At A Glance
M3 MI's MARS Consumer Health Study empowers healthcare advertisers to create personalized campaigns by offering nuanced audience insights. By layering behavioral and engagement attributes, MARS enables accurate targeting, driving stronger engagement, improved ad recall, and measurable campaign outcomes across connected TV (CTV), social, and display channels.In our Ask the Expert Series, we interview leaders from our partner organizations who are helping lead their brands to new heights in AdTech. Today’s interview is with Dan Lynch a Senior Manager, Insights and Analysis at M3 MI, the company behind the MARS Consumer Health Study and MARS Audiences.
Audience impact across health vertical
Which healthcare advertisers see the greatest impact from MARS audiences? Could you share an example of how health marketers have successfully utilized your data to achieve specific campaign goals, such as patient engagement, awareness, or adherence?
We’re seeing a clear shift in healthcare advertising away from generic, one-size-fits-all campaigns. With MARS, advertisers from pharmaceuticals, over-the-counter (OTC), health insurance companies, and hospitals are seeing the greatest impact by defining highly specific patient and caregiver personas and using those insights to build personalized media plans and deliver unique messaging by segment. As a result, our partners are seeing stronger engagement, increased ad recall, and more effective outcomes because they’re speaking directly to what matters most to each audience.

Media agencies who utilize the MARS Consumer Health Study to build their strategic marketing plans are seeing a great impact by then taking those strategic targets and activating them. Those who are not activating those audiences are really missing out on bringing their strategy to consumer screens.
Building stronger health campaigns with advanced segmentation
What key health-related audience segments does MARS offer?
While other competitors may offer caregiver segments by condition, we go further by layering engagement levels, such as caregivers actively involved in medical decisions or those who regularly discuss care with physicians. Similarly, for patients, we don’t stop at identifying over 60 health conditions; we add behavioral dimensions like whether they’re proactive in managing their health or primarily doctor-led. These nuanced attributes allow advertisers to craft personalized campaigns that resonate on a much deeper level. We can also look at patients that are willing to pay more for an Rx not covered by their insurance, which has been a trend with GLP-1s.

How can health advertisers use these segments to craft more personalized and effective campaigns?
Advertisers can use MARS’ advanced segmentation to move beyond simple demographics or condition-based targeting by layering behavioral and engagement attributes for greater relevance and impact. With MARS, a single condition can be the starting point for building multiple test-and-learn audiences to identify prime prospects. For example, GLP-1 patients have diverse treatment journeys; some pay out-of-pocket due to lack of insurance coverage, others switch brands for cost savings, and some purchase directly through patient websites. Each of these scenarios represents a distinct audience that can be created using MARS data, enabling highly personalized activation strategies.

Data sourcing and quality
How does MARS source and curate consumer data relevant to health audiences?
Our audiences are survey-based, first-party data built from the MARS Consumer Health Study and Kantar’s trusted LifePoints Panel. We do not use medical claims, insurance data, or personal health records; our data is 100% self-reported. The study has over 5,000 different healthcare data points used to create syndicated and custom audiences. Our syndicated audiences are curated based on marketplace trends (e.g., we’ve added more information on GLP-1s), client feedback for enhancements to the MARS study, and reaching audiences medical claims data cannot (e.g., caregivers, treatment satisfaction, act based on healthcare advertising).
What data quality standards do you follow, and how do you ensure consistency and reliability, especially for sensitive or regulated health-related data?
M3 MI is part of M3 Global Research which is committed to transparency and high-quality data with ISO (International Organization for Standardization) certifications. These certifications demonstrate that our research practices align with international regulations.
In a crowded data marketplace, what unique attributes set MARS apart, particularly for health advertisers?
We don’t just identify patients or caregivers, we uncover their motivations, preferences, and behaviors, enabling advertisers to build highly targeted and meaningful audiences that competitors simply can’t replicate.

