We talk a lot about the privacy implications of the modern advertising industry here on Techlicious. Not only are all of us profiled personally through use of social networks like Facebook, but our communities are profiled, too. Marketers pull aggregated data from our Internet searches, supermarket card purchases, social media profiles, credit histories and more to create detailed snapshots of each of our communities, broken down by ZIP code.
Curious what Big Data can tell you about your neighborhood? This past week, The Wall Street Journal’s The Numbers blog posted about mapping software company Esri’s absolutely fascinating Tapestry Segmentation project. It breaks down the American populace into 67 different named demographic groups, each with very specific insights.
You can enter your own ZIP code into Esri’s map and it’ll tell you which of those named groups dominate your neighborhood and what your neighborhood says about you as person. It’ll even predict if you’re likely to be a latte drinker.
A person who lives in my Somerville, Massachusetts ZIP code, for example, is most likely to fit in a category called “Laptops and Lattes.” Big data says that I’m likely a well-educated single professional in an industry such as computing or entertainment that prioritizes fitness, nutrition and organic foods. It also predicts that I’m the type to splurge on Starbucks, iPads, theater tickets and night clubs. A related category in my area, “Trendsetters,” suggests I may also be interested in current fashion, social media and pre-prepared healthy meals. As my beat-up bank account can attest, these are all highly accurate descriptions: I blow my money on all that nonsense. I put my parents’ rural NJ ZIP code into the Esri map and the results were just as accurate, right down to predicting the SUV in their driveway.
Some of the other categories in Esri’s database include the down-to-earth “Prairie Living,” the professionally successful “Top Tier” and the hardworking Southern “Diners and Miners.” A person in Iowa ZIP code 51444 is likely to love God, hunting, fishing and shopping at Walmart; a person in the famed 90210 is likely to take luxury vacations, visit upscale salons and attend charity dinners. The tool will also return median income data, age profiles and population density. It’s an interesting (if not eerie) way to get a picture of what life around your state and the country is like—so far as advertisers are concerned, anyway.
This article was written by Fox Van Allen and originally appeared on Techlicious.