What is GDPR?
GDPR (General Data Protection Regulatory) is a new digital
privacy regulation that came into force on May 25, 2018. It standardizes a wide
range of different privacy laws across the European Union, with a single
centralized regulation to protect users in all member states. Companies also
have to regularly conduct privacy impact assessments, strengthen their consent
to use personal data, document how they use personal data, and improve the way
they transmit data violations (Ghosh, 2018). Although members of the European
Union enforce the law, sanctions include companies outside the European Union.
Basically
GDPR is a regulation to protect personal information such as email, phone number,
bank detail, location etc. Companies who do not
comply with the regulation on personal data are subject to criminal sanctions
of up to 4% of its annual earnings or 20 million euros (whichever is greater) (Bergen,
2018).
What will be the effect of GDPR on Marketing?
GDPR appears to affect marketing in three areas; ``data
collection``, ``data storage and processing``, and ``data destruction``.
Data Collection:
``Any organization which attracts people to its website and wants
to collect data via a form must communicate clearly to that person what the
data is going to be used for`` (What is the GDPR?
And What Does it Mean for the Marketing Industry, 2019).
Data Storage and Processing:
Use Limitation: Companies can use the data they collect and
store for clear and legitimate purposes. They cannot use this data for purposes
other than those they reported while collecting their data.
Security: After the personal data are collected, this data;
should be kept in accordance with the security criteria defined in GDPR against
theft, improper use, accidental deletion, disclosure, alteration.
Data Destruction:
If
an individual requests the company to delete their personal data, the company
is obliged to delete this data as soon as possible. If they have shared this data
with other institutions, they have to make sure that all data have been deleted
from their systems.
Reference:
Bergen, B., 2018. GDPR: What All Marketers Need
To Know. [online]
Salesforce Blog. Available at:
<https://www.salesforce.com/blog/2018/04/gdpr-what-marketers-need-to-know.html>
[Accessed 16 June 2020].
Blog.hubspot.com. 2019. What Is The GDPR? And What
Does It Mean For The Marketing Industry?. [online] Available at:
<https://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/what-is-the-gdpr> [Accessed 16 June
2020].
Ghosh, D., 2018. How GDPR Will Transform
Digital Marketing. [online] Harvard
Business Review. Available at:
<https://hbr.org/2018/05/how-gdpr-will-transform-digital-marketing>
[Accessed 16 June 2020].
very interesting blog.
ReplyDeleteWell written..
ReplyDeleteThis is the one of the best blog, i have ever seen. Cemre you are the best.
ReplyDeleteUseful information and well written.
ReplyDeleteFinally a good piece of work about marketing. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteI have a question about deleting personal data. Is it legal if we truly anonymised the data rather than completely delete it? Does GDPR cover anonymised data? Thanks in advance!
ReplyDeleteThanks for your question. The anonymised data will not fall within the scope of the GDPR. Therefore, anonymising data could be encouraged for limiting the risk. Once data is anonymised and individuals are no longer identifiable.
DeleteGreat content, very well written!
ReplyDeleteVery informative blog, thanks for providing information.
ReplyDeleteInteresting topic ! thanks for sharing Cemre..
ReplyDeleteYour blogs are quite interesting Cemre
ReplyDeleteWell written, thanks..
ReplyDelete