Thursday, January 15, 2009

Mobile Broadband Reaches Rich And Poor–With Or Without The Phone


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Posted by eydie on Jan 12, 2009 in Mobile Internet, Mobile Marketing


The mobile Internet isn’t just for consumers who can’t afford a computer, or whose countries lack the infrastructure to support traditional Internet connections.
The research firm Parks Associates has put out an interesting report about mobile broadband. Unsurprisingly, smartphones will triple in sales in the United States alone, to 60 million units by 2013. What’s more compelling is the projected popularity of non-phone devices with mobile Internet connectivity–gadgets that definitely aren’t a staple for developing economies the way cell phones are.
U.S. consumers will buy more than five million connected cameras, more than one million 3G-enabled portable media players, and more than two million 3G-enabled “netbooks” (those mini-computers that made a big splash at CES).
Under that second category could be the iPod Touch, that iPhone-without-voice that came out more than a year ago. I actually had predicted the “iTouch” almost a year and a half before it came out. Such Internet-enabled PMPs, as well as netbooks, are the really important things here–providing a true Web experience on-the-go.
Internet on cell phones means equal opportunity for all, by allowing Web access for consumers of all economic levels. Internet on luxury devices like cameras, PMPs/music players, and uber-portable computers prove that even the richest consumers will be best-reached on the mobile Internet.


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Mobile Payments With A Side Of Mobile Marketing

Posted by justin on Jan 12, 2009 in In The News, Mobile 2.0

Mobile commerce and the use of mobile devices as payment methods has been another area that’s lacking in the US compared to elsewhere. Mocapay, a leader in mobile-commerce solutions, is partnering with VeriFone Holdings, a provider of customer-facing payment systems, to introduce a new mobile payments and marketing technology that will be announced at the upcoming NRF Annual Convention this month in New York City.
Mocapay’s new platform provides merchants with the ability to “mobile-enable” their existing gift and loyalty programs through payment at the point-of-sale. Gift cardholders can transact at the point-of-sale, access their account balance and transaction history, find the nearest location, and reload their account, all from their mobile phone.
In addition, Mocapay gives retailers the tools to send targeted, one-to-one marketing messages to their customers while they’re using the platform. The problem is, being tied to a certain type of POS system means limited availability and thus limited amount of users to market to. In other words, the technology itself will need to prevail before successful mobile marketing can be executed using this method.
Mocapay’s mobile payment solution can be integrated with any point-of-sale system, however, the MX800 series from VeriFone is designed to enhance the customer experience at the point of sale. With more than 300,000 systems installed, its quickly become the de facto standard in consumer-facing payment systems, but will it become ubiquitous? One way or another, mobile payments will become standard in the near future, as long as the infrastructure and POS systems can support it.

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Mobile Marketing Solutions Offered to Retailers by Fujitsu and InMotion Digital Media

