Archive for the ‘Mobile Marketing’ Category

Interactive Media with 2D mobile barcodes

Friday, May 16th, 2008

Mobiel 2D barcodes marketingAfter having received more and more request from businesses that are interested in mobile 2D barcodes, I have devoted some time to give a practical explanation what 2D barcodes entail for making media interactive by using a mobile device.

To basic thing is to create the data matrix and QR codes (2D mobile barcode) to link print media to the mobile web. What does this mean?

It is now possible to make traditional print media interactive by linking it directly to the mobile web. Our solution generates a unique data matrix code and QR code for each mobile web page created related to the printed information or advertisement. This code can be printed on advertisements, magazine articles, or even posters to provide an immediate call to action. When the 2D mobile barcode is scanned with the camera of a mobile phone it links straight through to the related mobile webpage - where you can; get further information and register interest, to a competition entry, buy concert tickets or other products directly with the mobile phone.

Datamatrix and QR codes are 2D barcodes consisting of a totally unique pattern of black and white squares that act as a quick link through to a specific mobile web page. When using InMovil Media to create and publish QR codes, these codes are automatically generated and can then be printed wherever required. Once the codes are scanned by the mobile device, consumers can quickly and easily access promoted content any time and any where they are. And unlike SMS or MMS triggers it is a free service.

Adding Data matrix or QR codes to print media meets a market demand for offering an easy and effective way to facilitate instant customer interaction with consumers on the move for a truly interactive marketing campaign. For example a consumer, waiting for the bus, a train journey or simply reading a paper or magazine becomes more interesting with the ability to purchase products, respond to articles or enter competitions without having to be back in front of a PC and search again for the product or information. And for your business it does not only provides an immediate call to action but a new and effective way to directly measure the success of print campaigns. Besides print media the codes can also be put on your normal website, if you want that people bookmark you mobile version of the website via this barcode.

Consumers love the opportunity for instant response and discovery of what this new technology can provide. This adds a completely new dimension to print media, which from our experience is good news for marketing campaigns.

Contact us to see how we can help your business use 2D mobile barcodes in an interactive way.

Mobile Marketing Tips and Best Practices

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

U.S. brands have integrated mobile marketing into their traditional advertising campaigns, CRM programs and Call Centers in order to increase higher response, enhance loyalty and improve customer relations. When applied correctly, targeted and creatively, mobile marketing gives exceptional results.

“Most people today use a cell phone. Lack of cell phone spam translates into a major channel of communications without the noise of traditional channels,” explained John Spagnuolo, President of the New Media Institute.

“The closer and the more targeted you connect with consumers within their lifestyle, the better your results will be,” noted Bas Vervoort, Director of InMovil Media. “When properly and creatively executed, mobile marketing can increase traditional response rates by 5-20%, Moreover it delivers a higher-level of customer service and enhances loyalty.”
Mobile Marketing Tips

1. Offer an incentive for individuals to opt-in to your mobile campaign.
2. Segment your messaging. Mobile technology makes this task easy and seamless.
3. Measure and refine your mobile marketing program in real-time.

A mobile marketing program may include the following features:
* Lead capture
* Additional touch-points to traditional advertising campaigns
* Pre/during/post event marketing
* Promotions, sweepstakes & contests
* Coupons & discounts
* Lifestyle, loyalty & community brand building
* Multi-media content creation and distribution
* Mobile videos
* Location based marketing
* Mobile polling and voting
* Sales and distribution programs
* Segmented broadcast messaging
* Web and email integration

If you want to know how you can use these mobile marketing tips for your company, please contact us.

Mobile Marketing Fantasy Or Reality

Thursday, April 3rd, 2008

I came across this article by Kenneth Hein made for Brandweek

It gives a good overview of mobile marketing, what can be used in reality and especially the so called “fantasies”, which appear with some irony not to be fantasies.

Those who doubt that mobile marketing hasn’t made headway might want to go amp themselves.

Among the brands that ponied up millions for a piece of the Super Bowl this year was PepsiCo beverage Amp Energy. While its 15-second TV spots didn’t venture far from the proven realms of Big Game locker-room humor—one featured an overweight truck driver starting a stalled-out car via jumper cables hooked up to his nipples—a quieter, related effort was reaching much further out. How far? Well, to people who might not even have had the game on at all. As part of its NFL deal, Amp Energy sponsored Sprint’s exclusive Super Bowl mobile channel, which allowed it to run ads via cell phone. A photo of the Amp can materialized on cell phone screens along with music, swirling green flames and the tagline “Go Amp Yourself.” (Hopefully, none of those cell phone users elected to do it with jumper cables.)

