Wednesday, June 17, 2026
ADVT 
National

Google Canada aims to be 'appropriate,' not creepy, with mobile ad push in 2015

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Dec, 2014 10:39 AM

    TORONTO — 2014 was the year Google saw Canadians really flock to mobile devices.

    It expects 2015 will be the year they become obsessed with them — if that isn't true already.

    "Users, and then in turn Google and our business, pivoted to mobile and mobile-first (strategies) in a big way," says Sam Sebastian, managing director of Google Canada, looking back on 2014.

    "We had to pivot our business multiple times over the years but this past year the pivot to mobile was extremely important."

    Although most consumers probably associate Google with its search engine, its video streaming site YouTube and its mobile operating system Android, at its heart is an advertising business, which generated the lion's share of the company's nearly US$58 billion of revenue in 2013.

    With Canadians spending less time accessing the Internet on computers and more time on smartphones and tablets, improving mobile advertising is a big focus for Google in 2015, says Sebastian.

    "Once we figure (mobile advertising) out ... it will probably be a much more powerful advertising medium than desktop or anything we've ever seen before," he says.

    Many consumers are still a little perturbed when they see so-called online behavioural advertising, which surfaces ads based on previous search or browsing history.

    Google is cognizant that there are elements of mobile advertising that might be equally off-putting, such as the ability to display ads based on a consumer's location.

    "The idea of what's creepy and what's appropriate is a constantly evolving thing," says Steven Woods, engineering director for Google Canada.

    "If you think about a consumer right now on mobile, they get very frustrated if you ask a ridiculous question. They are in a hurry, they want information relevant to them right now, and so this idea of turning location information on, turning it off, turning it on, off, it can be quite onerous.

    "So finding the right ways to ... delight the users and protect their information in a way they're comfortable with, these are the complicated issues of the day."

    While he expects it will grow somewhat in Canada in 2015, Sebastian isn't banking on mobile payments becoming a huge trend next year.

    "It's not, frankly, that hard to pull out a credit card and pay for something. So we have to delight (consumers) in some way beyond what they already do. So is there a way to deliver promotions, discounts, all sorts of other things that actually provide more utility if you use your phone as the wallet?" says Sebastian.

    "It has to provide something new, different and better. We've just found users have such high expectations now and we've taken the friction out of so many processes online — and to a certain extent offline — that they're not going to change their behaviour unless there's an incentive to. And again, I think we have to discover what that is."

    Apple is betting consumers are ready to make mobile payments and this year rolled out Apple Pay in the U.S., which works with a number of major brands including Bloomingdale's, Disney Stores, Macy's, McDonald's, Nike, Staples, Subway and Walgreens.

    Sebastian says he'd welcome an Apple Pay launch in Canada if it would spur interest in mobile commerce.

    "I think anyone doing great new things in the market is great for everyone," he says.

    "If it makes it better for users and it gives folks more choice and more opportunities and better utility it's good for Google, it's good for anyone."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Pickets For Pencils: B.C. Teachers Head Back To Classrooms

    Pickets For Pencils: B.C. Teachers Head Back To Classrooms
    VANCOUVER - B.C. Education Minister Peter Fassbender says he hopes the relationship between teachers and the province can be healed over the next five years of labour peace under the hard-fought new contract.

    Pickets For Pencils: B.C. Teachers Head Back To Classrooms

    Serena Vermeersch, Missing Teen, Found Dead in Surrey. Police Search For A Male Suspect

    Serena Vermeersch, Missing Teen, Found Dead in Surrey. Police Search For A Male Suspect
    SURREY, B.C. - RCMP are asking for the public's help in finding a man who may have been involved in the murder of a 17-year-old girl in Surrey, B.C.

    Serena Vermeersch, Missing Teen, Found Dead in Surrey. Police Search For A Male Suspect

    B.C. Teachers Cast Ballots On Bittersweet Contract Deal With Province

    B.C. Teachers Cast Ballots On Bittersweet Contract Deal With Province
    VANCOUVER - The mood was bittersweet Thursday as British Columbia teachers cast ballots on a tentative contract deal that could bring down picket lines and put them back in the classroom.

    B.C. Teachers Cast Ballots On Bittersweet Contract Deal With Province

    RCMP: Death Of 17-year-old Girl Last Seen Boarding Bus In Surrey Deemed Homicide

    RCMP: Death Of 17-year-old Girl Last Seen Boarding Bus In Surrey Deemed Homicide
    The death of a 17-year-old girl in Surrey, B.C., has been deemed a homicide. RCMP were to hold a news conference later Thursday into the case of Serena Vermeersch, whose body was found Tuesday night.

    RCMP: Death Of 17-year-old Girl Last Seen Boarding Bus In Surrey Deemed Homicide

    Rob Ford Thanks Well-wishers In Recording. Read The Full Transcript

    Rob Ford Thanks Well-wishers In Recording. Read The Full Transcript
    TORONTO - Just hours before starting chemotherapy for a rare and aggressive cancer, Rob Ford released a recorded statement Thursday thanking well-wishers for their support and urging Torontonians to elect his brother as the city's next mayor.

    Rob Ford Thanks Well-wishers In Recording. Read The Full Transcript

    Driver Fatigue Likely Cause in B.C. Tour Bus Crash: Minister

    Driver Fatigue Likely Cause in B.C. Tour Bus Crash: Minister
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. - British Columbia's transportation minister says a highway crash that injured dozens of tour bus passengers last month was most likely caused by driver error.

    Driver Fatigue Likely Cause in B.C. Tour Bus Crash: Minister