Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Sorry! Girls Only.

Imagine walking down the street and having advertisements change based on your gender, age, or race. This trend of ultra-targeted advertising has already started in London. Plan UK, a not-for-profit organization that helps children in third-world countries, launched a facial recognition billboard to promote its "Because I'm a Girl" campaign on February 22nd. As you may already assume, the ad is not the same for everyone. With 90% accuracy, the interactive advertisement scans pedestrians and identifies their gender. If it recognizes a woman, it allows her to see a 40-second campaign video, which promotes sponsoring a girl from a developing country to receive proper education. On the other hand, if it detects a man, it shows relevant campaign statistics and directs them to the Plan UK website. The purpose of this somewhat exclusive method of advertising is to show men "a glimpse of what it's like to have basic choices taken away." Personally, I think it is a bit creepy, but I'll have to get used to it (I'll explain why later).
The billboard, located at a bus stop on Oxford Street, cost Plan UK around $47,000 to execute (with help from Clear Channel UK3D Exposure, and Curb Media), and will only last for a total of two weeks (one down, one more to go). They hope to raise $400,000 in donations during the next four months, and believe the high-tech, emotion-inspiring billboard will motivate many of these donations. The amount of press the organization and its campaign has received due to the billboard will certainly help fundraising efforts as well--cue the need for PR professionals!


The 40-second video is part of a longer documentary, which showcases three 13 year old girls: Jasmine from the UK, Bintou from Mali, and Sur from Thailand. It highlights their differences, commonalities, obstacles, and dreams. If you have three minutes to spare, take a peak. Beware: it's emotionally riveting.
This new breed of outdoor advertising has incredible implications for the marketing industry. The technology used in Plan UK's billboard is the first of its kind and can be compared to the iPad and Xbox Kinect (combined). Not only does it scan faces, but it also measures the distance between the viewer's eyes, width of their nose, length of their jaw line, and shape of their cheekbone, to determine their gender. Ultra-targeted advertising through facial recognition software is in our near future. Some shopping malls are already testing the technology to more effectively reach and appeal to shoppers. 


I hope this technology can eventually be applied to television and the Internet. Maybe one day I'll stop seeing advertisements for arthritis medication or Viagra. One can only hope!


POGS,
AKtually Ashley

No comments:

Post a Comment