Tuesday, January 13, 2009
By Editor


Fujitsu Transaction Solutions, the wholly owned subsidiary of Fujitsu Limited has partnered with InMotion Digital Media, a provider of mobile marketing, commerce and entertainment solutions, to offer mobile marketing services to the retail industry. As per the agreement, InMotion’s will integrate its Flip Pocket Connect software with Fujitsu technology to enable marketing campaigns to mobile devices. The solution will offer retailers the ability to send promotions and coupons to mobile subscribers across various geographies and operators.
InMotion has been providing mobile solutions for more than ten years on a global basis in a variety of verticals including, retail, hospitality and leisure. InMotion’s solutions have been used by many enterprise clients in the retail space including such offerings as mobile coupons, mobile loyalty programs, special offers and integrated offerings that bring unique value to both the consumer and the retailer
“The mobile device is the next promotional frontier for retailers, bringing unmatched personal and pervasive reach,” said Peter Wolf, vice president of Self-Service and Univations operations at Fujitsu Transaction Solutions.
“Our partnership with InMotion Digital Media, and the combined mobile marketing solution, will empower both retailers and consumers with the ability to send and receive coupons and other offerings in a targeted and timely manner,” added Wolf.
“Mobile marketing requires a unique combination of marketing and technical expertise to develop a campaign that is tailored to a retailer’s specific needs,” said Larry Lehoux, CEO of InMotion Digital Media.
Fujitsu offers software, point-of-sale store technology, U-Scan self-checkout systems, U-Serv self-ordering systems and multi-vendor lifecycle services. Customers include Canadian Tire, Chevron Corporation, Hallmark, H-E-B, Kroger, Loblaws, Nordstrom, Payless ShoeSource, Regal Cinema, Staples, Stop & Shop and The TJX Companies, among others.
“Our Flip Pocket Connect application, with Fujitsu’s technology, combines these critical elements to form a robust, user-friendly solution that will help retailers navigate these emerging and uncharted waters,” commented Lehoux.
The companies made the announcement at the National Retail Federation (NRF) 98th Annual Convention and Expo, held on 12th & 13th of January in New York City. Fujitsu also allowed visitors to its NRF Booth to experience the solution ‘live’. Visitors used their mobile phones to text numbers to a short code and then receive a promotional message and a coupon.

Source: Fujitsu

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MyGlobalTalk Enables iPhone Users to Place Inexpensive Long Distance Phone Calls

Tuesday, January 13, 2009
By Editor

iPhone users will now be able make inexpensive phone calls to destinations anywhere in the world for a little price of USD 0.02 to USD 0.03 per minute through their operators’ mobile voice networks with MyGlobalTalk. i2Telecom International, Inc., a developer of award-winning patented and innovative high-quality mobile applications and services, has announced the availability of its mobile phone solution, MyGlobalTalk, on the iPhone App Store.
MyGlobalTalk will be available free for download to the users. MyGlobalTalk, i2Telecom’s internally developed patent-pending technology, is a new and advanced mobile Voice over Internet Protocol (“VoIP”) application that targets the mobile handset market.This contrasts sharply with the current methods in which users place regular calls via their mobile phone service providers at prices that can easily reach or exceed one dollar per minute when calling locations outside of the United States.
MyGlobalTalk offers Internet telephony to mobile users, enabling them to make calls independent of mobile operator technology, handset type, or the mobile voice or data plan used. Users are able to to access low-cost Internet telephony communications in a completely “untethered” manner throguh their MyGlobalTalk enabled phones.
“Our latest version of MyGlobalTalk has demonstrated excellent reception quality in beta trials and is now ready for prime time with iPhone customers. We are offering 20 minutes of free calling with the MyGlobalTalk application, which should be available through the App Store in coming weeks,” commented Paul Arena, i2Telecom’s Chairman and Chief Executive Officer.
i2Telecom International, Inc. provides innovative high-quality mobile applications products and services that employs VoIP technology and uses services network and the Internet to deliver high-quality phone calls, streaming video and text chat to customers on a global scale. i2Telecom International services include VoiceStick, MyGlobalTalk, Digital Portal communications and microgateway adapters for VoIP long-distance. Its patent pending services technology platform is compliant with the Session Initiation Protocol ("SIP") telecommunications industry standard.
“We previewed the MyGlobalTalk iPhone application at the Consumer Electronics Show (“CES”) in Las Vegas last week,” continued Arena. “The response from CES attendees was very enthusiastic, with particular interest in the fact that the application offers carrier-grade quality at VoIP rates.”
Users are required to simply download the MyGlobalTalk application to their mobile handset, to be able to call any telephone in the world directly using VoIP technology, at a fraction of normal long-distance rates. MyGlobalTalk is a fully functional service that does not require local access to the Internet or proximity to an Internet “hotspot”. MyGlobalTalk can be used on users’ existing handsets and does not required the availability of dual-mode WiFi phones.

