Systems and Methods for Tracking Advertisement Efficacy Under Consumer Transactions
20190213630 ยท 2019-07-11
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A technique for tracking advertisement efficacy using consumer transactions is disclosed. An information tracking agent maintains and stores information related to users identified by a unique identifier. A user is presented with an online/offline advertisement. An information tracking agent records and stores the advertisement transaction. When a user performs a transaction for purchase of goods or service that are the subject of the advertisement, the information tracking agent identifies the user with the unique identifier and the matching agent matches the user transaction with the displayed advertisement. The system automatically tracks the effectiveness of the advertisements displayed to users without requiring consumer action, beyond the purchase/transaction, in response to the displayed advertisement. In another embodiment, the system automatically tracks user location with a GPS and dynamically displays advertisements on billboards connected to the information tracking agent.
Claims
1. An advertisement efficacy tracking system, comprising: a computer server, embodied in both hardware and software and connected to a data network, the server configured to receive, via data transmission from an advertising provider across the data network, advertisement information regarding an advertisement presented to a user by the advertising provider; software code, for execution on a payment terminal associated with a merchant configured to transmit transaction information regarding financial transactions at the merchant across a payment network associated with a financial institution, the software code altering functioning of the payment terminal such that it further transmits at least a portion of said transaction information to the server via the data network; wherein the server is further configured to receive from the payment terminal user transaction information regarding a financial transaction between the merchant and the user presented the advertisement, the user transaction information comprising a unique identifier identifying said user, an identification of said merchant, and a time stamp of said financial transaction; and a processor, embodied in both hardware and software and in communication with the server, the processor configured to: derive mode, means and time of the presenting of said advertisement from the received advertisement information, determine, using the user transaction information, if the financial transaction with the user occurred within a predetermined period of time from the presenting of said advertisement to the user, and provide an indication that the presented advertisement was effective with respect to the user if the financial transaction with the user is so determined.
2. A system in accordance with claim 1, wherein the transmitted at least a portion of said transaction information comprises unique identifying data representing a payment account number used by the user for the financial transaction with the merchant.
3. A system in accordance with claim 2, wherein the unique identifying data comprises a tokenization of the payment account number.
4. A system in accordance with claim 3, wherein the software code is further configured to cause the payment terminal to cause the tokenization of the payment account number.
5. A system in accordance with claim 1, wherein a matching agent initially receives said advertising information and user transaction information, and provides a determination that said user transaction involves a good or service that is the subject of the presented advertisement to the server via the data network.
6. A system in accordance with claim 1, wherein said user has registered identifying information with an entity associated with the advertisement efficacy tracking system prior to the presenting of the advertisement.
7. A system in accordance with claim 1, wherein said advertisement information comprises one or more of format of advertisement, location, subject matter, time stamp, and merchant name.
8. A system in accordance with claim 1, wherein said unique identifier is selected from an identifier group consisting of: user's name, telephone number, telephone identifier, Facebook username, Twitter handle, an account number, a biometric, an interactive television identifier, a geographic location of the user, GPS of a mobile device, Local Area Network (LAN) device detection, device location triangulation, or Internet Protocol (IP) address of a device.
9. A system in accordance with claim 1, wherein said advertisement is presented to said user as an offline advertisement.
10. A system in accordance with claim 9, wherein said offline advertisement is physical advertising signage.
11. A system in accordance with claim 1, wherein said advertisement is presented to said user as an online advertisement.
12. A system in accordance with claim 11, wherein said online advertisement is a banner advertisement.
13. A system in accordance with claim 11, wherein said online advertisement is a search engine advertisement.
14. A system in accordance with claim 11, wherein said online advertisement is a social networking site advertisement.
15. A system in accordance with claim 1, further comprising a database, embodied in both hardware and software and in communication with the processor, the database configured to: store the advertisement information, store the user transaction information, and store the indication.
