
AudienceScience
Founded Year
2000Stage
Dead | DeadTotal Raised
$89.33MAbout AudienceScience
AudienceScience offers a flexible targeting platform for digital media worldwide. The company's audience targeting platform collects and measures interests and intent through Web behaviors, sites visited, articles read, and searches made. The non-personally identifiable information is parsed and stored in massive data warehouses.
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Research containing AudienceScience
Get data-driven expert analysis from the CB Insights Intelligence Unit.
CB Insights Intelligence Analysts have mentioned AudienceScience in 1 CB Insights research brief, most recently on Aug 1, 2023.

Aug 1, 2023
463 startup failure post-mortemsExpert Collections containing AudienceScience
Expert Collections are analyst-curated lists that highlight the companies you need to know in the most important technology spaces.
AudienceScience is included in 1 Expert Collection, including Ad Tech.
Ad Tech
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Companies offering tech-enabled marketing and advertising services.
AudienceScience Patents
AudienceScience has filed 20 patents.

Application Date | Grant Date | Title | Related Topics | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
3/2/2016 | 1/22/2019 | Computer memory, Networking hardware, Internet advertising methods, Promotion and marketing communications, Advertising | Grant |
Application Date | 3/2/2016 |
---|---|
Grant Date | 1/22/2019 |
Title | |
Related Topics | Computer memory, Networking hardware, Internet advertising methods, Promotion and marketing communications, Advertising |
Status | Grant |
Latest AudienceScience News
Jun 17, 2021
The “un-carrier” is getting into programmatic. T-Mobile has hired ad tech vet Mike Peralta, former CEO of AudienceScience, EVP at Criteo and CRO of Future, as VP of Marketing Solutions, an ad tech and analytics business unit that uses the company’s first-party mobile data. “Everyone’s watched what’s going on with AT&T and Verizon,” Peralta said, and those telcos folding on their programmatic ambitions dampened the idea of a mobile provider entering the world of data-driven online advertising. T-Mobile’s plan is less ambitious, but more realistic. “We’re not trying to be everything to everyone,” Peralta said. “We know what we’re good at, and we’re focused on just that.” For instance, T-Mobile’s programmatic push is only in mobile app advertising, he said. The company may provide measurement and targeting for digital out-of-home or OTT campaigns, but only to the degree that those campaigns involve media or data on someone’s phone. Not only is T-Mobile only using its data for mobile advertising, it is even laser-focused exclusively on Android. Apple’s iOS privacy policies that block the IDFA from being used to track across apps make it difficult or impossible to do ad targeting or measurement, he said. So T-Mobile will keep its sights set on Android, rather than risk a privacy issues with Apple. The T-Mobile Marketing Solutions business also avoids all web advertising – even on mobile phones, when users have a browser app on their phone. Web display ads are low-hanging fruit, but T-Mobile is focused on the growth opportunity of mobile advertising and device IDs, not the diminishing returns of third-party cookies, Peralta said. The mobile phone is, of course, the source of T-Mobile’s first-party data. The company collects device IDs and app usage data from across its cell network, which powers its ad platform. Advertisers can target T-Mobile’s first-party audiences directly, but only if they use T-Mobile’s ad-buying technology – so T-Mobile customers can’t be identified and retargeted elsewhere. The other side of T-Mobile Marketing Solutions is data and analytics. If an advertiser or agency is using an outside DSP or ad network, it can model audiences for that campaign based on T-Mobile data, or do attribution using T-Mobile audiences as trackable control groups. Location data is lucrative, but it’s another example of a combustible privacy topic that T-Mobile will avoid. The Marketing Solutions business doesn’t use location tracking as part of its targeting or measurement, Peralta said. Another important distinction for T-Mobile’s ad tech compared to previous mobile carriers is that T-Mobile didn’t enter advertising with blockbuster media acquisitions, Peralta said. That makes it easy for T-Mobile to work with any other media or platform company, including Google, Facebook or Amazon. The telco hypothesis has been tripped up because the mobile giants that attempted to stand up advertising businesses couldn’t reconcile their competitive tensions with other broadcasters and ad tech companies, Peralta said. “We’re going about this with the mindset that we can work with anyone.” Enjoying this content? Sign up to be an AdExchanger Member today and get unlimited access to articles like this, plus proprietary data and research, conference discounts, on-demand access to event content, and more!
AudienceScience Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
When was AudienceScience founded?
AudienceScience was founded in 2000.
Where is AudienceScience's headquarters?
AudienceScience's headquarters is located at 1120 112th Avenue NE, Bellevue.
What is AudienceScience's latest funding round?
AudienceScience's latest funding round is Dead.
How much did AudienceScience raise?
AudienceScience raised a total of $89.33M.
Who are the investors of AudienceScience?
Investors of AudienceScience include Mohr Davidow Ventures, Mayfield, Meritech Capital Partners, Integral Capital Partners, Second Avenue Partners and 11 more.
Who are AudienceScience's competitors?
Competitors of AudienceScience include interCLICK.
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Compare AudienceScience to Competitors
interCLICK is a digital advertising company that can deliver content to audiences, measure its impact along with specialized software to track advertiser-consumer responsiveness. In November 2011, interClick was acquired by Yahoo. The valuation of interClick was $270 million.
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