When a Super Bowl ad effort stretches into the cellular realm, it’s surely a sign that mobile marketing has arrived, right? After all, even though the third-screen spot was a timid boil-down of the in-your-face TV version, the very idea of adapting a commercial for mobile distribution would have seemed like an alien concept only a few years ago.

Today it is a reality, sort of. Around this time 12 months ago, experts were busy touting mobile marketing as the Next Big Thing. It wasn’t. And not a whole lot is different. Mega brands like Pepsi and Burger King are still toe-dipping in the mobile pool, testing various forms of advertising and promos even as the bulk of their spending dollars go elsewhere.

As mobile expert John Hadl puts it: “It’s hard to get a real read on the value of mobile when you’re only spending $25,000 to $50,000 on it.”

But things are beginning to change. Mobile marketing is “headed in the right direction,” said John Vail, director of the interactive marketing group at Pepsi-Cola North America, Purchase, N.Y. “It’s just taking a lot longer than people thought.” Mobile analytics firms such as U.K.-based Bango are helping companies measure mobile Web site traffic, what devices recipients used and the countries they’re in. In February, 58 million mobile subscribers reported that they’d already been exposed to mobile advertising, per San Francisco-based Nielsen Mobile (a unit of Nielsen Co., which also owns Brandweek). While that’s only 23% of today’s total mobile subscribers, that number will spike as marketers’ mobile experiments continue to grow. And Hadl, who serves as managing partner of Beverly Hills-based BrandInHand, overseer of Procter & Gamble’s mobile efforts, added that a threshold is approaching: “Once there’s direct proof of ROI,” he said, “the spend will shift faster than the industry can handle.”

That might happen as soon as two years from now. Forrester Research forecasts that mobile-marketing spending in the U.S. will surge from the $270 million it stands at now to $405 million in 2009. Then it all goes exponential, doubling every year through 2012, at which point the Cambridge, Mass.-based research firm predicts mobile marketing will be worth $2.8 billion.

Marketers view the mobile marketing explosion as “inevitable,” said Bill Jones, president of Atlanta-based mobile Internet platform provider Air2Web, which counts Starbucks and UPS as clients. Some are “really trying to accelerate” the channel because “properly used it is the most effective mechanism to interact with customers and prospects.”

All of which begs the question: How can marketers profitably use mobile devices to deliver their brand messages right now?

What follows are some of the answers. Like many emergent ideas in the tech realm, mobile marketing’s birth has been attended by as much fantasy as reality, and marketers are learning the painstaking (and, at times, just painful) differences between the two. For instance, studies repeatedly show that many consumers don’t like to get ads on their phones. (A mere 10% of mobile data users deem ads received via PDAs to be acceptable, according to Nielsen Mobile.) At the same time, a third of the same respondents said they’d be OK with seeing ads, so long as the spots offset their mobile bills—say, via free minutes. “That,” said Nielsen Mobile corporate marketing vp Paul Okimoto, “is where we’re starting to see an uptick.”

No doubt, we’ll start to see many more of those. For now, here’s the story on the mobile-marketing phenom today—both fantasy and reality.


REALITY
Customers dig mobile games.
Videogames were once synonymous with geekdom, but one glance at who’s using a Wii these days (including AARP members and the physically disabled, at last check) shows how dated that stereotype is. This love affair has carried over to mobile devices. In fact, some watchers are now predicting that the global revenue from mobile games will eventually surpass that of traditional console and handheld versions. According to U.K.-based consultancy Understanding & Solutions, mobile gaming is expected to hit $6 billion by 2011.

Some brands are already prepared to embrace this passion by offering free downloadable games for mobile devices that keep their brand front and center. The latest is BK City, debuting April 21, an elaborate game with three worlds (five games in each) ranging from a castle to a BK drive-thru. It will be available across all carriers except for Verizon. POP, online ads and mobile ads, of course, will support the effort. BK City is the latest creation of Mobliss, Seattle, whose prior efforts include Nickelodeon’s Rugrats Food Fight and Brady Bunch Kung Fu.