Source: i2Telecom International

Does Mobile Marketing Pose Security Threats?

Posted by michael on Jan 13, 2009 in Mobile Marketing


Two consumer groups plan to ask the Federal Trade Commission today to “investigate the privacy threats of mobile advertising,” according to the FTC.
The Center for Digital Democracy and the U.S. Public Interest Research Group believe that “mobile advertising companies are collecting vast amounts of information about consumers and their behavior, without fully disclosing it, in an effort to better target their sales pitches.”
“They know your location, they’re profiling you and categorizing you,” said Jeffrey Chester, executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy. “It’s disturbing.”
Of course, if one goes down this road of “violated privacy”, there are many other non-mobile avenues one could similarly take, yet the mobile marketing sector will at present be in the hot seat.
Mike Wehrs, chief executive of the Mobile Marketing Association, defended his industry’s track record and called more regulation unnecessary. He supported companies that “collect consumer information, saying it ensures that mobile phone users are shown relevant ads rather than spam.”

www.bluespotmedia.ning.com

One-Day "Crash Course" on Mobile Marketing - Leveraging Experience of Leading Firms

Tuesday, January 13, 2009
By Nurul Haque


According to a new research by Pew Foundation, mobile devices will become the primary Internet access platform for most people in the world by 2020. The survey conducted among Internet leaders, activists and analysts showed that they expect major technology advances as the phone becomes a primary device for online access, voice-recognition improves, artificial and virtual reality become more embedded in everyday life, and the architecture of the Internet itself improves.
The research from Pew Foundation will join many other research reports that estimates that mobile will the primary source of accessing Internet in next few years and mobile Internet will witness explosive growth. However, these reports also agree on the point that majority of companies and marketers do not fully appreciate the significance and opportunity of this emerging platform and are not forthcoming in adopting the medium.
To educate companies and marketers about mobile Internet and mobile marketing, Local Mobile Service, an Opus Research advisory service, has organized Internet2Go: Conversations about Mobile Marketing, a one-day crash course in mobile marketing, featuring case studies and real data from the leading companies on the front lines of the mobile Internet. The event aims to bring together search engines, ad networks and technology providers with agencies in a more conversational setting. The emphasis will be on practical information and case studies.
“We created an event that will show mobile is working and delivering great ROI for advertisers today,” said Greg Sterling, Senior Analyst with Opus Research’s Local Mobile Search advisory service. Senior Analyst Greg Sterling is founder of Sterling Market Intelligence, focusing on the Internet’s impact on local consumer and advertiser behavior.
“We also wanted the emphasis to be on real case studies and practical information, rather than hypothetical or abstract discussions,” added Sterling.
Scheduled to be held at Mezzanine in San Francisco on January 29, 2009, the event is designed for marketers, agencies and others who are interested in but not yet deeply involved in mobile marketing. The event will feature a range of panel discussions and presentations that offer practical information and case studies from the leading mobile firms and platforms in the market today.
Various sessions that are a part of this one-day event will discuss topics such as removing roadblocks to mobile marketing, integrating mobile with traditional media campaigns, SMS - Not Sexy but Effective and Voluminous, search marketing in a mobile environment and mobile ROI.
One of the sessions will also feature a “Mobile Creative Showcase” that will highlight compelling mobile ad campaigns utilizing all platforms, from SMS to mobile video.
The event’s sponsors include Yahoo!, JumpTap and NearbyNow and will feature executives from AdMob, Ansible, AOL/Platform-A, ChaCha, Google, HipCricket, JumpTap, Microsoft, NearbyNow, Quattro Wireless, Verve Wireless, Yahoo! and others, speaking at the event.
Local Mobile Search analyzes and quantifies business opportunities at the nexus of mobile search, location-based services and geo-targeting. Founded in1986, Opus Research, enables conversational access technologies and markets.

