciting development for advertisers as they look to maximize the effectiveness of their marketing campaigns. With hands-on access to Experian’s identity solution and audiences directly within our platform, Samsung DSP, advertisers can now better address their most important audiences on the screens they use most.”
alex boras, platform lead, samsung dsp
Why choose Experian in Samsung
At Experian, data is more than just numbers; it tells detailed stories about what consumers like, how they behave, and their experiences. Each piece of data supports the connective networks that offer advertisers nuanced insights and actionable strategies.
Ease of use
Experian syndicated audiences take the guesswork out of developing segments, and they are available turnkey on the Samsung Ads shelf.
Expansive reach, scale, and flexibility
Our breadth and depth of data ensures detailed and targeted insights, spanning multiple verticals and can be directly attached to households, providing contextual relevance to each consumer’s behaviors and purchase patterns.
- A rich data set that encompasses 126 million households and 750 million hashed emails
- 5,000 data attributes for enrichment, licensing, and audience creation
- 2,400 ready-to-use audiences on integrated platforms spanning 8 verticals, complemented by an average of 2,300 attributes per household and 250 attributes per consumer
Four benefits to advertisers
The partnership between Samsung Ads and Experian offers a plethora of benefits to advertisers, including:
Enhanced audience targeting
You can use Samsung Ads’ ACR data and Experian’s syndicated audiences to create highly targeted campaigns that reach the right audience at the right time. This can lead to significant improvements in campaign performance, such as increased engagement, conversion rates, and ROI.
Optimized ad spend
You can reduce wasted ad spend by using Experian’s data to identify and avoid audiences less likely to be interested in your products or services. This can help you get the most out of your advertising budget.
Improved attribution
You can better understand the consumer journey by tracking how audiences interact with your ads across different devices and platforms. This information can be used to optimize campaigns and improve overall performance.
Brand safety
You can ensure that your ads are displayed in safe and secure environments by using Samsung Ads’ brand safety solutions. This helps to protect brand integrity and reputation.
Samsung and Experian are steering the future of advertising
Together, our goal is to bring personalized and improved ad experiences to the forefront. This partnership allows advertisers to tailor their ads to individual consumer interests and needs, using the rich consumer data insights provided by Experian. Additionally, the partnership offers measurable aspects that allow advertisers to assess the effectiveness of their campaigns across various platforms, increasing their return on investment. By enhancing the overall ad experience, Samsung and Experian ensure that ads are more relevant and less intrusive, improving consumer engagement.
Connect with us to learn more about how you can access our syndicated audiences in Samsung’s DSP.
To learn more about our partner Samsung Ads, visit SamsungAds.com.
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It seems that every time I go into a store today, I am offered a loyalty card. From one of my favorite local restaurants to my shoe store VIP program, I feel like I am getting a host of emails and points at every turn. Statistics support my theory: according to a recent Experian Data Quality study, 91 percent of organizations use loyalty programs. Why did they become so prevalent? Today’s consumer is more empowered than ever before and driving major change within business. In the era of Yelp, digital channels and a 24/7 shopping cycle, organizations have less control. Just look at the shoe market, which you can tell I pay attention to. It used to be that you would purchase whatever your local department store or brick-and-mortar retail had to offer, which might be 50 different options. Now, you can go online, read reviews and browse hundreds of different choices based on style and color. In fact, last night I went online and searched for black boots and scrolled through six pages of different options! Loyalty programs are a counter balance to that choice and empowered customer behavior. They make sure that while I am shopping for shoes, I am probably doing it through my preferred store and earning reward points for free merchandise. And through the loyalty process, companies are collecting a lot of data. Customers usually need to provide more than three types of information to sign up, the most popular being email, followed by name and phone number. However, collecting this information accurately isn’t always easy, which is why poor data collection is one of the leading problems for loyalty programs. Eighty-one percent of companies face challenges related to these programs, the two biggest being not enough customers signing up and poor contact data. Inaccurate data means that a customer has signed up, but the marketer is unable to communicate with them in the desired channels. This clear drop in communication and a potentially bad customer experience could be by improved data collection. Sixty-four percent of respondents say this is a needed improvement. Let’s go back to my shoe retailer example. If they had collected my email wrong, I wouldn’t get my email confirmations or offers around upcoming sales. If they got my address wrong, I wouldn’t be receiving my shoes. Considering how much money I spend on shoes annually, which I am ashamed to admit, if any of those items went wrong, I might switch to a competitor. That can equate to a lot of money annually, especially when you look at it across a large number of clients. When a customer chooses to sign up for a loyalty program, they are making a commitment to the company and expecting something in return, be it points, free shipping, coupons or just company updates. However, if bad contact information is collected, then the consumer often never receives the benefits, resulting in a bad customer experience. In the next year, marketers need to data validation in place to ensure information is accurate upon collection. This type of software can be implemented across all channels where information is collected and ensure data is accurate while the consumer is still engaged. If information is accurate when it is collected, then loyalty programs have a better chance at engaging consumers and actually seeing the benefit that a loyalty program can provide. To learn more about loyalty programs and the research mentioned above, please read our new white paper, Driving customer loyalty.