“A lot of what mobile content advertisers throw out there is cheesy,” said Tia Lang, director of media and interactive for the Miami-based chain. But, “as players progress, our game gets more difficult. It’s fun, funny and relevant to our target.”


FANTASY
People will never use their phones to buy stuff.
Think again. Remember when everyone was worried about using credit cards online? Even some tech-savvy shoppers wrung their hands over cyberthieves stealing their identities and draining their savings accounts. (Psst—it rarely happens.) Even as those same worries have swirled around mobile banking and on-the-go transactions, the truth is that a quarter of cell users with mobile Web access have already trusted their handheld devices to do their shopping, according Harris Interactive, Rochester, N.Y. Sixteen percent already use mobile banking services and one-in-five respondents hope their phone becomes a mobile wallet.

Smarter brands are beginning to respond. In January, Pizza Hut began allowing U.S. consumers to order from any of its 6,200 stores using the mobile Web or text messaging. The chain said it expects half its sales to come online or via mobile devices within the next five years. Papa John’s began offering the ability to text in orders last November.

“If privacy and security issues can be caged, mobile banking and mobile wallet services could launch the next leg up for mobile operators,” predicted Joseph Porus, vp of Harris Interactive’s technology practice. Rajeev Raman, CEO of mywaves, a mobile video destination whose clients include MBW, concurs. In the near future, he said, “purchasing movie tickets, fast food and music via mobile phones will be considered normal, everyday behavior.”


REALITY
Convenience works.
Skip the cleverisms; brands that give consumers information that makes their lives easier are the ones that’ll benefit. “That’s why we bought the phone in the first place,” Hadl said.

Starbucks, for example, makes it easy to find the nearest latte with a mobile-based store locator. When is that blue turtleneck you ordered going to show up? UPS will let you track the whereabouts of your package on your mobile device.

“Too many people pigeonhole mobile marketing as just being ringtones or wallpapers,” said Air2Web’s Jones, whose company created both applications. Brands that sponsor services that tell users things like where the is nearest baby-changing station or where is the store where I can buy what I need, will thrive, added Hadl of BrandinHand. “Soon,” he said, “mobile devices won’t simply be a push medium.”


FANTASY
Texting (aka SMS) isn’t effective.
Like hell it isn’t. While many are looking at mobile video, the mobile Web and other features, the simple, text-only brand campaign often still is what works the best. Why? Because even the oldest, most primitive cell phones out there have the technology that lets people receive a text promo and respond to one. Plus, the practice of text messaging has already been widely adopted.

In December, 1-800-Free411 attached ads sent to users who opted in to receive text horoscopes, diet tips and other information from a company called Limbo. While the free-information service usually gets about 40,000 to 50,000 new callers daily, that volume shot up to nearly 80,000 a day after the mobile ads ran. Overall, Limbo received a 7.1% response rate for text ads it ran for its clients in the fourth quarter.

“The forgotten technology of SMS will be a much bigger factor in digital spends than anyone is predicting,” said Jonathan Linner, CEO of Limbo, Burlingame, Calif., who’s amused that so many marketers are buzzing about putting a movie or banner ad on a cell phone. Those people, he said, “Don’t’ get it yet. You’ll get 10 times better performance from SMS.”


REALITY
The iPhone’s changed everything.
One of the biggest hang-ups (pun intended) for mobile marketers is the lack of “high” in the tech. We’re talking about antideluvian cell phones that everybody was carrying around prior to last summer, when the Apple iPhone hit stores. In January, CEO Steve Jobs had promised the iPhone would “reinvent” telecommunications. Some disagreed. Some still do. But mobile-marketing advocates generally aren’t among them. The average iPhone user over the age of 18 is five times more likely to explore the mobile Web and 11 times more likely to use mobile video or TV, per Nielsen Mobile. An iPhone-toting American also is 70% more likely to use SMS.

“Look no further than the iPhone for proof that improving the device and user interface can radically increase media consumption,” said John Najarian, svp-media and business development at the Comcast Entertainment Group, who oversees E!’s mobile page.

Better still, the iPhone’s popularity has meant lower-price imitators—triggering a new generation of “smart phones” that experts like Chetan Sharma, co-author of the just-released book Mobile Advertising, believe will make up as many as 20% of the domestic market in two years. (More powerful data pipelines as well as all-you-can-eat data plans will help, too.) Thanks to the iPhone, Sharma said, Americans finally think the cell phone “is more than just something you talk with.”


