1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to electronic commerce systems, and more particularly, to a technique for using query weights to target advertising.
2. Description of the Related Art
Online shopping systems, or “shop bots,” provide consumers with the ability to perform a price comparison for a specific product. A shop bot will search its database for the specified product, the product's price, and a few other pieces of information. The shop bot then returns the results of the query to the user, typically ranking the return results based on the price each merchant specifies for the product. Often the lowest price is given the highest ranking. However, some shop bots limit merchant access to those merchants who have paid the shop bot a fee for being included in their rankings.
Examples of available shop bots include Junglee™ which provides a consumer with the ability to specify a product and receive a search return ranking merchants who list the product as for sale. The ranking is based solely on price of the product.
Another shop bot is MySimon™ which provides a similar search return ranking merchants based on price of the offered goods. Merchants can distinguish themselves from other merchants by purchasing links to the merchants' web site, promotional advertising, or logos.
Still another shop bot is pcOrder.com which provides information on price and compatibility of computer products from affiliated manufacturers and distributors. Several web sites, including “Shop the Web” from Amazon.com do rating and providing recommendations on sites. These sites are limited to ranking based on offered price and do not include the total price to the consumer, including the costs of shipping and handling which can vary widely among different merchants. Some merchants have begun the practice of offering low prices on the product and including high shipping and handling charges. In this manner some merchants have sought to manipulate existing shop bots which only rank based on offered price of the product, and not the total price for the product delivered to the consumer.
Some web sites allow for ranking by consumers. Sites such as Compare.net allow a consumer to select and compare offerings from different merchants or manufacturers, and the consumer may select a ranking button which allows the consumer to respond in survey fashion to which product the consumer would most likely purchase. The disadvantage of such web sites is that they only present data to the consumer and then let the consumer perform the difficult task of making a comparison. In this manner the site does little for the consumer. What the site does do is present and collect survey information for use by merchants and manufacturers.
Another online service aimed at providing consumers with information is BizRate™. Bizrate collects information through consumer questionnaires at the point of purchase and through independent testing. Bizrate uses this information in rating, such as gold or silver, a merchant. The collection of information through point of purchase questionnaires necessitates the cooperation and approval of the merchant. Not surprisingly, merchants who do not score well on these surveys have an incentive not to continue participating.
While some web sites seek to compile information on multiple merchants, other sites provide consumers with information on their specific product. Sites such as those run by Dell™ and Gmbuypower.com help a consumer select a product and see how the customization of the product effects the price, but these sites do not allow for customization of comparing between different merchants offering similar goods. Such sites often present data on their offered product in manner that is most favorable to the merchant or manufacturer. Consumers lack the ability to customize the site to their needs or to rank competing products based on more than just offered price.
Another problem for consumers in using the available web sites is the affiliation, whether made known to the consumer or not, of the web site with the merchant or manufacturer. Advertising and licensing are major revenue sources for many web sites from portals to shop bots. Merchants or manufacturers pay for more prominent placement in search returns and rankings. Some sites only search or rank merchants that pay a fee to the site. Such affiliations undermine the credibility of the information presented to the consumer and obscure any validity of the search or ranking.
Thus, there has been a need for providing consumers with specific information which enables them to make informed decisions. The present invention meets this need.
An online commerce information system (OCIS) is described, which can perform a method of collecting information on the products and services of merchants, establishing a weighting for comparison information, calculating a ranking of merchants or products based on the weighting of the comparison information, and returning the results of the ranking to the consumer.
In certain embodiments of the invention, the weighting factors are input by the consumer, allowing the consumer to customize the ranking to reflect the priorities the consumer places on different factors when making a purchasing decision.
Certain embodiments of the invention overcome the limitations of prior online commerce information systems which did not have the capacity to provide a ranking based on a wide variety of factors related to consumer purchasing habits and decisions. Additionally, the system of the present invention allows consumers to customize the weighting of factors. Certain embodiments provide the ability for consumers to select which information items should be considered in the ranking and the weight accorded to the individual information items. Additionally, certain embodiments provide consumers with the ability to lock the chosen weightings, and to group information items in categories to more easily prioritize categories of information relating to specific concerns of the consumer. Examples of specific concerns are security of the consumer's credit card information, and the reliability of the merchant in delivering the product within a specified time.