When building marketing plans these are the top trends marketers need to know and consider Crowdsourcing, Programmatic Buying, The Internet of Things … these are all concepts that today’s savvy marketer needs to be thinking about. We can’t emphasize it enough: the marketing landscape changes almost daily, sometimes without us even realizing it. The three concepts I just mentioned weren’t even part of our lexicon a few short years (or even months) ago, but are now important trends marketers need to know and consider when building out marketing plans. Take crowdsourcing, for example. Experian Marketing Services research showed that the number of ratings or reviews posted online has increased by 30 percent in the past two years and the number of adults who say they pay attention to such reviews has increased by 33 percent. Brands are capitalizing on the trend by engaging their consumers in communities that share their content and even help them design new products. Programmatic Buying, which refers to the automation of online ad buying, has exploded over the last few years as publishers like AOL have started focusing less on selling remnant inventory and started offering their premium inventory to advertisers up front. This has led to the packaging of “audiences” that marketers can use to target customers across channels and devices. And one of this year’s biggest trends is the rise of the “Internet of Things,” which is, essentially, everyday objects that connect to the Internet to improve efficiency, connectivity and user experience. Think smart light bulbs that you can control from your smartphone, or smart thermostats that also connect to your phone and allow you to adjust the temperature in your house before you get home from work. If you find these concepts interesting, please read “Trending Now” to get more insights into these trends marketers need to know and several other fresh marketing ideas that are changing the way marketers are thinking about planning today.

Q&A with John Fetto, Senior Analyst, Marketing & Research Earlier this year, Experian Marketing Services released our Cross-Device Video Analysis. The analysis has generated such strong and sustained interest from marketers and the media, we wanted to explore the subject further. The following is an exchange with the report’s lead author John Fetto who answers some common questions that we’ve received since the analysis was published. Q: In the Cross-Device Video Analysis, you report that consumers are “cutting the cord” on pay cable and satellite television services. Can you elaborate on this trend? What’s driving it? According to our research at Experian Marketing Services, U.S. consumers are increasingly likely to have high speed Internet at home but no cable or satellite TV subscription. There are two primary consumer trends driving this: 1) Households that never subscribed to a pay TV service are now upgrading to broadband Internet; 2) Households that previously subscribed to both pay TV service and broadband Internet that have since cancelled the cable or satellite TV subscription. While the vast majority of U.S. households pay for either cable or satellite TV, an estimated 15.1 million (or 12.9 percent of households) do not. That’s up from 13.5 million households (11.9 percent) who didn’t pay for TV in 2009. At the same time, the share of broadband households is also rising. Today, 72.7 million homes (61.4 percent) have broadband Internet, up from 65.0 million homes (56.9 percent) in 2009. As Americans’ Internet connection at home is increasingly fast enough to deliver high quality video content through sites like YouTube, Netflix, Hulu and the like, as well as the ability to consume that online video content across an array of devices ranging from Internet-connected televisions to smartphones and tablets to computers, they are increasingly questioning whether they need to continue paying for TV. And more and more consumers are deciding to cut the cord. Q: With more consumers cutting the cord, how are they consuming video content? While the most commonly used device to consume online video is the smartphone — used by 24 percent of adults during a typical week to watch online video, according to our research — “cord cutters” are primarily using Internet-connected TV to consume online video. In fact, an adult who watches online video on their TV is 3.2 times more likely than the average adult to be a cord-cutter. This means that the Internet-connected TV market is critical in predicting the future of the cord-cutting consumer. As existing devices like Apple TV, Chromecast and Roku are upgraded and new devices like Amazon Fire TV are introduced to the market, consumers will have more and more options to consume online video without sacrificing quality or screen size. As a result, more consumers will be reconsidering whether they need to continue paying for TV. Q: What percent of consumers get their television programming from various sources including cable, satellite, online streaming and free over the air TV? Combined, 87.1 percent of U.S. households subscribe to either cable or satellite TV. While Experian Marketing Services doesn’t specifically measure the percent of Americans who watch TV through an over the air feed (OTA) we know that among those who do not subscribe to cable or satellite, the vast majority (77 percent) still watch TV. And while it’s possible that some are viewing TV from a cable or satellite feed away from home, the most likely source of their TV content would be from OTA sources. That means that at least 10 percent of American adults are watching some TV through an OTA feed. In addition, 48 percent of all adults watch online video each week through a variety of devices. Those who don’t pay for TV are 12 percent more likely than those who have cable or satellite TV to watch online video (54 percent vs 48 percent). Q: The cord-cutting trend has many implications for the cable and satellite companies, but what do consumer-facing marketers and advertisers need to know about this trend? The growth in online video viewing creates many opportunities for marketers. Online audiences can be more easily targeted and served up advertising that is more relevant, responsive and measureable. Marketers can also be more confident that their online ad was actually seen, given that viewers are typically unable to skip ads. And while CPMs for online video ads may generally be lower than those of TV, marketers can use that savings to negotiate costs based on clicks or transactions rather than impressions, giving them a better picture into audience interest and insights to inform their budget allocation. Millennials are the most device “agnostic,” with more than one-third saying they don’t mind watching video on a portable device even if it means a smaller screen. That’s more than double the rate of those ages 35 and older. This decentralized viewing can create headaches for marketers who need to start a relationship with Millennials during this stage of their lives when they’re most open to trying out new brands and have yet to settle down. On the plus side, marketers who do manage to reach this audience will find them much more open to advertising than average. In fact, Millennials are more than four times more likely to say that video ads that they view on their cell phone are useful. So while the challenge is big, so is the potential reward. Download the full analysis to learn more about: Cross-device video behaviors to optimize media mix approach The impact of the growing trend in cord-cutters The rising influence of Internet-connected TV How to get more impact from video content