16. An advertisement efficacy tracking system, comprising: a computer server, embodied in both hardware and software and connected to a data network, the server configured to receive, via data transmission from an advertising provider across the data network, advertisement information regarding an advertisement presented to a user by the advertising provider, wherein the advertisement information comprises format of advertisement, subject matter of the advertisement, and time stamp the advertisement is presented to the user; software code, for execution on a payment terminal associated with a merchant configured to transmit transaction information regarding financial transactions at the merchant across a payment network associated with a financial institution, the software code altering functioning of the payment terminal such that it further transmits at least a portion of said transaction information to the server via the data network, wherein said at least a portion of said transaction information comprises a token representing a payment account number used by the user for a financial transaction with the merchant; wherein the server is further configured to receive from the payment terminal user transaction information regarding a financial transaction between the merchant and the user presented the advertisement, the user transaction information comprising a unique identifier identifying said user, an identification of said merchant, and a time stamp of said financial transaction; a processor, embodied in both hardware and software and in communication with the server, the processor configured to: derive mode, means and time of the presenting of said advertisement from the received advertisement information, determine, using the user transaction information, if the financial transaction with the user occurred within a predetermined period of time from the presenting of said advertisement to the user, and provide an indication that the presented advertisement was effective with respect to the user if the financial transaction with the user is so determined.
17. A system in accordance with claim 16, wherein the software code is further configured to cause the payment terminal to perform the tokenization of the payment system.
18. A system in accordance with claim 16, wherein a matching agent initially receives said advertising information and user transaction information, and provides a determination that said user transaction involves a good or service that is the subject matter of the presented advertisement to the server via the data network.
19. A system in accordance with claim 16, wherein said user has registered identifying information with an entity associated with the advertisement efficacy tracking system prior to the presenting of the advertisement.
20. A system in accordance with claim 16, wherein said unique identifier is selected from an identifier group consisting of: user's name, telephone number, telephone identifier, Facebook username, Twitter handle, an account number, a biometric, an interactive television identifier, a geographic location of the user, GPS of a mobile device, Local Area Network (LAN) device detection, device location triangulation, or Internet Protocol (IP) address of a device.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0007] For a fuller understanding of the advantages provided by the invention, reference should be made to the following detailed description together with the accompanying drawings wherein:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0022] Although the figures discussed below illustrate an exemplary embodiment of matching/tracking the providing of an advertisement to a consumer based on payment transaction, be it credit card, debit card, PayPal, NFC Mobile wallet, cloud based, etc., or even a non-payment related consumer interaction with a merchant, any type of promotional information provided to a consumer may be tracked and matched to any type of consumer transaction related to that information by a system or method implemented in accordance with the disclosed principles. In advantageous embodiments, the consumer is identified by the disclosed system or method using some type of unique identifier associated with the consumer and provided to the disclosed system. For example, the identifier may be the consumer's name, telephone number, telephone identifier, Facebook username, Twitter handle, an account number, a biometric scan (e.g., fingerprint scan, retina scan, facial recognition scan, etc.), interactive television identifier, or even the geographic location of the consumer, e.g., provided via personal location device, GPS of a mobile device, Local Area Network (LAN) device detection, triangulation or other means of location by a telecommunications network of a mobile device, check-in at a location via a device or other means, Internet Protocol (IP) address of a device of a consumer, or any other means capable of determining the geographic location of a consumer (whether via his mobile device or not) or a device (mobile or fixed) associated with the consumer.