Certain embodiments of the invention provide a technique for targeting advertising at a consumer based upon consumer-input weighting factors relating to a query. In one embodiment, the technique is implemented in the OCIS, which receives from a consumer a query in relation to a potential consumer transaction and also receives a set of weighting factors that correspond to the query, where the weighting factors pertain to stored data relevant to the potential consumer transaction. The OCIS causes a result of applying the query and the weighting factors to the stored data to be communicated to the consumer, in response to the query. The OCIS also selects an advertisement to be communicated to the consumer based on at least one of the weighting factors, and causes the selected advertisement to be communicated to the consumer.
The weighting factors can be specified by the consumer prior to the consumer's submission of the query to the OCIS. The selected advertisement can be communicated to the consumer either in response to the query or completely asynchronously to the query; further, it may be communicated to the consumer concurrently with, and through the same communication medium as, the result of the query, or it may be communicated to the consumer through a different communication medium than the result. The advertisement can be selected to have a positive correspondence or a negative correspondence to at least one of the weighting factors. Selection of the advertisement also can be based on a historical record of actions by the consumer and/or a group of consumers (e.g., an entire market segment), where the actions can include, for example, changes made by the consumer(s) to the weighting factors in connection with submission of one or more queries.
These and other purposes and advantages of the invention will be better appreciated from the following detailed description of the invention.
As used herein, the term “merchants,” unless otherwise specified, applies to any provider of a good or service whether or not they are formally organized as a business. The term merchant applies to distributors, producers, organizations, non-profits and potentially individuals, offering a good or service for barter or sale. Similarly, the term “consumer,” unless otherwise specified, applies to any person or entity seeking information on a good or service, whether or not there is a specific intention, desire, or ability to purchase or barter for the offered good or service.
Unless otherwise specified, the term “product” refers to any good or service which is the subject of commerce. A “product” can be an advertisement, advertising time or space, or an advertising campaign. So for example, a merchant wishing to advertise his products or services can use the system described herein to identify advertising time on the radio or advertising space in a newspaper, for purchase (in which case, the merchant is acting as a “consumer”), and can even potentially negotiate its purchase using the system.
The terms “advertisement” or “advertising” refer to any form of communication, via any medium, which is designed to solicit, promote or encourage any form of commerce or any other particular behavior to benefit the advertiser or another party.
The online commerce information system (OCIS) and technique introduced here comprise a novel system and method for providing ranking merchants or products based on information on the merchants or products. The following description is presented to enable any person skilled in the art to make and use the invention, and is provided in the context of a particular application and its requirements. Various modifications to the preferred embodiment will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, and the general principles defined herein may be applied to other embodiments and applications without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Although described with reference to certain specific embodiments, those skilled in the art will recognize that the present invention may be practiced with or without some or all of these details. Thus, the present invention is not intended to be limited to the embodiment shown but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and features disclosed herein.
Referring to the illustrative block diagram of
The OCIS described herein may be implemented within the server (12), or within the client (18), or it may be distributed between the server (12) and the client (18). In certain embodiments, the OCIS is implemented in the form of software, such as a software application, that resides and executes in the server (12) and/or in the client (18). In other embodiments, however, the OCIS is implemented in the form of circuitry specially designed to perform the functions described herein, or as a combination of such circuitry and software. The term “software”, as used herein, is intended to include any form of instructions and/or data (including “firmware”) stored in any form of data storage medium.
The processing system (20) includes one or more processors (21) and memory (22), each coupled to a bus system (23). The bus system (23) as shown in
The processors (21) are the central processing units (CPUs) of the processing system (20) and, thus, control the overall operation of processing system (20). In certain embodiments, the processors (21) accomplish this by executing software stored in memory (22). A processor (21) may be, or may include, one or more programmable general-purpose or special-purpose microprocessors, digital signal processors (DSPs), programmable controllers, application specific integrated circuits (ASICs), field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs), programmable logic devices (PLDs), or the like, or a combination of such devices.