Source: Local Mobile Search

www.bluespotmedia.ning.com

Campaigns Watch’ Every Text Counts at the SMS Campaign Launched by AT&T and Share Our Strength to Help Hungry Kids

Every Text Counts at the SMS Campaign Launched by AT&T and Share Our Strength to Help Hungry Kids

Tuesday, January 13, 2009
By Nurul Haque
AT&T has partnered Share Our Strength, an national organization dedicated to ending childhood hunger in America, to participate in its campaign ‘Operation No Kid Hungry’ to raise funds to help end childhood hunger and encourage Americans to hold food drives. The campaign started on January 13 and is open till March 1, during which time, subscribers across all major mobile operators in the U.S. can donate USD 5 to Share Our Strength by text messaging “SHARE” to 20222. AT&T has announce that it will match donations up to USD 100,000.
“We’ve seen a dramatic jump in the need for food assistance in the last six months,” said Bill Shore, founder and executive director of Share Our Strength. “Some food pantries we fund had a 40- to 50-percent increase in demand — much of it from working families and people seeking help for the first time.”

Share Our Strength Website
Share Our Strength is asking people to send a text donation and hold food drives to help feed those in need. Food pantries and food banks especially need foods rich in protein, such as peanut butter and canned tuna, chicken, and salmon. U.S. president-elect Obama has pledged to end childhood hunger by 2015 during his presidential campaign. He has also called for a national day of service on January 19, Martin Luther King Day. The national text-donation campaign is made possible through the Mobile Giving Foundation.
Users can text ‘HELP’ to 20222 to find out more about the campaign and can unsubscribe at anytime by texting ‘STOP’ to 20222.
“As a proud participating sponsor of this Share Our Strength program, we are pleased to offer AT&T’s expansive resources — our vast network of wireless subscribers, 300,000 employees and dedicated AT&T Pioneer volunteers — as part of a greater effort toward eliminating childhood hunger,” said Ralph de la Vega, president and chief executive officer of AT&T Mobility and Consumer Markets.
In conjunction with the text donation program, AT&T Pioneers - the industry’s largest employee and retiree volunteer organization - are leading a nationwide, AT&T employee food drive to benefit community food banks that serve America’s children in 32 major metropolitan areas. The first AT&T food drive will start on January 13 across six cities - Atlanta; Chicago; Dallas; Hartford, Connecticut; Sacramento, California; and Washington, D.C. The remaining 26 cities will launch their food drives on January 19. More than 12 million children are at the risk of hunger in the United States.
Share Our Strength will use the fund raised to support its national work to end childhood hunger, which finds ways to feed the hungry in the communities, funds the most effective anti-hunger organizations in each state, and makes the most of state, federal, and local resources.
Source: Share Our Strength

www.bluespotmedia.ning.com

More Mobile Marketing while meeting people of the same interest. . . . . . .

Microsoft “Ads” Quattro Wireless

Posted by Adena on Jan 13, 2009 in Mobile Advertising
Quattro Wireless, the Waltham, Mass-based mobile ad company that helped encourage mobile-savvy youth to vote for Obama in the 2008 election, announced a “strategic relationship” with Microsoft Corp.’s advertising unit on Monday.
Microsoft is getting down to business when it comes to sorting out their mobile strategy. Just last week, the software giant announced a search partnership with Verizon Wireless, a blow to ad-hungry competitor Google. According to Verizon, Microsoft Live Search integration will enable easier access to context-relevant search results–Microsoft will also manage display advertising, promising a one-stop integrated channel for advertisers and ad agencies to target mobile users.
Quattro earned its Microsoft agreement by showing off its mobile ad influence during the 2008 election. The company put together an Obama ad campaign targeting youth in 10 battleground states. Its ads appeared both on mobile Web sites and as text messages.
The Wall Street Journal reported that the election work led to a broader relationship with Mobext, a mobile marketing network of French ad giant Havas. Since the partnership began in August, the company has increased its purchases from the ad network since, buying space on behalf of McDonald’s franchisees and for Amtrak.
As far as the Microsoft agreement goes, Quattro’s ad targeting platform and publisher inventory will accept traffic from Microsoft Advertising’s Atlas Media Console buy-side ad serving technology. This will offer advertisers and agencies an efficient option for setting up, tracking, billing and measuring an integrated mobile campaign.
Once a campaign is set up via Atlas Media Console, it can be seamlessly served across any publisher within the Quattro Ad Network, with Quattro partner integration tools simplifying mobile media planning and buying chores by refining the targeting method and dynamically serving ads based on the subscriber’s mobile device and screen size. In addition, media planners and buyers may work directly with Quattro to further extend their reach and placement alternatives.