[0023] Once the user is identified, by whatever means may be employed, an advertisement or other promotional information may be tracked all the way to presentment of payment by the user. There are many ways to identify a user. Marketing companies today use technology to identify and target ads to consumers. For example, knowing the consumer's Facebook username can allow an advertisement or other information to be presented to that specific consumer while he is accessing his Facebook page. Likewise, if the user has logged in to another site or application using his Facebook information, promotional information may still be presented to the user at the secondary site once he is identified using his Facebook information. Similarly, knowing the consumer's interactive TV account (e.g., television service provider), and even based on which family member is watching the TV, may allow a targeted advertisement to be presented to the consumer while he is watching a particular program. In yet other embodiments, knowing the consumer's geographic location, such as at a sporting event, can be used to present promotional information to that consumer (whether individually or in collection with the other consumers in the stadium). Still further, a consumer passing a billboard or other display means may be identified, such as with retinal or facial recognition scan, and thus can also be targeted with promotional information at that detected location. Thus, while any means to provide an advertisement or other promotional information to a consumer may be used, the disclosed principles provide for tracking that the advertisement or information was in fact presented to the identified consumer, as well as when, where, and how it was presented, using the consumer identifier to confirm the consumer's identity, location, and/or other information. Moreover, such advertisement or promotional information may be provided by a system implementing the disclosed principles (e.g., operating as a matching agent on behalf of merchants/advertising companies), or it may be provided by an external/third party entity working with the disclosed system, such as an advertising merchant of goods or services advertising for itself, or a third party advertising entity on behalf of a merchant, in order to track that presented promotional information.
[0024] In addition to identifying consumers to target promotional information towards, as well as tracking or logging when, where, and how that information was presented to the identified consumer, the disclosed principles further provide for tracking the consumer's purchasing actions after being presented the advertisement or promotional information. Such actions by the consumer may be immediate upon presentation of the promotional information or long after its presentation, even after the consumer has left the location of the presentation. For this, a system or method as disclosed herein includes registering an account, such as a payment vehicle, that is specifically associated with the targeted consumer. For example, a consumer's credit or debit card, PayPal account, mobile payment device or application, checking account, or even his utility (e.g., TV provider or phone provider) account information may be registered with the disclosed system or method. Moreover, the registering of the account can be prior to identifying the consumer for presentation of the promotional information, or it can be at the time of, such as in response to, the presentation of the promotional information. Thus, when a consumer employs his one or more registered accounts by interacting in a transaction, financial or non-financial, that is in response to the displayed promotional information, the disclosed principles employ the time and manner of that use to track the consumer's spending or other actions in relation to the presented advertisement or promotional information. Thus, stated generally, the disclosed principles provide for identifying consumers having a registered account, registered prior to or at the time of the identifying, presenting promotional information to the identified consumer, logging the details of that targeted presentation, and then tracking the consumer's use of the registered account in relation to the presented information, whether a financial or non-financial. Accordingly, by combining a registered account of the consumer along with tracking of an advertisement or other promotional information being specifically presented to that consumer, the disclosed principles provide the ability to track and match the provided promotional information with the consumer's actions afterwards using the registered account in order to evaluate the effectiveness of the provided advertisement or information on the consumer.
[0025] Furthermore, as noted above, the actions of a consumer in relation to the presented advertisement or promotional information is not limited to financial transactions. Thus, although many of the embodiments illustrated and discussed herein relate to consumer credit card transactions in response to a promotional offer, and thus the matching, tracking, and evaluating the effectiveness of the promotional information using the consumer's financial transaction(s) with a registered account, the disclosed principles also include non-financial transactions. For example, when a consumer, identified via a known/registered identifying account or other identifier, is presented a promotion, such as via an on-screen website banner advertisement, related to a particular event at a given location, the how, when, and where the impression of the promotion can be tracked using, for example, the user's registered account (e.g., his Internet service provider (ISP) account or his television provider account with an Internet capable TV). When the user then visits that event at the specified location, a system or method in accordance with the disclosed principles provides the ability to track and match the consumer's response to that presented promotion even though no financial transaction was involved. In this non-financial example, such tracking includes determining when, where, and how the consumer followed the promotion, for example, tracked using his registered GPS (via his mobile device) or even facial recognition or other identifying technology at the location. Thus, the tracking of the initial impression, as well as the tracking of the user's response to that impression, may be logged and evaluated to automatically determine the effectiveness of the promotion on the targeted consumer, all without requiring the user to click through the promotion displayed or enter a code or other information associated with that displayed promotion, or even for the consumer to make a purchase, in order to track that the consumer's action was in response to the presented promotion.
