Web Coupons Know Lots About You, and They Tell

By STEPHANIE CLIFFORD
April 16, 2010

For decades, shoppers have taken advantage of coupons. Now, the 
coupons are taking advantage of the shoppers.

A new breed of coupon,  printed from the Internet or sent to mobile 
phones, is packed with information about the customer who uses it. 
While the coupons look standard, their bar codes can be loaded with a 
startling amount of data, including identification about the 
customer, Internet address, Facebook page information and even the 
search terms the customer used to find the coupon in the first place.

And all that information follows that customer into the mall. For 
example, if a man walks into a Filene's Basement to buy a suit for 
his wedding and shows a coupon he retrieved online, the company's 
marketing agency can figure out whether he used the search terms 
"Hugo Boss suit" or "discount wedding clothes" to research his 
purchase (just don't tell his fiancée).

Coupons from the Internet are the fastest-growing part of the coupon 
world - their redemption increased 263 percent to about 50 million 
coupons in 2009, according to the coupon-processing company Inmar. 
Using coupons to link Internet behavior with in-store shopping lets 
retailers figure out which ad slogans or online product promotions 
work best, how long someone waits between searching and shopping, 
even what offers a shopper will respond to or ignore.

The coupons can, in some cases, be tracked not just to an anonymous 
shopper but to an identifiable person: a retailer could know that Amy 
Smith printed a 15 percent-off coupon after searching for appliance 
discounts at Ebates.com on Friday at 1:30 p.m. and redeemed it later 
that afternoon at the store.

...

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/17/business/media/17coupon.html

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