The MARS Consumer Health Study offers an extensive range of data for audience building, spanning healthy living profiles, OTC, vitamins, and prescription purchasing behaviors, as well as media consumption habits and lifestyle activities.
How MARS ensures regulatory compliance
What measures does MARS take to maintain data privacy and regulatory compliance?
We take a privacy-first approach to exceed all Network Advertising Initiative (NAI), Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), and California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) regulations. Since the data to build our audiences is self-reported via the MARS Consumer Health Study, we do not use PII data. We also take the following steps to maintain data privacy and compliance:
- State regulatory compliance: We proactively exclude survey respondents for audience seeds from certain states with consumer privacy laws that preclude audience data use
- Consent and transparency: Survey panelists are required to double-opt-in to all data usage terms before participating in the MARS study. Our panel partner’s privacy policy clearly explains use cases such as look-alike modeling and audience creation.
- Privacy-safe modeling: Data is scaled using propensity models built from an offline, people-based national consumer database. All seed survey data is removed from final models to eliminate any risk of re-identification, ensuring respondents are never targeted directly based on their survey responses.
Click here for full details on M3 MI’s privacy policy
How do these efforts help advertisers navigate an evolving regulatory landscape while ensuring ethical standards?
By relying solely on double opt-in, self-reported data, and removing identifiers, we guarantee that our approach is 100% privacy-safe and compliant. This gives advertisers confidence that our audiences are built on ethical, transparent practices without compromising consumer trust.
Success stories
Could you share a recent success story where a health advertiser achieved significant campaign improvements using M3 MI’s MARS data? What were the key factors behind that success, such as ROI, engagement lift, or conversion rates?
One recent success story involved a diabetes medical device advertiser trying to breakthrough in a cluttered marketing landscape. Their initial broad, non-personalized media campaign delivered lower than expected digital engagement. To address this, the company conducted segmentation research and identified three distinct patient personas. However, the research lacked actionable media insights and a way to effectively reach these personas in the digital world.

That’s where MARS data came in. Using the MARS Consumer Health Study, M3 MI mapped the existing personas to uncover each group’s unique media habits. These insights enabled the media agency to design tailored strategies for each persona. Additionally, M3 MI built custom, propensity-modeled persona audiences for activation across CTV, social, and display channels, ensuring precise targeting and personalized messaging. This strategic shift to personalized persona marketing transformed the campaign from a one-size-fits-all approach to a patient-first model. The company saw a significant lift in website engagement and a measurable increase in ROI.
Resources to maximize your campaigns
Where can readers find additional resources, case studies, or insights to learn more about MARS audience solutions?
Interested healthcare marketers can explore additional resources by visiting our Audience Solutions page. There, they’ll find a comprehensive overview, a detailed taxonomy of syndicated audiences, and other helpful materials. For personalized support or further information on customized audiences, they can also reach us directly at info@M3-MI.com.
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About our expert

Dan Lynch
Senior Manager, Insights and Analysis, M3 MI
Dan Lynch is a seasoned leader in strategic marketing insights and activation with over 20 years at healthcare focused media agencies. At M3 MI, he helps pharmaceutical companies, media partners, and agencies leverage our syndicated research to address critical business needs. Dan is also a lead of the MARS addressable audience initiative, applying his expertise in developing unique audience personas from our data and activating them across programmatic channels.