FANTASY
It’s getting easier to run mobile marketing programs.
Dream on. It still takes about two months to get a major carrier like AT&T or Verizon to approve a text program. And that, according to Gene Keenan, vp-mobile services at Isobar, San Francisco, and vice chairman of the Mobile Marketing Assn., Denver, is “ridiculous.”

“You can by a URL and have a Web site up in two hours,” Keenan said. “It’s still way too hard for brands and agencies to do mobile.” Even worse: “Until it’s easier for big brands to participate, you won’t see the big money.”

Keenan and experts like him have likened carriers to walled gardens: nice to be part of, but good luck getting in. They exert authoritarian control over their on-deck content (that’s the proprietary stuff available only to subscribers) and move with Soviet-style bureaucratic slowness in approving marketing programs.

For instance, WAP sites and banner ads have to be customized by handset and by carrier. “It introduces a lot of complexity,” Sharma said. “You can’t press a button and have a program launch nationwide. You have to negotiate everything and get your content approved.”

But stay tuned; fantasy might turn to reality by this time next year. “You can get over the wall,” Hadl said. “You’ll get hot and sweaty doing it, but you can get over. AOL already proved that this [walled approach] is a model for failure.”


REALITY
The mobile ecosystem is evolving rapidly.
Quick as the pace of technology is, sometimes it never seems quick enough. But mobile advocates hamstrung by tools that haven’t kept pace with their marketing dreams may soon be doing a high-tech jig. In November, Google announced Android, a new Linux-based operating system for mobile. Microsoft just inked a deal with Nokia that’ll bring its Silverlight platform to mobile. And this quarter, Yahoo! will launch what it calls onePlace, a mobile bookmarking tool that will allow better control of information. These developments come on the heels of AOL’s ‘07 purchase of Third Screen Media, a company that serves banner ads to mobile Web sites. Nokia bought the mobile agency Enpocket last year, too.

All of it, said Sharma, means that “there’s a cautious optimism” out there. “Optimism, because of the uniqueness and reach mobile presents. Caution because of the enormous fragmentation in the industry.”


FANTASY
There is one killer application.
Just like Gilda Radner and Dan Aykroyd debated whether New Shimmer was a floor wax or a dessert topping (it’s both!) on Saturday Night Live, each marketer seems to have his own miracle claim for mobile marketing. And so far, nobody’s quite nailed it.

Take GPS-enabled initiatives, which some see as the potential holy grail of mobile marketing. CBS Mobile announced a test earlier in the year that’ll pinpoint ads to customers based on where they happen to be standing, and Burger King’s Lang has been lovingly nurturing the idea of “serving customers an ad at lunchtime, asking them if they’re hungry.” The problem? “Those kinds of things are fantasy.”

Hardly the only one. “My fantasy is offering Pepsi Smash [music programming] as video-on-demand optimized for the third screen for millions to view,” Vail said. P&G, General Mills and others are currently in test with Cellfire, a company whose technology allows customers to store e-coupons on their cell phones.

There’s the dream of direct-to-consumer mobile video, alive in the mind of BMW Mini as it kicked off a program with mywaves in January. Still others are excited about mobile search; more than 46 million used their phones to search for information in the third quarter of last year, per Nielsen Mobile.

Alex Muller will tell you that GPS-driven mobile marketing won’t be a fantasy for much longer (then again, he’s CEO of GPShopper, which enables mobile-using customers to track down the best deals on stuff they want to buy.) “There will be a point,” he said, “where flipping through a paper circular won’t make sense.”


REALITY
There needs to be standards.
Mobile marketing is still a lot like the Wild West: a landscape of many players of various reputes, each a competitor peddling his wares and promises. “We need to develop more standards to reduce the friction out there,” said Jordan Berman, executive director of media innovation at AT&T Mobility, New York. “There needs to be more uniformity about how programs get off the ground. I’m on the MMA board of directors and we all agree it is a confusing marketplace out there.”

Then again, people said much the same thing about the Web itself when it was new. The growing pains, Berman said, are natural: “Online is like a toddler; mobile marketing is still in the womb.”

 Contact us to see how we can make these Fantasies and Realities make work for your company.

