Voluntary
Disclosures of Personal Information for Direct Marketing
Purposes: A Quantitative and Qualitative Comparison of
Differences between Contributors and Abstainers
Dr. G.S
Robertshaw and Dr. N.E Marr
Abstract
The
disclosure of detailed, non-transactional individual-level
consumer information for direct marketing purposes is
essentially voluntary in nature. This raises the
possibility that those consumers who elect to disclose such
information may be atypical of the general population.
Using 256 personal interviews and a case study this paper
explores demographic and value system differences between
contributors of personal information and abstainers, and
provides an interpretive insight into the reasons
underlying the differences.
The results of this study reveal that consumers who
voluntarily contribute personal information for direct
marketing purposes are different to those who abstain, both
qualitatively and with respect to values, prompting a
re-appraisal of current targeting and customer profiling
methods.
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