About M3 MI
M3 MI, a division of M3 USA, is the leading provider of unbiased syndicated research for the healthcare industry. We specialize in media measurement, advertising intelligence, and audience insights and activation. Leveraging robust datasets, rigorous methodologies, and decades of healthcare expertise, M3 MI delivers a deeper understanding of patients, caregivers, and healthcare professionals, their behaviors, attitudes, media habits, and communication preferences. These insights empower marketers to make informed, data-driven decisions.
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The UK digital advertising market is worth £13.44bn, an increase year-on-year of 15%, reveals the 2018 IAB UK & PwC Digital Adspend Study. Report highlights The majority of all growth is coming from smartphone advertising, which has increased by £1.65bn (35%) from 2017. Smartphone advertising now represents 51% of all UK digital ad spend, up from 45% in 2017. Video is now the largest display format (£2307m), overtaking standard display banners (£1486m). Outstream/social in-feed has increased its majority in total video spend, now occupying a share of 57%, up from 52% in 2017. Social revenue now represents 23% of all digital ad spend. Growth is predicted to slow during 2019, with 5% estimated growth (+9% digital, +11% display, +9% search) compared to 15% in 2018. 2018 marks the tipping point towards a mobile-first ecosystem “For the past few years, industry commentators have been hailing the year of mobile. Each January the predictions come and the waiting commences for evidence to mark a tipping point, a shift to a mobile-first digital ad ecosystem. Well, drumroll… it was 2018! The latest Adspend report from IAB UK and PwC reveals that spend on smartphones outstripped spend on desktop for the first time last year. Brands spent 51% of total spend (which stands at £13.44 billion) on smartphones in 2018, up from 45% in 2017 – a significant milestone in the evolution of digital advertising. “This evidence shows that advertisers are increasingly thinking mobile-first. Growth in investment has historically lagged behind the amount of time spent on the device and we expect to see growth continue at a rapid pace to keep up with audience behaviour – two thirds of time spent online is now on mobile, according to UKOM. Other areas of growth highlighted by the report include video, which accounts for 44% of the total display market, while mobile video now makes up 51% of smartphone display. 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OpenAudience promises the targeting capabilities of a walled garden but without the restrictionsOpenX has lifted the lid on a targeting solution it claims will offer people-based advertising opportunities outside of the industry’s walled gardens such as Facebook and Google. Dubbed OpenAudience, the supply-side programmatic player claims the new offering is powered by proprietary data assets and is supplemented by data partnerships with partners such as LiveRamp and Tapad, a part of Experian. Initially available in the U.S., OpenAudience has a user graph of 240 million monthly users and is currently being tested with multiple marketers with a general rollout planned for the third quarter of 2019. Speaking with Adweek, OpenX CEO Tim Cadogan said the rollout would help differentiate it among its peers as for the most part ad exchanges have marketed themselves based on their impression count, not necessarily addressable audiences. Compare this with Google and Facebook, both of whom account for almost 60% of U.S. ad spend, although this is disproportionate to the amount of time spent with their properties, according to Cadogan. “The thing that has given Facebook and Google so much power is that they have people-based systems [for ad targeting] that are simple to use and operate with a massive scale that are effective, and programmatic hasn’t kept pace with that,” he said. Cadogan cited the findings of a further study by eMarketer, which indicated that marketers are increasingly reliant on such walled garden players for their online inventory supply with the latest launch geared towards capitalizing on that. The latest launch is the culmination of the California-based company’s recent strategic overhaul, namely its attempts to get to grips with an identity-based solution that provides options outside of the walled gardens. Also speaking with Adweek was Todd Parsons, OpenX’s chief product officer, who offered further insight into how OpenAudience operates including how it uses its recently sealed relationship with Google Cloud Platform and machine learning to ape the efficacy of walled garden advertising solutions. “We had to build a matching technology, which made it possible for us to talk about monthly active users instead of talking about cookies or devices,” he explained. “And it took several quarters of staffing up with the right people from the consumer data and identity space.” OpenAudience’s matching technology works by using the identity and cookie matching capabilities of cross-device specialist Tapad and data onboarder LiveRamp to formulate a persistent, deterministic ID which can then be used to match advertisers with audiences on its ad exchange. “So, the idea isn’t for us as a company to put our future into one provider,” added Parsons. “It is to provide a matching technology that uses the best of several.” OpenAudience will also include involve additional tie-ups to offering further demographic information on the 240 million monthly U.S. users such as location, etc., which is currently in testing. “We felt like we needed to be very different about enabling marketers and publishers to activate against that data,” added Parsons. He further added that OpenX wants to rival Facebook’s levels of service when it comes to helping publishers monetize audiences on the social network, except this time on the open web. “No one has actually pushed identity and consumer data into the hands of publishers in a way that you might unify the view of audiences across many websites.” OpenX’s Cadogan summed up the OpenAudience offering and how it may look to advertisers when he said, “Imagine the open web is one publisher, and this lets buyers look at it as a single entity and market to them accordingly.” Contact us today

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