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- Call and Tell
-
- The zip code tells the U.S. Postal Service where to deliver the mail.
- It also tells direct marketers what to deliver. Combining the zip
- code with census and other data provides marketers with a rich vein of
- demographic information concerning your income, buying habits and
- socio-economic preference for squash instead of handball.
-
- If all this is not enough, the past decade has given direct marketers
- another wedge into the collective psyche of American consumers: your
- telephone number. Combining the resources of massive computer data
- bases with the ability of an emerging "smart" telephone network to
- identify callers, the direct-marketing industry is using the telephone
- number to track down a person's name, address--and life-style. If
- your household is deemed "desirable" to a marketer--perhaps one of the
- "Pools & Patios" crowd, as one telemarketer puts it--an 800 or 900
- line service representative may know it before the call is answered.
-
- Target direct marketing is not new. A company that subscribes to an
- 800 or 900 service can receive a monthly listing of the numbers of
- callers, which can then be matched with names and addresses using a
- reverse telephone directory. Correlating that information with
- demographic data produces valuable mailing or phone lists. (An 800
- call is toll free, whereas the caller pays for dialing a 900 number.
- A caller interested enough to pay a fee is more likely to buy a
- product, marketers reason.)
-
- To the consumer, all this means that products can be more closely
- matched to personal tastes, with the result that the junk mail might
- just contain something worth buying. What's new is that
- information-age marketers have begun to acquire the technology to
- carry out this screening process instantly and without the caller's
- knowledge.
-
- Beginning this year, Telesphere Communications, Inc., and Oakbrook
- Terrace, Ill., company with $550 million in annual sales, will offer a
- service to 900 subscribers that can peg the location of an incoming
- call using an are code and the number's three-digit prefix. Knowing
- where the call originates allows a salesperson to prepare a pitch.
- Later a reverse directory can be used to identify the caller, and a
- data base can determine which of 40 demographic "clusters" fits that
- person. In the near future, these services may be provided while the
- caller is still on the lines.
-
- Telesphere gets in demographic information from PRIZM, a data base
- owned by Claritas Corporation in Alexandria, Va. PRIZM can pinpoint a
- neighborhood for virtually everyone in the U.S. using census and other
- public demographic information. "It works on the theory that birds of
- a feather flock together," says Harvey B. Uelk, a Telesphere sales
- director.
-
- So if you are lucky, the pitchman will know if you fall in the fifth
- cluster in the data base: "Furs & Station Wagons." This group is
- described as "'new money' living in expensive new neighborhoods....
- They are winners--big producer, and big spenders." A not so fortunate
- caller might be lumped into the "Emergent Minorities" cluster. These
- people, says a promotional report, are "almost 80 percent black, the
- remainder largely composed of Hispanics and other foreign-born
- minorities.... Emergent Minorities shows...below-average levels of
- education and [below-average] white-collar employment. The stuggle
- for emergence from poverty is still evident in these neighborhoods."
-
- The risk that a household, through clustering, might become the
- telemarketing equivalent of a bad credit risk has not escaped the
- notice of the American Civil Liberties Union and other public interest
- groups who fear that minorities might be excluded from mortgage and
- credit opportunities or a gay neighborhood may be blacklisted by an
- insurance advertising campaign. A telemarketer might display
- different sales pitches on a service representative's computer screen,
- depending on whether the incoming caller hails from the "Money &
- Brains" or the "Coalburg & Corntown" cluster.
-
- Marc Rotenberg of Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility
- likens calling an 800 or 900 number to walking into a store. "A
- person should have a right to enter a store without disclosing
- creditworthiness, residence or annual income," Rotenberg asserts.
- Lobbying by privacy groups has focused so far on supporting national
- legislation that would, in effect, allow a caller to keep his wallet
- in his back pocket until he decides to make a purchase.
-
- The law would give the caller the option of blocking a number from
- being displayed immediately bya receiving party. This would be done
- by pressing "*-6-7," or a similar combination of numbers, before
- making a call. (Marketers could still get callers' 800 or 900 numbers
- with their statements each month, however.) Although the law failed
- to pass Congress last year, it is scheduled to be reintroduced this
- year.
-
- Individual states are not necessarily waiting for Congress. A
- Pennsylvania court has banned "Caller ID" service--a decision that is
- on appeal--and a number of state public utility commisions have
- ordered that blocking be offered free of charge. For the moment,
- states' actions may not affect most telemarketers, whose 800 and 900
- calls are usually routed over the long-distance phone network and
- displayed to a clerk using a service called automatic number
- identification.
-
- Support for blocking has come not just from privacy advocates but from
- the White House's Office of Consumer Affairs, four of the seven
- regional Bell companies and the Direct Marketing Association in New
- York City. As with junk mail, the direct-marketing industry
- acknowledges that the consumer should have the right to choose not to
- receive unsolicited information.
-
- On the opposite end of the line, a number of telephone companies
- contend that caller identification services are a clear boon to
- subscribers. Bell Atlantic, an ardent opponent of call blocking, has
- compiled a list of subscribers who have used the Caller ID service to
- stop obscene phone calls or fake pizza orders and to track down
- burglars.
-
- For their part, some direct marketers assert that fears of
- misappropriatio of personal information are greatly exaggerated: they
- are interested in patterns of group behavior, not the personal
- preferences of the individual. "We try to identify market segments
- that are most likely to respond to a particular marketer's products or
- services," explains Philip H. Bonello, director of corporate planning
- for Metromail, a Lombard, Ill., firm that owns a data base of 86
- million households that supplies the direct-marketing industry.
-
- But the public is clearly concerned about electronic privacy. In
- January Lotus Development Corporation, a Cambridge, Mass., software
- company, and Equifax, Inc., an Atlanta-based credit bureau, withdrew
- plans to market Lotus Marketplace on compact discs after some 30,000
- people asked that their names be removed from the files. This data
- base contains demographic information on about 120 million
- individuals.
-
- The public debate over privacy could grow still more heated if
- telephone companies try to market their internal data bases of
- information about residential customers. Limited attempts to do so
- have sometimes met with resistance. Recently New England Telephone
- and New York Telephone dropped a service offering residential and
- business directory listings when hundreds of thousands of customers
- asked that their names be taken off the lists.
-
- Legislation may help stem abuses. A public outcry may force companies
- to lay low. But the irresistible lure of knowing name, phone number
- and lifestyle means that computerized telemarketing is here to stay.
- Caveat salutator: let the caller beware.
-