Improving Portable Media Players Will Expand Mobile Marketing

Thursday, March 27th, 2008

JupiterResearch says that it has found that introducing portable media players (PMP’s) with internet browsing capabilities are likely to stimulate significant growth in the amount of people accessing the mobile web and will create additional opportunity for mobile advertisers, who are expected to spend $2.2 billion on mobile messaging, display ads, and search via mobile technology by the year 2012.

Adoption of internet browsing on mobile phones is expected to climb from 16 percent at the end of 2007 to 19 percent at the end of 2008.

Their new study was completed in cooperation with mobile advertising service provider AdMob.

According to the report, the majority of page views and advertising impressions on mobile phones and portable media players are on a small screen with a mini-browser. Impressions and click-through rates (CTR) per device, however, are higher for mobile devices with full browsers.

“Mobility is adding a time and space dimension to media and advertising that has the potential to drive up CPM’s significantly. We are finding ads with location tags are selling at five to tenfold premiums over basic ads,” said Julie Ask, Vice President at JupiterResearch and lead author of the report. “The ability to tag users with location, demographics, and behavioral data complemented by devices that support rich media to avoid having their role in the advertising value chain made obsolete must continued to push forward.”

In order to be truly successful, mobile carriers must continue to enable access with affordable portable media players, mobile devices and innovative business models while protecting their stake in the value chain by adding information layers to user profiles.

“New mobile devices such as portable media players available on the market with dramatically improved user interfaces and capable of fully rendering HTML web sites are driving consumer demand for Internet access on mobile devices,” said David Schatsky, President of JupiterResearch. “Carriers should continue to enable consumers by rolling out more devices that look like portable media players at affordable prices – perhaps even as a second device – and continue to break down economic barriers of pricing and application restrictions to consumer adoption.”

 Contact Us to see how we can help your company to access the mobile internet.

Your Mobile Marketing Score Card for 2007

Wednesday, November 14th, 2007

As our matriculants currently wrestle under the yoke of final examinations and the fear of failure, it is the time of year to take stock and measure our own performance in mobile marketing, least of all to ensure that we head in the right direction for 2008.

A simple yes or no reply will soon show you where you fall on the scale of things related to mobile and marketing.

Have you acknowledged that the consumer is in control?

Is your brand being built on a truly interactive dialogue with consumers, recognising that they have the power to control how, when and where they interact with you?

Have you taken steps to ensure that the efforts of your agency are tied to client brand performance?

Has your agency delivered some big, game changing ideas this year?

Has your marketing tapped into social networking, word-of-mouth or local event?

Have you used the Internet, mobile and other new media forms to reach and engage reluctant consumers?

Have you become involved in, or embraced the role of advancing national priorities such as diversity, education and health?

Has your marketing department been overhauled in favour of enhancing creativity, strategic alignment and brand stewardship?

Have you insisted that research become more aligned with critical brand accountability goals?

Have you blown up the back room?

Have you set in motion a process of continuous marketing reinvention?

The issue is whether or not one requires a 100% pass mark for this exam. If you indeed do have full marks, then well done. You have grasped the nettle and turned problems in opportunities. If you have not performed convincingly during this year, then best not show your report card to anyone and resolve to work smarter in 2008. Contact us, and we can will make sure next year you will score 100%

Going the M-ad way

Monday, November 12th, 2007

The Mobile advertising (M-ad) space is abuzz as industry players vie for a share of this new marketing frontier.

Mobiles becoming 24/7 companions has opened up opportunities to design campaigns aimed at specific sets of users. And the benefits are evident for the stakeholders — visibility at cost-effective rates for advertisers, additional revenue st ream for mobile operators and personalised, non-intrusive information for customers.

Simply put, Mobile advertising is communicating brand value through the mobile. It enables enterprises to overcome a key hurdle — inability to reach well-defined target audiences. The ever expanding telecom subscriber base is the basic driver for M-advertising in the country, says Harish Gandhi, which recently launched SMS 2, a messaging, content and advertising application.

4 strategic spheres According to Bas Vervoort, CEO, InMovil Media, the mobile marketing ecosystem comprises four interconnecting strategic spheres. They are: product and services (brands, content owners and marketing agencies), applications (discrete application providers and mobile ASPs), connection (aggregators and wireless operators), and media and retail (media properties, ‘brick ’n’ mortar’ and virtual retail stores).