The memory (22) represents any form of data storage medium, such as any form of random access memory (RAM), read-only memory (ROM), flash memory, hard disk drive, or a combination thereof. Memory (22) may store, among other things, software (28) embodying the OCIS described herein.
Also connected to the processors (21) through the bus system (23) are a network adapter (24) and one or more input/output (I/) devices (25). The network adapter (24) provides the processing system (20) with the ability to communicate with remote devices and may be, for example, an Ethernet adapter, cable modem, DSL adapter, wireless modem, etc. The I/O device(s) (25) may include any one or more of, for example: a display device, audio speakers, printer, keyboard, cursor control device (e.g., mouse, touchpad, trackball, or touchscreen), microphone, etc.
In response to a query forwarded by the consumer the server requests comparison information from the database relating to both the product specified in the query and the merchants offering the specified product. The server also retrieves weighting factor information from the database. The server applies the weighting factor information to the merchant information and the comparison information on the specified product to calculate weighted comparison factors relating to product and merchant information. A detailed description of the calculation of the weighted comparison factors is provided below in connection with
The process performed by the OCIS of applying the weighting factors to the information on the merchant or the specified product is illustrated in
If at step (304) it is determined that the information is sufficient for ranking the system proceeds to step (306). At step (306) the system applies a filter to screen any merchants not meeting any selected criteria. Examples of screening information includes any information corresponding to a potential weighting factor as shown in connection with
Table 1 shows examples of weighting factors used in comparing and ranking merchants.
The ability to modify weighting factors is a significant feature in providing “customizability,” and creates way to track the real intention of consumers and/or their reasons for selecting certain products over others and to help maximize return on investment (ROI). Further, tracking a person's modification of a weighting factor in response to data presented or changing, gives a much clearer picture of predictive actions than that provided by existing engines that direct traffic or produce arbitrary results based upon such simple things as a randomly placed ad or a mistaken click of the mouse. As such, it becomes much easier to produce default weighting factors or purchasing paradigms. In addition, the system can build a historical record of actions (e.g., user modifications of default weighting factors, etc.) of a particular consumer or multiple consumers (e.g., an industry-wide practice/behavior) and corresponding search results. The system (or a person) can analyze that historical record, and based on that analysis, intelligently determine default weighting factors to be used in future interactions with (e.g., queries by) the same consumer and/or other consumers. In this way, sets of default weighting factors can be generated to optimize searches for various different goals, such as better delivery times, lower prices, overall adherence to corporate principles, etc., thus helping to maximize ROI.
Optionally, adjacent the weighting fields (413) are weighting field lock (414) indicators which correspond to the adjacent weighting field and comparison information field. The system can lock the weights of some of the comparison information such that the weighting factor can't be altered. In this manner the system protects the user from removing critical pieces of information from the ranking. For example, a user who has administrative privileges, such as a company's Chief Purchasing Officer (CPO), might lock certain weighting factors, such that other users (e.g., purchasing agents working under his supervision), who use the system would not be able to alter those weights (or at least, not without entering a “playground” mode in the system that allows users the ability to run queries independent such locks). Optionally, the system locks could be clickable by the consumer to allow the consumer to lock in specific weights such that the system will not rebalance or change them from the user's desired weighting.
Optionally, category fields (415) are adjacent the weighting lock fields (414). The category fields tie together items of comparison information present in the corresponding comparison fields (413). The same given number, character, string, symbol, or other identifier entered in the category fields of two comparison fields indicates to the system that these two items of comparison information are to be includes in the same category. Category tags (416) indicate the available categories of comparison information, such as security, on time delivery, customer satisfaction, environmental compliance, labor relations, etc. Adjacent the category tags (416) are category weighting fields (417). A weighting factor for a category is entered in the category weighting fields (417). By entering the identifier in the category field of two or more items of comparison information, the consumer indicates that the selected comparison information items are to be part of a category having a specific weighting factor, as entered in the category weighting field (417). Any changes to the weighting factors entered in the weighting fields (413) corresponding to comparison information items will not change the weighting of the category of information which the comparison information item corresponds. In this manner the present invention allows a consumer to adjust the relative weights of comparison information items relating to security, while keeping constant the weighting factor for security in the ranking. Optionally, the items of comparison information could be arranged into categories which the user could then customize or eliminate altogether. Another option of the present invention is to allow comparison information items corresponding to the same category to be grouped on the screen. As the user adds or deletes comparison information items from a given category the system could rearrange the comparison information tags, and their associated weighting factor fields, to associate comparison information tags with other comparison information tags in the same category.