[0026] The following example helps to explain one specific implementation of the disclosed principles: Consumer A is a member of Facebook. He has a credit card registered with Facebook and has granted Facebook permission to track his purchase activity as well as deliver offers and discounts that can be tracked with his credit card. He has also given permission to allow a Facebook cookie to be placed on his computer, tablet, and mobile phone to track advertisements delivered to him. The advertiser is Restaurant A. Consumer A need not be a member of Restaurant A's Reward Program. Restaurant A works with ABC Marketing, which generates advertisements for Restaurant A and also tracks Restaurant A credit card purchases. ABC Marketing buys banner ads for Restaurant A from Facebook that can track Facebook member purchases (payment tracking banner ad) at Restaurant A (as well as other merchants). Facebook delivers a payment tracking banner ad (this ad could be in Facebook, easily tracked by Consumer A's account, or by a banner ad outside of Facebook, tracked with a cookie) to Consumer A's computer. This ad could be simply to promote the restaurant's onion rings or suggesting that he come in and enjoy a 20% dining discount at Restaurant A. Facebook may deliver messages to Consumer A's tablet or phone as well. Consumer A does not need to click or otherwise clip this or any other advertisement. It is simply presented to him. After the advertisement is presented to Consumer A, he goes to Restaurant A and uses the same credit card he has on file with Facebook. ABC Marketing at a designated time period, say one month, delivers a report of all the credit/debit card payments to a Clearinghouse. These credit card numbers are converted to tokens for security reasons. This Clearinghouse also has access to payment tracking banner advertisements distributed by Facebook, to Facebook members. Facebook has data for all payment tracking banner advertisements delivered to Facebook members. Facebook has tokenized the credit card data for security purposes as well. Facebook and ABC Marketing use a tokenization process that allows the Clearinghouse to match the Facebook payment tokens with the payment tokens from ABC Marketing showing purchases at Restaurant A. A report is then prepared for Restaurant A, Facebook, and ABC Marketing (the report may even be anonymous, if desired, to protect consumer privacy) showing Facebook advertisements that may have influenced Consumer A's trip to Restaurant A as evidenced by coinciding purchase behavior at Restaurant A. These reports help all parties value the efficacy of the marketing due to the fact that it is linked with purchase behavior.
[0027] With an understanding of the broad scope of the disclosed principles in mind, exemplary embodiments of implementing these innovative principles in a financial transaction are discussed below.
[0028] As illustrated in
[0029] Additionally, the message from the payment terminal to the disclosed system need not be direct. For example, the payment terminal may send a pre-processing message to a system owned or operated by the owner of the payment terminal, or the manufacturer of the payment terminal, or any third party, which could then forward a second message to the disclosed system. The disclosed system may then send a message back to the payment terminal, which may be directly to the payment terminal, or may be indirectly through the same system(s) that transmitted the message to the disclosed system or indirectly via some other third party system. Such differences in routing have no bearing on the fact that a message is provided to the disclosed system as a pre-processing step before transmitting the transaction information to the payment processor, as shown in
[0030] In order to provide a discount or other incentive during a payment transaction between a user and a goods/service provider, a message may be sent to a system in accordance with the vPromos technology discussed above as a pre-processing step (i.e., within the process illustrated in
[0031] In alternative embodiments, the disclosed principles may also provide that the payment terminal submits transaction information as a post-processing step; that is, after the transaction was processed by the payment processing system.
[0032]
[0044]
[0045] Any of the above-discussed processes, or even combinations thereof, may be used to create a history of credit card transactions in embodiments where credit card transactions are used to track the consumer's spending in response to receiving promotional information.