M-advertising campaigns include: banner and contextual advertising on mobile Internet or WAP, advergaming (using video games to advertise a product, organisation or viewpoint), CRBT-brand tune association (where CRBT is caller ring back tone), lead generation zones, polling, contests, mobile video, MMS (multimedia services), etc.

For that personal touch The mobile phone can offer advertisers a level of immediacy, intimacy and personalisation that cannot be matched by other mediums. “Being a personal device, the mobile phone offers emotional appeal, context and time sensitivity. Improvement in the quality of handsets and network infrastructure that enable delivery of rich media advertisements to users’ handsets at a lower cost will give the required impetus to this industry,” says Manoj Dawane, CEO of Mauj Telecom.

The mobile medium enables to ascertain spending patterns and personalise advertising. No wonder that content companies have found a click rate of 3-3.5 per cent on their mobile WAP portal as against 1.5 or 2 per cent on the Internet. Says Anil Nair, head, Wireless Media, Cricinfo, , “By the end of the year, we expect 10-15 per cent of global revenues from our mobile business to be driven by m-advertising.” (Click through rates measure what percentage of people clicked on the ad to arrive at the destination site)

Threat to Net? Globally, mobile advertising is emerging as the biggest competition for Internet advertising and it may even jeopardise the latter, according to a study by analysis firm Thomas Weisel International.

Even though the m-advertising marketplace is presently miniscule in size, it has the potential to grow at 200 per cent a year. The availability of high-end handsets supporting GPRS and 3G will help mobile advertising to grow considerably in the coming years.

Bullish on scene No wonder the industry sees big things ahead. Research firm Strategy Analytics is forecasting that advertisers will spend $1.4 billion globally on mobile media this year. “The global M-advertising industry is expected to reach $11 billion in 2009 and India should account for more than 1 per cent of this overall value chain,” avers Narasimha of Telibrahma. With advances in networks, advertising capabilities and growth in advertising inventory, the outlook for mobile advertising spend has significantly advanced in the past 12 months, according to Prasad of Reliance. Some global brands, such as Pepsi, are talking about up to 5 per cent advertising budget being allocated to this new medium. CBS, Coca-Cola, Cadbury, Suzuki, ICICI, HDFC and Castrol are some of the brands active in this space.

“M-advertising is poised to take off in the next six months or so and within the next two years it will become a full-fledged industry.”

Since this is a medium that is still in its infancy, there is no single revenue generation model. There are several strategies for monetisation, which include brand sponsorship (taken out of advertising budget), premium SMS (Consumers paying for the service) and transaction-based monetisation (pay per transaction/click/view).

Bas Vervoort, CEO, InMovil Media, says corporates spend on branding/lead generation as they would on other mediums via banner advertising, SMS promotions, contests, etc. On mobile web pages, advertisers pay on a CPM (cost per impression) basis for banner ads and on CPL (cost per click) basis for brand zones. Or advertisers pay on a per impression basis on SMS and on a per click basis on WAP. “There is a school of thought that believes that the market will be free in the next five years, wherein all downloaded stuff will be subsidised through advertising,” according to Vervoort.

Mauj, which currently does advertising only on its WAP portal, will be rapidly expanding into SMS-based advertising first and eventually into voice, says Dawane. Agrees Nair of Cricinfo, who believes that the advertising-subsidised model will overtake the consumer-paid model for mobile entertainment in the next five years.

Target ‘em “While there is a real opportunity and value for brands, the true potential of mobile advertising will unfold when advertisers deliver time-sensitive ads based on the context of targeted consumers,” says Tim Ruisbroek, CEO, InMovil Media. InMovil Media is a provider of ad-funded mobile content and communication, to bring mobile advertising solutions and ad-funded mobile entertainment content to the Spanish market.

Roy of Hungama is further of the view that the biggest challenge in mobile advertising is preventing unsolicited advertising or spam, which has the potential to kill the opportunity.

“Advertising has to be contextual as the potential in ‘push’ marketing is fairly limited and is largely viewed as spam. Thus there is a need to get into ‘permission’ marketing and ‘pull’ marketing to deliver value to marketers.”

Building the infrastructure The big question is: do we have the neccesary infrastructure and ecosystem in place? For SMS-based or operator portal-based advertising, there exists a well-established eco-system. In areas such as bluetooth and search, advertising is still blooming and the ecosystem is being built.