Optionally, category weighting locks (418) which correspond to the category tag (416) are adjacent the category weighting fields. The system can lock the weights of some of the categories such that the corresponding category weighting factor can't be altered. In this manner the system protects the user from removing or rebalancing critical categories of information from the ranking. Optionally, the system locks could be clickable by the consumer to allow the consumer to lock in specific weights such that the system will not rebalance or change them from the user's desired weighting.
A weight factor tutor button (420) allows the consumer to request instructions and advice from the system on how to customize the weighting ranking to suit the consumers need. Optionally, the system could suggest different weighting factor paradigms for the consumer. In this manner the system would provide multiple paradigms where the weighting factors are chosen to maximize a particular preference set, while still considering other factors in the merchant ranking. As an example, one weighting factor paradigm could provide a strong emphasis on security, while ranking all other information at a lower, roughly equivalent, level. Another paradigm could give a high ranking to both total cost of the delivered product and to the factors relating to customer satisfaction, giving a secondary ranking to security and on-time delivery, and giving a very low ranking to environmental and labor relation factors. Still another paradigm could give the highest weighting to environmental and labor relations, giving a secondary weighting to both offered price and customer satisfaction, and giving a very low ranking to on-time deliver and delivery options. Accordingly, the system could offer multiple paradigm choices to meet the varied preferences of consumers.
At the bottom of the weighting customization page (410) a weighting reset button (421) allows the consumer to enter the changes they have made, or values they have entered, into the system of the present invention. In response to the consumer clicking on the weighting reset button (421) the system stores the displayed values for use in performing the ranking of merchants.
The process of a consumer customizing the weighting factors is shown in
The process of customizing the ranking without the use of categories is shown in
Once the consumer is satisfied with the relative weighting of comparison information the consumer clicks on the weighting reset button (421). In response, at step (425) the system receives the weighting factors displayed when the consumer clicked on the weighting reset button. At step (426) the system saves the weighting factors as modified for use in the ranking for the consumer.
At step (432) the system creates the category associations based on the association factors entered in the category fields (415). At step (433) the system begins the process of calculating categorization weighting factors. In response to the weighting factors entered corresponding to the comparison information items and the categories, along with the entering of the category identifiers, the system must harmonize the weighting factors entered in each field to reflect the consumers desired weighting. For instance, if a consumer selected the security category as having only a ten percent weighting on the overall ranking, and selected credit card security and availability of fraud insurance as the only two comparison information items in the security category, while giving credit card security a high ranking of five and fraud insurance a low ranking of one, the system would calculate categorization weighting factors corresponding to both the credit card security comparison information item and the fraud insurance comparison information item for use in the ranking. At step (434) the weighting factors corresponding to the credit card security and the fraud insurance are converted to percentage values. When weighting factors are expressed a ranking of relative importance, such as a 1 through 5 ranking, the system converts the weighting factors into percentage values based on a predetermined formula. In the presently preferred invention the conversion formula is expressed in steps (433) through (435).
At step (433) the system counts all the weighting factors in each accepted weighting value, and the total number of weighting factors. In the present example, the system would have a total of two weighting factors, one each for credit card security and fraud insurance. The number of each weighting factor is expressed as Nx. The system would also have a total of 1 weighting factor of five (N5=1), zero weighting factors of 4 (N4=0), zero weighting factors of 3 (N3=0), zero weighting factors of 2 (N2=0), and one weighting factors of 1 (N1=1). The percentage value for each weighting factor is expressed as Px where x corresponds to the weighting factor. For example, the percentage weighting factor for five is represented by P5. The formulae the weighting factors satisfy is
ΣPxNx=100% Eqn. 1
Px> . . . >P5>P4>P3>P2>P1 Eqn. 2
P
x
−P
x-1
=P
x-1
−P
x-2
= . . . P
2
−P
1 Eqn. 3
Equation 1 provides that the total number of weighting factors sum to 100%. Equation 2 provides that the weighting factor corresponding to the more important weighting rank has a higher percentage weighting factor than the lower ranked weighting factors. Equation 3 provides that the step between percentage weighting values is equal between any two neighboring rank weighting factors.
