Captivate and Dstillery to Bring Data-Driven Targeting to Digital OOH

First-to-Market Audience Targeting Technology Drills Down Location Data and Browsing Behavior, Enhances Targeting and Measurement Capabilities

Captivate has formed a strategic partnership with Dstillery. Captivate is North America’s leading location-based digital video network while Dstillery is an industry leader in predictive marketing intelligence. Currently, Captivate Network connects advertisers with 11 million unique monthly viewers through creative, research-driven and Nielsen-measured advertising and marketing programs.

Read More: Interview with Jesper Theill Eriksen, CEO, Templafy

captivate-dstillery (1)

The new partnership would further deepen Captivate’s audience targeting and measurement capabilities. This first-to-market opportunity within the digital out-of-home industry leverages mobile location data, website browsing behavior and all forms of first-party data, including CRM, to identify what audiences are present in Captivate buildings, as well as measure incremental website traffic driven by exposure to Captivate campaigns.

A Major Boost to Location Data-Based Targeting across Digital Campaigns

Captivate and Dstillery’s partnership represents the first-time data used to target digital campaigns can now be applied to digital out-of-home campaigns, as well as the measurement of incremental website traffic from out-of-home activations.

At the time of this announcement, Neil Shapiro, Vice President of Digital Sales at Captivate, said, “Location data is now table stakes in the digital-out-of-home world but our partnership with Dstillery takes this capability to a new, deeper level. By utilizing this scale of targeting, we can now find hard-to-reach audiences that can’t be identified based on location data alone.”

Read More: Interview with Jon Lombardo, Global Brand Strategy Lead, LinkedIn

As the workday gets longer, professionals are improving their work-life balance by completing personal and professional tasks at the office and across multiple devices. This alliance provides Captivate’s advertising partners with the ability to target campaigns based on the activity that’s being conducted at work and within the Captivate Class A buildings that have the highest concentration of an ideal audience.

Neil added, “Additionally, by working with Dstillery to measure website visitation driven by Captivate campaigns, we can now offer another important form of attribution for our partners.  We’re excited about using data-driven targeting to identify hard-to-reach B2B consumers, amplify B2C objectives and provide measurable results for our clients.”

Read Also: How is The Location Data Landscape Shaping Up in 2018?

Today,  Out-Of-Home Is a Powerful Traditional Channel 

Evan Hills, Vice President of Strategic Partnerships at Dstillery, said, “Marketers have seemingly unlimited media choices for reaching consumers today, making it incredibly important that they target their messages as precisely as possible. Out-of-home is a powerful traditional channel made all the more impactful in the digital age, thanks to the availability of targeting signals. We’re thrilled to work with one of the leaders in digital-out-of-home to make our data available for both targeting and measurement.”

For Captivate’s brand and agency partners, this partnership also presents an opportunity to learn and grow from campaigns.

By engaging its viewers with timely news and actionable information that helps balance the personal and professional demands of the workday, Captivate provides advertisers with a highly desirable and difficult-to-reach audience of affluent and influential business professionals. Founded in 1997, Captivate is owned by Generation Partners and Gannett.

Read More: Ad Blockers: Take a Page from Video Game Advertisers 

Brought to you by
For Sales, write to: contact@martechseries.com
Copyright © 2024 MarTech Series. All Rights Reserved.Privacy Policy
To repurpose or use any of the content or material on this and our sister sites, explicit written permission needs to be sought.