www.bluespotmedia.ning.com

Focus…a Marketing Strategy - by Ann Marie Rubertone

Focus…a Marketing StrategyCopyright 2004 Ann Marie RubertoneThe secret to increasing sales doesn’t lie in choosing just the right marketing tactic for each of your businesses. The real problem that’s experienced by many entrepreneurs–a damaging lack of focus. Plenty of entrepreneurs make this dangerous mistake. They try to market more than one business at once, or they tackle too many targets for a single business. Suddenly, they discover that their time and budgets are fragmented beyond their ability to produce positive results. The solution is to get–and stay–focused. This single alteration can actually reduce your marketing costs and increase sales. The trouble with trying to market several businesses at once is that you end up with many different target audiences–each requiring its own set of sales and marketing tactics. To reach them, your sales tactics may include creating an in-house prospect list, making cold calls to set up appointments and handling one-on-one meetings with prospects. Instead of trying to gain small profits from a variety of individual ventures, for best results, the key is to pick one of your businesses (preferably the most profitable and enjoyable) and focus all your marketing energies in that direction. I inevitably get calls from business owners who say, ” I have the greatest product on earth. Anyone can use it–kids, parents, businesses.” And then I’m forced to reply, “Do you have unlimited funds to launch this product? Can you start off with $10 million, or how about $20 million or more?” Because no one can market to everyone. The cost would be astronomical. Even the world’s largest companies, with seemingly unlimited marketing funds, typically focus their efforts on a single type of product or service for individual niche markets. And the actual campaign messages they employ differ depending on the hot buttons for each niche. As an entrepreneur who has limited time and money to waste chasing after unqualified prospects, it’s vital to narrowly focus on your best, most profitable target audience groups. This will reduce your media costs–since you won’t be advertising to reach marginal groups–and free up the time you would otherwise lose meeting with low-quality prospects. For entrepreneurs who operate several businesses at once, choosing just one can seem like an overwhelming task. The secret lies in following both your head and your heart. Start by examining the business potential and the corresponding costs of each of your ideas. For example, consider which business has the greatest chance for success based on your ability to fund and manage the operation. Then, review the ideas that look best on paper and decide which you feel most passionate about. When you’re passionate about what you do, it shines through to customers–and can make all the difference between lackluster sales and a stunning success.

Ann Marie Rubertone is a marketing consultant & freelance writer. Her two newest booklets, “The One Page Marketing Plan” and “13 Household Items You Can Use To Market Your Business” tips for marketing on a shoestring budget. For more information, contact Ann Marie Rubertone, Check It Out (772) 335-0073, www.checkitoutinc.com cio@adelphia.net

www.bluespotmedia.ning.com

BlueSixty Mobile Marketing workshop

januari 14, 2009, 11:15 am Ingedeeld onder: Bluetooth, Marketing, mobile marketing Tags: , , , ,