[0046] As mentioned above, the disclosed system may implement technology similar to the vPromos technology, which enables sending messages back to the payment terminal, among other features. Moreover, such messages may be printed on the screen of the payment terminal, prompting the merchant to enter more information immediately or to solicit more information from the consumer, such as registering the consumer and perhaps even the used credit card with the disclosed system, and enter that information via the payment terminal. Still further, it is also possible to print information beyond what might otherwise appear on the consumer's receipt, where the additional information is provided by a system or method according to the disclosed principles to the payment terminal. Thus, looking at
[0047] In the illustrated embodiment, since the consumer is a member of a vPromo loyalty program, the promotional message on the receipt offers the consumer an additional vPunch by simply visiting the merchant's Facebook page using his own registered Facebook account, and Liking the merchant. Since the consumer's Facebook information is registered with the disclosed system, the consumer's response to the promotion on the receipt is automatically tracked without the need for the consumer to enter a special code or any other additional action. For instance, additional action tracking might require the loyalty member to log onto the loyalty application or site, and then click a hyperlink from within the loyalty site or application, to allow for the tracking of the Like in this example. On the second illustrated receipt, the consumer need only visit the physical location of the merchant, and using a registered identifying means, such as GPS or even facial recognition technology, the consumer's visit to the location is traceable as a response to the presented promotion. In both examples, the payment terminal is employed to track the presenting of the promotion to the consumer (i.e., via the receipt, whether paper or emailed), and the consumer's like of the merchant's page or visit to the merchant's location is tracked as a response to the promotional offer on the receipt. Therefore, by providing a promotional message to a consumer with a registered account or other identifying information, and then determining if, when, where, and how the consumer follows that message using a registered account or other registered identifying information, the disclosed principles allows users of the vPromos technology, such as merchants, advertisers, and advertisement providers, to track the efficacy of the message provided to the consumer even when it is not related to a vPromos or other loyalty program.
[0048] Turning to
[0049] Looking at the example in
[0050] Moreover, although the example set forth in
[0051] It should be understood that in the context of the disclosed principles, the term transaction as used herein is not limited to just financial transactions, such as the credit card examples discussed above. Instead, the term transaction is used broadly herein to include any interaction a consumer may have with another party or entity and which is conducted using a means that is automatically traceable by the disclosed system or method. For example, rather than a financial transaction with a merchant the consumer visited, a transaction herein may relate to non-financial actions of a consumer, such as simply visiting a specific website using a registered ISP account, calling or texting a specific number using a registered telephone number or telephone service provider account number, visiting or liking a specific site using a registered Facebook or other type of social media account, physically visiting a specific location using a registered GPS device or other traceable interaction identifying the consumer, each of which was facilitated by information provided in the promotional information presented to the consumer, and acted upon by the consumer using a registered account or other traceable information. Accordingly, the disclosed principles go far beyond simple credit card transactions with consumers having credit cards registered with the tracking network, and instead extends to automatically tracking the effectiveness of promotional information presented to the consumer, without additional consumer actions, by identifying the consumer using any type of payment vehicle, account, geolocation tracking, or even biometric identification information the user may have when the promotion is presented, as well as when the consumer simply provides an interaction related or in response to that promotion using a registered account or other identifying information.
[0052] In addition, the disclosed principles broadly provide a means for presenting such promotional information to a consumer, where the promotion is related to an advertiser or merchant, and the consumer's response to that message by using nothing more than a registered account or other traceable information. Therefore, in addition to the receipt message printing discussed above, the disclosed principles also provide for presenting the information to the consumer through viewing a billboard, a website, a television presentation, or even a newspaper or magazine.