For the present example of x ranging from 1 to 5
P5N5+P4N4+P3N3+P2N2+P1N1=100 or
P5+P1=100%, and
P5>P1
The preferred weighting is for P5=30%, P4=25%, P3=20%, P2=15%, P1=10%. The present system adjusts the weighting factors Px to with respect to Eqn. 1-3. For the present example, P5=70% and P1=30%.
At step (435) the system replaces the weighting factors stored in the system prior to the customization by the consumer with the percentage weighting factors calculated at step (434).
At step (506) the comparison information retrieved at step (503) is compared between the merchants to determine whether the data sets for each merchant are complete. If one or more merchants lack an item of comparison information on a particular aspect of their offering, such as options on shipping or information on consumer complaints, the system has several options to normalize the data. If there are a large number of merchants offering complete, or nearly complete, data sets than any merchant with a partial data set could be eliminated from the ranking. Optionally, this merchant's elimination, the reason for the elimination, and the particular data elements missing from the data set, could be saved for retrieval by the consumer. Alternatively, merchants with incomplete data sets could have their data sets “completed” by giving the merchant the lowest possible value consistent with the corresponding information. For example, information relating to the option of having express overnight delivery for the specified product may receive one point if the merchant offers this delivery option, and zero points if the merchant does not. If this information was missing from the merchant's data set the system could normalize the data set by giving this merchant a zero point value for the express delivery option. Optionally, this lacking of this data value for the particular merchant could be stored and retrieved by the consumer.
At step (507) the system applies the weighting factors to the corresponding comparison information from step (506). The weighting factors, represented as percentage values reflecting the respective contribution of the corresponding weighting factor data, are multiplied by their corresponding comparison information item. The product of this multiplication is a weighted comparison value. The weighted comparison values are summed for each merchant at step (508) to calculate an aggregate score for the corresponding merchant. Optionally, the system also stores the aggregate scores at step (508).
Optionally, the system would also ascribe a star rating to the merchants based on their rating. As described in connection with
Alternatively, the ranking could use other break points for ascribing merchants a rating. Alternate embodiments could use other indicators other than stars for rating merchants.
Optionally, the present invention could use the rating system to apply to categories within the ranking. For example, a merchant that received a lower rank in the security category may be given the highest rating due to the small difference between that merchant's weighted security comparison value and that of the merchant with the greatest weighted security comparison value.
Optionally, the present rating and ranking system could be applied to individual comparison information factors. A merchant's specific rank on one comparison factor can be calculated and presented to the consumer.
In this manner the present invention provides detailed comparison information on not only the ranking based on a plurality of factors, which are weighted to reflect their relative importance to a consumer, but also provides relative difference information to indicate when the difference between merchants comparison values are relatively small, or relatively large. The present invention allows both of these comparison features to be presented on the total ranking, the ranking of merchants within a category, and that relative difference for individual comparison factors.
The merchant line includes a merchant rank block (602) on the leftmost portion of the merchant display line (611). The merchant rank block gives the merchants rank based on the merchant's aggregate value relative to the other merchant in the ranking. A merchant name block (603) is located adjacent to the merchant rank block (602) and identifies the merchant through their trade name. An aggregate value total block (604) is adjacent to the merchant name block (603) and displays the aggregate value for the merchant identified in the merchant name block. An offered price block (605) is adjacent to the aggregate value block (604). The offered price block (605) displays the price the merchant in the merchant named in the merchant name block (603) is offering to sell the queried product. Optionally, a rating block (606) is adjacent the offered price block (605) and is located on the rightmost position of the merchant display line (611). The rating block (606) displays the rating given to the merchant in connection with the merchant's aggregate value. All of the blocks (602)-(606) in the merchant display line include information specific to the merchant named in the merchant name block (603).
