4.4 Core findings in publications derived from qualitative analysisAlthough the analyzed publications are heterogeneous in their approaches to LBA, the analysis revealed several core findings that are shared among several publications. Overall, the results suggest that consumers may perceive LBA positively if they receive it at the opportune moment. LBA is assumed to be most useful in leisure time (Banerjee and Dholakia 2008; Conti et al. 2012; Penev and Wong 2009) and in situations when the consumer is ready for consumption such as during shopping, during lunch break, or during ‘niche’ times such as travel time of commuters (Banerjee and Dholakia 2008; Conti et al. 2012; Cremonese et al. 2010; Kim et al. 2011a). Interestingly, advertisements are perceived more positively if the consumer finds himself or herself at a public place instead of being at home or at work (Banerjee and Dholakia 2008; Conti et al. 2012; Cremonese et al. 2010). In situations when the consumer is not ready for consumption (e.g., at work), LBA is perceived rather negatively. Recent empirical studies (e.g., Luo et al. 2014) are performed on a large-scale basis and reveal interesting effects when mobile targeting strategies are performed; results show that balancing of temporal and geographical mobile targeting strategies is crucial when designing mobile targeting campaigns.