[0053] In embodiments employing online promotions, a website may be used to display promotional information, e.g., via banner advertisement. If the consumer's ISP account is registered with the disclosed system, the display of the banner advertisement to the consumer can be documented when the consumer is using that registered ISP account to visit the website. Then, without requiring the consumer to click the banner ad in order to track its effectiveness, the consumer may simply navigate to a website promoted on the banner ad, again using his registered ISP account, and the disclosed system can automatically track the consumer's action in response to the banner ad. Similarly, the banner ad may display information regarding a physical location. In such embodiments, the consumer's navigation to that physical location, using registered information related to a GPS device of the consumer, can automatically be tracked to determine that he visited the physical location in response to the online promotion. Alternatively, rather than tracking registered GPS information, the consumer may use a registered payment system at the location, or even make a phone call to the physical location using a registered telephone number or account, and the disclosed system can still automatically track the consumer's response to the promotion.
[0054] In embodiments employing offline promotions, for example, promotional information provided via a billboard, that billboard may be a typical bill board on the side of a road. In such embodiments, the consumer may have registered an account or other information related to GPS information associated with the consumer, such as his mobile telephone information. In other embodiments, the billboard may be provided at location having a collection of potential consumers, such as a sports stadium or similar venue having a large collection of people. The presence of those people may be confirmed again using registered GPS based information, or even the LAN WiFi network are the stadium when the consumers' mobile device is registered with the disclosed system. Regardless of the location or the number of potential consumers, the disclosed system determines that a consumer was in fact present at the billboard, and thus the information on the billboard was presented to that consumer. Then, if the consumer uses a registered account or other registered identifying information to act on the information displayed on the billboard, the disclosed principles can automatically track that action in response to the billboard using the consumer's registered account/information, and without requiring the consumer to conduct any other action(s).
[0055] In a related embodiment, the billboard may be a billboard with facial or retina recognition capabilities. If the consumer's facial or retinal information is registered with the disclosed system, the presence of the consumer in front of the billboard can be logged, and then if the consumer uses a registered account or other identifying information to act on the information displayed on the billboard, the disclosed principles can automatically track that action in response to the billboard using the consumer's registered account/information, again without requiring the consumer to conduct any other action(s). Moreover, the billboard may also be a virtual billboard with similar recognition capabilities, and thus once the consumer is identified by the disclosed system, the actual promotional information displayed to the consumer may be customized just for him.
[0056] In an offline example using individual print media, such as a newspaper or magazine, the promotional information may be provided to a specific consumer via a periodical to which he has subscribed. Thus, the disclosed system can confirm that the promotion was presented to that specific consumer when the consumer's subscription information is registered with the disclosed system. Then, when the consumer follows the information in the promotion, again using a means of interaction that is registered with the disclosed system, the actions of the consumer based on the promotional information may be automatically tracked and matched as a response to the promotion in the registered periodical, and thus the effectiveness of the printed promotion may be evaluated without further action by the consumer.
[0057] Referring now to
[0058] Multiple methods of interacting from the consumer's registered accounts or other identifiers may be used simultaneously, as shown by the various response exemplary tracking events in the sample log of
[0059] Regardless of the specific tracking information regarding both the presenting of the promotional information and the consumer's reaction to that information, a tracking log as disclosed in
[0060] Some of these promotions may or may not have been seen by the consumer. For instance, GPS location coupled with a billboard may have a different (e.g., lesser) certainty of impression when compared with an email delivered, opened, and clicked by the consumer. In this instance, the different type of advertisement may be given an Impression Probability Rating. In another example, a brand may deliver an advertisement for Chili's restaurant during a particular television program. The consumer in this example is married with two kids, a boy 8 years old and a girl 16 years old. The consumer agreed with his cable operator that it can track his payment system at certain merchants. The consumer's payment system is used to make a purchase at Chili's three days after the advertisement is presented. How likely is it that the Consumer made this purchase? Or his wife or his daughter? Now compare this example with an interactive TV example, in which the TV at the time of launch is configured to ask which consumer is watching the TV: the father, mother, son or daughter. If he selects Father, then a different advertisement may be delivered to the father based upon his demographics. In this case, the ad could be for Home Depot. The father's payment system is used to make a purchase at Home Depot three days after the advertisement is presented to the father. Because there is more data available in the second example, i.e., that the father was watching the targeted ad, the degree of likelihood that the father actually saw the advertisement is higher than in the first example. In the first example, there is a one out of four chance that the father saw the advertisement if there was only one person watching. While that percentage may go down based on the demographics of the program having the advertisement, i.e., who the program is geared towards, tracking the efficacy of this Chili's advertisement still has less certainty than the Home Depot advertisement.