M-advertising is evolving as a unique and unknown medium is bringing together carriers, ad agencies, publishers, mobile ad technology companies and brands.

“There is limited corporate knowledge of this medium, so it will take a while for all the stakeholders to get a better understanding of the opportunity,” Mittersain of Nazara says. Improved relationships between technologists, advertisers and operators will help bridge this gap, concludes Gandhi of Airtel.

Identify Tomorrow’s Most Profitable Advertising and Marketing Opportunities in the Mobile Space

Tuesday, November 6th, 2007

Over time marketing and advertisement activities transform as new digital media streams emerge. The first major digital transition took place when advertisement extended from broadcast media such as television and cinema, also called the first screen, to the PC Internet, referred to as the second screen. In the last couple of years we have seen an expanding transition into the third screen represented by the mobile handset. What distinguishes this new channel from digital predecessors is the ability to influence consumers at the very moment they are ready to take action, thus closing in on the last mile of transaction.

Brands and marketing agencies play a key role in the nascent mobile marketing ecosystem. Their decisions on the distribution of advertisement spending ultimately decide the total monetary value of mobile marketing. Global advertisement expenditure in 2006 was approximately 303 billion (US$ 435 billion) and global Internet advertisement expenditure reached 18 billion in 2006. The year-on-year growth rate was reported to be 26 percent in H1-2007. Online media consumptions today accounts for 21 percent of overall media consumption, hence it is not difficult to realize why Internet advertisement is the fastest growing advertisement media.

In the last 12 months there has been an increase in the momentum around mobile advertisement. As the market is starting to move mobile operators are now partnering with mobile advertisement and content stakeholders to build competitive new business models. An important note is also that free content has never wiped out paid-for content in any other media channel and the most probable scenario will probably be a mixture of the two business models in the mobile channel.

SMS is currently the most widely used messaging vehicle for mobile marketing. Overall the worldwide SMS traffic increased with approximately 50 percent to more than 620 billion messages in the first quarter of 2007. However, only a small fraction of messages consists of commercial messaging. Another emerging marketing channel within mobile is the mobile Internet. Historically advertisement has played a critical role in driving the mainstream adoption of PC based Internet services. The service areas that are beginning to take off on the mobile Internet are very similar to the online world and consist of search, communities and web mail services. In addition, more and more mobile operators all over the world have in the past several years introduced location-based services in their service portfolio. We believe that the ability to target consumers based on their position will have a significant effect on the way that companies advertise, not just in the mobile medium but it will also impact on their entire advertising strategies and channels. Our technologies enable the offering of such services.

The shift of advertisement expenditure into new digital channels is a very complex process where traditional thinking clash with new, innovative and unexplored advertisement and marketing territory. The mobile marketing ecosystem is very multifarious and far from being mature. Since the mobile advertisement channel is still fairly new there are a number of new ventures entering the market space. The supply side is consolidating with major corporations positioning themselves to take substantial market shares on this emerging marketplace.

We estimates that mobile channels will account for 0.8 percent of the total digital advertising expenditure worldwide in 2007. By 2012 the share for mobile media is expected to have reached 7.5 percent, while at the same time the digital advertising market more than doubles in size. In monetary terms, the value of all mobile channels combined is forecasted to grow with a compound annual growth rate of 79.8 percent from 192 million in 2007 to 3,606 million by 2012.

Contact us and:

  • Identify tomorrows most profitable advertising opportunities in the mobile space.
  • Understand the fundamentals of the ad-based mobile media revenue model.
  • Recognise the key barriers restraining the growth of the mobile advertising market.
  • Comprehend the relative importance of digital channels compared to other advertising media.
  • Learn about the early experiences of mobile marketing campaigns by top global brands.

And Discover:

  • How to become a winner with mobile advertising
  • What changes in the mobile industry and end-user behaviour are required before mobile advertising can become a multi-billion euro market
  • How are Google, Microsoft, Nokia and Yahoo positioning themselves to become leading mobile advertising networks
  • Who are the remaining independent mobile advertising providers and aggregators following the recent merger and acquisition spree
  • How are the traditional players in the advertising industry approaching the mobile channel
  • What are the initial experiences from mobile marketing campaigns
  • Which advertising formats will become most successful in the mobile environment
  • How is the ad-based revenue model going to impact mobile search, location-based services and social networking communities
  • What long-term effects will the rise of mobile advertising have on the telecom industry