Facial recognition: The good and the bad

Is facial recognition “creepy or cool?” asked a June 2015 survey of British shoppers. The poll, conducted by product personalisation firm RichRelevance, found that while shoppers were generally OK with personalised recommendations they were a little unnerved by the idea of facial recognition being the source of the targeting. It’s a strange one given that MasterCard recently revealed via CNN that it is trialling the use of selfies as authentication for in-store purchases and Apple has lifted the lid on its biometric authentication mobile commerce software Apple Pay in Europe.

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Omnichannel at tipping point in world of ‘Webrooming’

Personalisation group RichRelevance and digital marketing benchmarking specialist L2 have previewed findings from their upcoming Intelligence Report: Omnichannel 2015.

The report analyses the efforts of leading retailers to blend digital and in-store experiences, in a bid to identify those that are successfully delivering a true omnichannel experience.

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You are being watched: face recognition deemed 'creepy' by UK shoppers

Tom Cruise gets an eye transplant in order to evade face-recognition-based marketing. At least, that’s how I recall the scene in the film Minority Report.

The transplant is necessary because his character is on the run but wherever he goes optical recognition sensors identify and then assault him with personalised advertising messages. It is clear that unless he changes his appearance he will never be anonymous.

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UK consumers find facial recognition-driven targeted ads “creepy”: RichRelevance report

RichRelevance published a new UK study, “Creepy or Cool” that reveals that 70% of UK shoppers find facial recognition technology that identifies age and gender in order to display product recommendations “creepy”.

The study, which surveyed 1,049 consumers in the UK about their attitudes towards digital enhancements to the store shopping experience, found that 72% of UK consumers find personalization of product recommendations based on purchasing habits a “cool” capability.

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Omnichannel retail at tipping point says survey

Personalisation group RichRelevance and digital marketing benchmarking specialist L2 have previewed findings from their upcoming Intelligence Report: Omnichannel 2015.

The report analyses the efforts of leading retailers to blend digital and in-store experiences, in a bid to identify those that are successfully delivering a true omnichannel experience.

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UK Consumers Welcome Product Personalisation In Stores but Reject Facial Recognition

Almost three quarters (72 per cent) of UK consumers find personalisation of product recommendations based on purchasing habits a “cool” capability when shopping, according to a new UK study, “Creepy or Cool”, by RichRelevance®.

British shoppers also welcome location-based personalisation in store, with over 6 in 10 (63 per cent) welcoming a mobile personalised map showing item locations and efficient store paths to help them navigate stores more conveniently. Furthermore, 43 per cent find in-store location deals – where their location is tracked in order to trigger personalised promotions whilst shopping – “cool”.

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18 most interesting digital marketing stats from this week

It’s that time of week again. After five days of watching the clock and wondering roughly at what point you swapped your dreams for spreadsheets, the moment you live for is finally here.

No, I’m not talking about the weekend. It’s much better than the weekend. It’s the weekly Econsultancy stats round-up.

Below is a collection of the finest digital marketing stats from this week, all lovingly collated and presented in one handy post.

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UK consumers find in-store facial recognition ‘creepy’

Almost three quarters (72%) of UK consumers find personalisation of product recommendations based on purchasing habits a “cool” capability when shopping, according to new research.

But seven in 10 UK shoppers say the idea of facial recognition technology that identifies age and gender in order to display product recommendations is “creepy”, while three quarters (76%) felt the same about being greeted by their names when walking into a store because their mobile phones registered their entrance.

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