[0061]
[0062] Illustrated in
[0063] In an exemplary method of matching a credit card transaction from a payment terminal device to an online advertisement in accordance with the disclosed principles,
[0064] Once the advertisement provider 920 has created appropriate banner ads 925 having a specific promotion or offer thereon, those banner ads 925 are distributed on the Internet. When the banner ad 925 is delivered to the consumer's computer 930, an advertisement tracking cookie may also be delivered with the banner ad 925. To view the banner ad 925, the consumer 905 uses his computer 930 to connect to the Internet via his ISP account. Since the consumer's ISP account information has been registered with the database 910, the advertisement provider 920, via the tracking cookie, can determine that banner ad 925 was in fact presented to the consumer 905 while the user was accessing the Internet using the registered ISP information.
[0065] After the banner ad 925 is confirmed as being presented to the consumer 905 using a registered account, the disclosed principles then provide for automatically tracking the consumer's response to the banner ad 925 using the same or other registered account or identifying information. For example, when the consumer 905 visits the advertising merchant 915, the consumer 905 may pay for goods or services using the credit card he registered with the database 910 of the disclosed system 900. Alternatively, the consumer 905 may be prompted to register an unregistered payment method he tries to use at the merchant 915. In either case, the credit card is passed through a credit card terminal 935 at the merchant 915 that is associated with the disclosed system. The registered credit card information is transmitted to a matching agent 940, which is tasked with matching the registered credit card data to the banner ad 925. Such transaction information is also sent to the credit card processor 945 for processing of the payment to the merchant 915.
[0066] To match the advertisement and the purchase to the same consumer 905, the matching agent 940 obtains information on the banner ad 925 from the advertisement provider 920. Alternatively, the advertisement provider 920 may provide the information regarding the presentation of the banner ad 925 in the database 910, and then the matching agent 940 access the database 910 to determine that the banner ad 925 associated with the merchant 915 was displayed to the consumer 905. Once the matching agent 940 has the necessary information, the matching agent 940 can determine that after being displayed the banner ad 925, the consumer 905 made a purchase at the merchant 915 using the registered credit card. In addition, the matching agent 940 can determine how long it was after the banner ad 925 was presented to the consumer 905 that the consumer 905 made the purchase at the merchant 915. In an alternative embodiment, if the consumer 905 did not use his registered credit card to make the purchase at the merchant 915, the registered GPS information from the consumer's mobile device 907 may also be used by the matching agent 940 to determine that the consumer 905 at least visited the merchant 915 after being presented the banner ad 925. In either embodiment, if the consumer 905 visited the merchant 915 soon after being presented the banner ad 925, the matching agent 940 can reasonably determine that the banner ad 925 was likely effective on the consumer 905. The matching agent 940 keeps such information in an advertisement tracking log, and thus can report the effectiveness of the banner ad 925 to both the advertisement provider 920 and the merchant 915.
[0067] Also illustrated in
[0068] Still further,
[0069] Additionally, although the embodiment set forth in
[0070] Still further, promotional information distributed and tracked as disclosed herein are not limited to a single consumer. Thus, promotional information may be presented to multiple consumers simultaneously, or consumers presented a promotion may elect to gift that promotion to another consumer having registered identifying information. A consumer may also gift a promotion in a viral manner, such as by posting or distributing the promotion via social media for other registered consumers to enjoy. In such embodiments, the disclosed principles not only automatically track the initial consumer's response to the promotion, but can automatically track other consumers' responses to the promotion, as well as the gifting or viral distribution of the promotion itself, for example, if it distributed via a registered account of the original consumer.