Mobile marketing is voor veel marketing en communicatie bedrijven nog steeds een grijs gebied en om deze reden wordt het dan ook nog vaak niet opgenomen in de marketing mix van diens klanten. Een presentatie van onze producten verschaft duidelijkheid over de mogelijkheden, maar in onze ogen is het ervaren van mobile marketing de beste manier om de ‘added value’ te ontdekken.
Aan het begin van 2009 kregen wij dan ook de kans om interactief aan de slag te gaan met werknemers van een M&C bedrijf uit Eindhoven. Op diens verzoek hebben wij een workshop / masterclass ontwikkelt, waarbij de deelnemers na een heldere uitleg door ons werden uitgedaagd om in drie groepen een case op te lossen door middel van Bluetooth marketing. Niet alleen leverde dit hilarische campagnes op, maar tegelijkertijd creëerde het een aangename sfeer binnen de teams. Uiteindelijk hebben wij de inzendingen beoordeeld en de winnende campagne middels onze bluetooth zenders verstuurd naar de deelnemers. De beoordelingscriteria waren: Hoe wordt iemand getriggerd om Bluetooth aan te zetten, wat is de toegevoegde waarde van het bericht, komt de ontvanger hiermee in actie en zou hij of zij dit doorsturen aan vrienden?
Na een korte evaluatie konden we stellen dat workshop geslaagd was. De deelnemers waren enthousiast en zagen direct mogelijkheden om klanten uit hun porfolio te verrassen met een vernieuwende mobile marketing oplossing.
Is er binnen uw bedrijf op dit moment ook weinig kennis van mobile marketing en zou u ook graag op een interactieve manier geïnformeerd willen worden over de mogelijkheden? Neem dan contact met ons op, zodat wij samen met u kunnen kijken of er mogelijkheden liggen.

www.bluespotmedia.ning.com

A Lot Of Potential In New Image Recognition Breakthrough

Posted by justin on Jan 14, 2009 in In The News, Mobile 2.0


Image recognition remains a technology with a lot of potential in regards to mobile marketing. It poses the best chance of widespread adoption down the road and can offer a unique experience to the end-user without being overly complex and difficult to understand and use.
Image recognition technologies have long been tested over the years with little advancement for true usable recognition in the long-run, but a new image-recognition system developed by European researchers has the ability to actually hyperlink reality, or say they say. The “MOBVIS” system, as it’s currently being called, can recognize individual buildings in a photo you take with your camera-phone, for example, and then apply icons that hyperlink to information about the building. Simply by looking at a picture, the system knows where you are and can tell what you’re looking at.
The system can be applied to mapping data, such as Google’s street view data, and instantly hyperlink individual objects in the imagery to whatever you desire. To me, the obvious benefit of all this is the extreme mobile marketing platform it could provide. Imagine sitting at a bench in a new city you’re not familiar with and simply snapping a photo of the nearby street. The device could instantly return hyperlinked images of the storefronts on the street with coupons, menus, etc. or you could even learn about the history of certain buildings, etc. with hyperlinked Wikipedia articles. The possibilites are endless, but it would open a whole other avenue of highly-targed mobile marketing with the potential of huge returns and success rates.
Now whether or not the new MOBVIS system can truly “hyperlink reality” is still up for discussion, but it still seems promising. The only problem is it falls in the same category as QR codes and other new-age methods that will be slow to catch on. If you ask me, nothing else has the potential mobile image recognition does, especially when it comes to mobile marketing.

www.bluespotmedia.ning.com

Mobile Air Tickets Inevitable

Posted by eydie on Jan 14, 2009 in Mobile Commerce, Mobile Marketing, Mobile Technology

