Three of the analyzed publications (i.e., Ho 2012; Cremonese et al. 2010; Tussyadiah 2012) indicate that specific offers such as discount tickets are higher appreciated than informative advertisements. Moreover, findings suggest that consumers use location-based services mainly because they enjoy doing so (Ho 2012), which may imply that entertaining advertisements may be better accepted by consumers than informative ones. Actually, the perceived benefit is argued as being the most important driver for mobile advertising from the consumer’s perspective. Advertisers should therefore particularly consider the relevance and the benefit of anadvertisement for the targeted audience, and only provide meaningful advertisements based on the gathered data (Haddadi et al. 2010; Merisavo et al. 2007; Conti et al. 2012; Unni and Harmon 2007). Furthermore, LBA should rather be ope rationalized as pull advertising, because the perceived benefit of an advertisement is higher and privacy concerns are lower compared to push advertising (Unni and Harmon 2007; Li and Du 2012; Conti et al. 2012; D'Souza and Ananthanarayana 2012). Generally, having the consumer’s consent for delivering advertisements increases the attention to and the perception of those messages delivered (Leek and Christodoulides 2009; Bulander et al. 2005).