[0071] By constructing or implementing a system or method in accordance with the disclosed principles, a number of advantages can be realized. Fundamentally, users of the disclosed system or method may automatically track the effectiveness of online or offline promotional information by using consumers' registered identifying information to present the promotional information, as well as using consumers' registered identifying information to automatically track response to presented promotional information without further consumer action. Not only can the efficacy of individual promotions to certain consumers be tracked, but the disclosed principles may also be used to automatically track overall promotion count versus overall consumer response. In addition, any number or type of account or other identifying information, either now existing or later developed, may be registered and used by a system or method as disclosed herein. Importantly, the automatic tracking disclosed herein in not limited to tracking the same registered information as was used to present the promotional information. Moreover, any potential registered means for presenting promotional information to a consumer may alternatively or additionally be used to automatically track the consumer's response to the promotional information. Also, the response to the promotional information by the consumer is not limited to financial transactions, and instead may also encompass the consumer's mere visit to a website or physical storefront in response to a promotion. No matter which embodiment is implemented, the disclosed principles provide for automatic tracking of consumer response to promotional information presented to those consumers not previously possible with conventional technology.
[0072]
[0087] One skilled in the art will recognize that these method steps may be augmented or rearranged without limiting the teachings of the present invention. This general method summary may be augmented by the various elements described herein to produce a wide variety of exemplary embodiments consistent with this overall design description.
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[0104] When a user 1260 drives an automobile equipped with a GPS device, the information tracking agent 1210 tracks the user location and in real time knows or calculates a distance from the nearest billboard 1250 or other similar advertisement display. Subsequently, the information tracking agent 1210 may communicate with the billboard via the network 1230, and transmit an advertisement to the billboard 1250. According to an exemplary embodiment, the user history is analyzed in real time and the user presented an advertisement such that there is a greater likelihood of generating a transaction from the user for the goods/services that are the subject of the advertisement. The information tracking agent 1210 may use criteria such as user distance from the billboard, user past purchasing trends, and network speed to present a relevant advertisement to the user; thus, improving the efficacy of the advertisement, in addition to the efficacy tracking as discussed above.
[0105]
[0112] While various embodiments in accordance with the principles disclosed herein have been described above, it should be understood that they have been presented by way of example only, and not limitation. Thus, the breadth and scope of this disclosure should not be limited by any of the above-described exemplary embodiments, but should be defined only in accordance with any claims and their equivalents issuing from this disclosure. Furthermore, the above advantages and features are provided in described embodiments, but shall not limit the application of such issued claims to processes and structures accomplishing any or all of the above advantages.
[0113] Additionally, the section headings herein are provided for consistency with the suggestions under 37 C.F.R. 1.77 or otherwise to provide organizational cues. These headings shall not limit or characterize the invention(s) set out in any claims that may issue from this disclosure. Specifically and by way of example, although the headings refer to a Technical Field, the claims should not be limited by the language chosen under this heading to describe the so-called field. Further, a description of a technology as background information is not to be construed as an admission that certain technology is prior art to any embodiment(s) in this disclosure. Neither is the Summary to be considered as a characterization of the embodiment(s) set forth in issued claims. Furthermore, any reference in this disclosure to invention in the singular should not be used to argue that there is only a single point of novelty in this disclosure. Multiple embodiments may be set forth according to the limitations of the multiple claims issuing from this disclosure, and such claims accordingly define the embodiment(s), and their equivalents, that are protected thereby. In all instances, the scope of such claims shall be considered on their own merits in light of this disclosure, but should not be constrained by the headings set forth herein.