Mobile ticketing, in which airline passengers receive bar-coded boarding passes on their phones, could trump all other air ticketing within the next two years. And that’s just what the aviation industry and at least one research firm expect.
The global trend for bar-coded boarding passes (called BCBPs in the airline industry) sent to consumers’ phones accelerated going into the new year:
American Airlines started testing such passes at O’Hare International Airport in Chicago. That makes three U.S. airlines dabbling in mobile bar code tickets. Continental Airlines was the first U.S. carrier to offer mobile tickets, starting December 2007, followed by Delta and Northwest, which was acquired by Delta late last year.
Oman Air announced four new check-in options, including mobile phone check-in, with the intent to save time for passengers without luggage.
Spanair Airlines celebrated the first-year anniversary of its mobile check-in system, enabled by NeoMedia Technologies and the first such system in Spain. The Spanish airline said it expects to issue 800,000 2D barcode mobile tickets in 2009, making up 10 percent of its total ticketing transactions.
This increased usage of mobile ticketing falls in line with a forecast by Juniper Research. The firm expects that transport-based mobile ticketing will grow from 37.4 million transactions in 2007 to just over 1.8 billion by 2011, the majority of which will be for air and rail travel. Juniper Research also said that the air industry can save $500 million annually by migrating to mobile boarding passes.
Indeed, BCBP’s appeal to the air industry is the cost savings, according to the International Air Transport Association, a global trade body whose members make up 93 percent of all scheduled international air traffic. By not having to print tickets on paper with magnetic stripes, airlines will save on paper and ink costs, as well as the expense of a magnetic strip encoding equipment, which have an estimated price tag of up to to $5,000 per unit.
Air carriers can pass the savings on to their customers. By sending boarding pass bar codes to consumers’ mobile phones–either through a link in a SMS message or as a bar code in a MMS message–airlines save their customers the cost and time to print up tickets.
Consumers do seem to be on board, considering the number of bar code boarding passes issued. “The IATA has exceeded the BCBP targets for 2008 and more than 200 airlines…issued BCBP last year,” IATA corporate communications manager Albert Tgoeng told the Indian news magazine TravelBiz Monitor. BCBP usage is at 40 percent today; according to its website, the IATA hopes to see that number increase to 60 percent by the end of 2009, and mandates 100 percent usage by the end of 2010.
What does all this have to do with marketing? Does it mean that the airline industry will have to come up with its own textspeak–perhaps letting people know their aircraft arrived in time by texting, “Da Plane!”?
Ultimately, mobile ticketing makes for happy, satisfied customers–the best advertising you can have. “These types of innovations appeal to a traveler and can help build airline loyalty very quickly,” Oman Air vice president Barry Brown said in a release. Spanair chief commercial officer Sergio Allard said in a release, “Our mobile check-in system is proving to be the fastest way to get on the plane in Spain. It’s innovative, efficient, and offers great benefits in terms of both time and convenience–advantages that are particularly appreciated by our business customers.”
When customers are satisfied with a brand, they’re going to be much more likely to sign up to receive its future marketing messages–thus boosting the brand’s database for the benefit of future mobile marketing campaigns.

