Content build showing the process to create a marketing email

What is geofencing marketing?

Geofencing marketing is a location-based strategy that establishes virtual boundaries around specific real-world areas. 

When a mobile device enters or exits these predefined "geofences," it triggers targeted marketing actions, such as delivering personalized advertisements, notifications, or offers.

An illustration of a coffee shop
An infographic showing GPS, bluetooth, and beacons as ways to track customer location for geotargeting, geofenching, and beaconing location-based marketing.
An infographic describing how geofenching can help business's bottom lines by increasing sales and loyalty.
Geofencing is compatible with 92% of smartphones, and 53% of shoppers visited a retailer after receiving a location-based alert.

Geofencing FAQs

Geofencing is a location-based marketing technology that uses GPS, Wi-Fi, or cellular data to create a virtual geographic boundary, triggering a pre-programmed action when a mobile device enters or exits the boundary.

Businesses set up virtual perimeters around specific locations (e.g., stores, competitor locations), and when a customer with a geofencing-enabled app enters or leaves, they receive targeted messages or promotions.

Benefits include highly relevant and timely promotions, increased foot traffic to physical stores, enhanced customer engagement, and personalized experiences based on real-time location.

Industries such as retail, restaurants, automotive, real estate, live sports, and event management commonly use geofencing for targeted advertising and customer engagement.

Geofencing relies on user consent for location services, and reputable practices focus on aggregate data and non-identifiable targeting to maintain privacy.

Geofencing triggers actions based on entering/exiting a precise virtual boundary, while geotargeting delivers content based on a broader geographic area (e.g., city, zip code).