The present invention provides a comparison system which increases the value of the returned results by giving the consumer the tools to inspect the ranking process. The present invention's ability to provide a detailed breakdown of the weighting factors and categories of information used allow the consumer to inspect the ranking process. In this manner the consumer can have confidence that the ranking is based on information about the product and merchant that is relevant to the consumer's purchasing decision. This eliminates the consumer's concerns that the ranking is based on hidden factors that are not aligned with the consumer's interest, such as licensing fees or other promotional fees paid to some of the existing web sites.
The ability of the present invention to allow the consumer to customize the ranking gives the consumer the tools to increase the accuracy, reliability and relevance of the ranking. The present invention allows the consumer the flexibility to personalize the ranking system to reflect their individual priorities when making purchasing decisions. In this manner the present invention reflects the user's priorities, giving the user confidence that the ranking is not based on extraneous factors that are unimportant to the user when making purchasing decisions.
While the present embodiment shows only one database, information on the merchants, offered products or services, and weighting factors could be stored in multiple databases or split amongst multiple databases. The database (10) or databases need not be located at the same facility as the server (12).
Various modifications and improvements to the embodiments described above can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, while the system has been described in connection with search for and comparing the offerings of one product from multiple merchants, the present invention could be easily adapted to search for can comparing the offerings from merchants on groups of products, or a “basket” of goods. For example, consumers wishing to lower their monthly grocery bill could specify a basket of goods they are interested in buying, everything from meats and cheeses to fruits and vegetables, and compare merchants offering based on lowest price, reliability of delivery, security of payment, and rankings of the quality of the delivered goods as rated by prior customers, in addition to other information the consumer deems relevant to their intended purchase. As a further example, the present invention is equally applicable to the comparison and ranking of different products. The present invention can allow a consumer to search for two competing products, such as VCRs or automobiles, where the system ranks the offering of two different models by comparing the features and offered terms of sale including price. Depending on the weighting used in the ranking the present invention may return the higher price product as a higher weighting due additional features or other aspects of the product. In this manner the present invention helps to inform the consumer by comparing and ranking based on the consumer's true priorities when making a purchasing decision.
As noted above, a “product” can be an advertisement, a block of advertising time or space, or an advertising campaign. So for example, a merchant wishing to advertise his products or services can use the OCIS described herein to identify advertising time on the radio or advertising space in a newspaper, for purchase (in which case, the merchant is acting as a “consumer”), and can even potentially negotiate its purchase using the system.
Thus, a consumer (merchant) can use the OCIS to buy advertising blocks from an advertising seller (e.g., a media company) with very specific goals in mind (e.g., television spots or hotel ads during football season, particularly the start of the season and the Super Bowl; print ads around a specific location and time, such as Las Vegas and the Bellagio hotel at New Year's Eve; or cell phone ads during basketball season when game updates are available, or when restaurants have specials tied to being in a particular location).
An advertising block can be treated as a “basket of goods”. The merchant/consumer in that case can select weights for different advertising media, days or times, price points, etc. For example, a particular merchant might prefer television as an advertising medium, but may be willing to consider print media or cell phone advertising, yet is unwilling to advertise on radio. Accordingly, he might search for advertising blocks by using the OCIS, inputting a keyword query and entering the following weights, for example: television 60%, print 20%, cell 20%, radio 0%.
Further, using the OCIS described herein, advertising exchange, auctions, and reverse auctions can be created around use of and matching against weighting factors. In this regard, an advertiser can buy advertising time/space and place advertisements in relation to the modifications of weighting factors made by buyers and sellers as they work through an auction or bid function. An advertiser can enter weights based upon historical returns on investment. For example, a consumer buying radios was offered free shipping, a consumer would buy from companies operating overseas; but when the same consumer was offered a 10% discount from a domestic supplier, the consumer would make the domestic purchase (as it would compensate for any shipping costs associated within country). An advertiser placing ads for domestic companies would weight ad placements in instances where a domestic supplier was able to offer a 10% or more offer. Contrastingly, an advertiser might weight advertising opportunities where a domestic supplier was able to offer a 9% discount but share transportation costs. As the supplier and advertiser worked through these factors in an auction or bid setting, advertisements for different companies/merchants would appear as they could meet the ever-changing needs of a consumer as identified in the auction or bid.