www.bluespotmedia.ning.com

MMA U.S. Best Practices Forum

Posted by Kim on Jan 14, 2009 in Best Practices

The Mobile Marketing Association held their annual U.S. Best Practices Forum yesterday in Denver and I was one of the wide cross section of mobile industry professionals in attendance. The mission of the meeting was to get input into our industry’s best practices for the committee in charge of updating the MMA Best Practices and Guidelines (CBP) document. The committee begins today to work on updating it for the next revision.
This document is updated twice a year – in June and December. There are significant changes, updates, and additions with each version. It is not a read-it-once-and-forget-it document. Make sure you get the latest version and read it front to back each time. It’s important.
Yesterday’s meeting was dominated by talk of SMS. The tone was set with one of the first sessions in the morning given by Nick Macilveen from Open Market who explained in detail each step of the process of getting a short code program built, approved, provisioned and launched. It reminded me of biology when we learned the precise elements that have to be in place for human reproduction to take place. In both cases it is clearly a miracle to make it happen. And the role of an aggregator in a successful SMS campaign became obvious. Aggregators are our biggest ally in this process.
A huge discussion followed after Mike Altschul of CTIA presented the plan of attack for CTIA to take over the media monitoring of short code programs. The wireless association is going to begin to monitor every short code campaign to check for compliance with the MMA Best Practices and each individual carrier’s requirements. CTIA will eventually (no specific timeline was given but in one carrier’s estimation it seemed it could be as early as 2 months) become the entity responsible for all monitoring and sending audit reports.An even bigger discussion ensued about enforcing compliance with the CBP and carrier requirements. Sentiment was high about making sure that everyone working in the mobile space be held to the standards that are set forth and that consequences be commiserate with offenses. It was also very clear that way too much time is being spent by both carriers and businesses dealing with audit reports. Hopefully the CTIA media monitoring efforts will help with all of this but no one, including CTIA, is holding their breath for that just yet.
Alan Chappell of Chappell & Associates gave a very informative talk about privacy and pointed out that as our revenue increases so will scrutiny from consumers and regulators. Timely evidence of this was the complaint filed by The Center for Digital Democracy and the U.S. Public Interest Research Group calling for an inquiry and injunctive relief concerning unfair and deceptive mobile marketing practices. The new President of the MMA, Mike Wehrs, spent the day doing media interviews about the complaint.
Another hot potato topic was affiliate marketing which accounts for 70-80% of some businesses revenue but may also be cause for a similarly high number of complaints and returns. It is obvious that businesses must maintain a close eye on their affiliates because their actions which may cause customer care requests to go up with the carriers will put the business at risk. It was pointed out by one carrier that when customers of theirs lessened their focus on affiliates that their refund rates and care calls went down significantly. The carrier representative did not say whether or not the overall profitability of the business went up or not.
Additional presentations were made about Word of Mouth / Viral marketing, User Generated Content, and Marketing Online. Universally, each person who presented their committee’s mission and outlined their course of action for the coming year made it clear they are seeking more MMA members to join their committees. To find out about joining a committee http://mmaglobal.com/policies/committees
The day was wrapped up with an open forum. During this discussion it was made a priority for the committee to separate standard messaging from premium messaging in the new Best Practices and Guidelines. Michael Becker of iLoopMobile suggested that at future meetings we work to focus more on the Best Practices part and less on the Guidelines. After spending a whole day talking about rules and compliance it was a breath of fresh air to start thinking again about the power and potential of mobile marketing.

www.bluespotmedia.ning.com

AT&T sends “Idol” promo via bulk SMS. Double standard indeed.

Image recognition remains a technology with a lot of potential in regards to mobile marketing. It poses the best chance of widespread adoption down the road and can offer a unique experience to the end-user without being overly complex and difficult to understand and use.
Image recognition technologies have long been tested over the years with little advancement for true usable recognition in the long-run, but a new image-recognition system developed by European researchers has the ability to actually hyperlink reality, or say they say. The “MOBVIS” system, as it’s currently being called, can recognize individual buildings in a photo you take with your camera-phone, for example, and then apply icons that hyperlink to information about the building. Simply by looking at a picture, the system knows where you are and can tell what you’re looking at.
The system can be applied to mapping data, such as Google’s street view data, and instantly hyperlink individual objects in the imagery to whatever you desire. To me, the obvious benefit of all this is the extreme mobile marketing platform it could provide. Imagine sitting at a bench in a new city you’re not familiar with and simply snapping a photo of the nearby street. The device could instantly return hyperlinked images of the storefronts on the street with coupons, menus, etc. or you could even learn about the history of certain buildings, etc. with hyperlinked Wikipedia articles. The possibilites are endless, but it would open a whole other avenue of highly-targed mobile marketing with the potential of huge returns and success rates.
Now whether or not the new MOBVIS system can truly “hyperlink reality” is still up for discussion, but it still seems promising. The only problem is it falls in the same category as QR codes and other new-age methods that will be slow to catch on. If you ask me, nothing else has the potential mobile image recognition does, especially when it comes to mobile marketing.

www.bluespotmedia.ning.com

HOT Mobile Marketing (Innovation 604 Inc. & BlueSPOTmedia)