At the intersection of fantasy football and behavioral marketing July 26, 2009
Posted by jjabel in Uncategorized.Tags: behavioral marketing, monetization
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I have been playing fantasy football, with varying degrees of success, for about eight years. Many of my friends, co-workers, and fellow students spend countless hours in the fall putting fantasy team together. I have always participated in fantasy leagues that are free (yahoo.com or foxsports.com). There must be millions of fantasy football teams that, I would guess, take up a fair amount of server space. Short of charging people to participate in leagues there must be a way to monetize this free service.
I’m sure that the sites are selling user data to third parties, that’s to be expected. The sites also serve up banner ads, but they’re firing blindly. My suggestion for the free sites is to use data mining to serve up personalized ads to users. It’s a win-situation: recent research by the e-tailing group suggests that people value personalization in their web experiences, and more profitable free sites would ultimately lead to more functionality being included for “free.”
So the question is “what kind of actionable behavioral data can be gleaned from a person’s interaction with a fantasy football site?” The behaviors fall into two categories:
Explicit Usage Data
Metrics to observe: time on system, number of transactions, interest decay
Application: People who spend more time on their team or execute more transactions are, inherently more involved. Websites should up-sell these individuals premium services. If a person is spending less time on their teams as the season progresses it may say something about their commitment levels in general; but they might be susceptible to small, impulse purchases.
Implicit Usage Data
What to observe: which specific players or mix of players are on individual’s roster
Application: This is where some data extrapolation comes in. If, for example, I draft T.O. with the first overall pick when his average draft position is fifteenth does that say something about me as a consumer? It may mean that I am risk-seeking. Maybe it means I have a propensity to buy flashy diamond earrings. If I have more than a few players from a given team what does that say about me? It might be an indication that I live in that city and would visit a restaurant whose ad was served to me. Maybe I should also be shown that team’s jerseys available for purchase on the web.
I am interested in continuing this conversation. Please let me know what you think!
Great idea to serve Fantasy Football players w/ targeted ads, but I think in that specific example you’d already have all the user demographic information you’d need from their registration, especially if it’s a pay-for-play FF site. The fact that someone drafted T.O. first overall might just mean they don’t know what their doing – not necessarily that they live in Buffalo.
It’d be interesting to apply the same implicit usage data concept to a site like fark.com, where users are generally more anonymous.