Further, an advertiser can enter weights based upon desired return on investment, knowing, for example that whenever a particular consumer has options placed before him, particularly those that make a buying a more expensive item possible, he will do so. In this particular case, a consumer might weight digital cameras high, weight payments by American Express moderately, weight SLR cameras high and hand-held point-and-click cameras low to moderate, weight payment by American Express moderate to high, and weight price as below $500. An advertiser knowing the historical purchasing patterns of this individual consumer might then offer the consumer the option of acquiring a VISA credit card with a higher interest rate but with a credit limit of $2000. If the consumer accepted the deal, he would be allowed to buy more than an inexpensive digital camera; in fact, he could afford an SLR costing $1500. Hence, as the past has proven the consumer will in fact make a more expensive purchase if options are provided, the advertiser could expect a greater return on its investment, as not only does the consumer spend $1000 more but he also pays a higher interest rate.
In addition, a merchant can use the OCIS to negotiate, in an interactive manner, with sellers of ads (e.g., through the modifications of weights with numerous ad sellers, who equally can reconfigure their own weights regarding the same factors to solicit better deals). Similarly, a merchant can use the OCIS to negotiate in an interactive manner across numerous buyers, where the buyers enter weights that are cross-referenced with the merchant's desired sell weights, with buyers coming back trying to negotiate a better deal, and so on.
Further, an advertiser can buy specific blocks of advertising within a particular space, based on what user identified weights, or on newly desired rates of return matched against advertiser offerings. Advertisers can buy blocks of advertisements across periods of time that would be placed whenever certain consumer weights were entered, thereby gaining not only efficiencies and placement but cost efficiencies from single purchase.
Certain embodiments of the invention provide a technique for more precisely targeting advertising to a consumer, based upon the consumer's use of the OCIS. This technique can include the OCIS's selecting an advertisement to be communicated to a consumer based on one or more of the weighting factors associated with the consumer's query (which may have been customized by the consumer prior to submission of the query, as described above), and then causing the selected advertisement to be communicated to the consumer.
For example, if the consumer customizes the weighting factors to specify American Express credit card as the preferred method of payment, then in one embodiment, advertisements for only those merchants who accept American Express are selected for presentation to the user. In this way, an advertisement can be selected to have a positive correspondence to a weighting factor.
On the other hand, an advertisement can be selected to have a negative correspondence to a weighting factor. For example, if the consumer customizes the weighting factors to prefer American Express, then an advertisement for Visa offering a better rate may be selected for presentation to the user. In either the positive or negative weighting correspondence case, the OCIS can align weights set by the advertiser (e.g., regarding how the advertiser desires the ads to be targeted) in response to the weights input by the consumer.
A selected advertisement can be communicated to the consumer either in response to the consumer's query or completely asynchronously to the query. For example, the selected advertisement may be communicated to the consumer concurrently with, and through the same communication medium as, the search result (e.g., it may be displayed on screen at the client (18)). Alternatively, the selected advertisement may be communicated to the consumer through a different communication medium than the search result (e.g., through the mail, email, fax, etc.), and it may be communicated at some future time, and may further be only partially and indirectly based upon the weights associated with any one particular query. That is, an advertisement may be selected based on a historical record, maintained by the OCIS or another entity, of past actions by the consumer and/or a group of consumers (even an entire market segment). Such actions can include, for example, changes previously made to the weighting factors by the consumer(s) in connection with submission of one or more queries.
An advertisement selected in this manner can have essentially any form, such as a visual ad or audiovisual for display on a computer or other processing device, a print media ad, etc.
This approach improves upon existing buying systems, in which advertising is driven around a consumer's simply clicking on a seemingly relevant ad, where revenue follows the click. In the approach introduced here, the movement is more definite, with a relationship being established between the two (in either a positive or negative manner).
As a variation upon the above process, the database of possible advertisements for selection can be stored at the client (18), and the selection (703) of the advertisement to provide to the consumer can be performed in the client (18).