Tuesday, January 20, 2009
Key opportunities for mobile marketing in 2009: A sector-by-sector look
Mickey Alam Khan is editor in chief of Mobile Marketer
Where are the key opportunities for mobile marketing in 2009? As marketers look to engage with customers and prospects on tighter budgets, they will turn to mobile and the Internet for their ROI potential.
First off, the use of common short codes for text messaging along with a mobile-friendly Web site should be standard issue for every ROI-focused company’s mobile marketing and commerce kit in 2009. But there are other mobile marketing tactics that marketers can deploy to meet their strategic objectives in a year when most of the world will be licking its wounds from an economic meltdown.
Here are some ideas for marketers, ad agencies, publishers and mobile service providers to mull on. They are not comprehensive – and some tactics are already employed by many marketers – but at least should stimulate action in 2009. This is not a time to be coy, but to prove that mobile marketing will help revive a flagging economy because of the value it delivers to the end-consumer.
Apparel and accessoriesThe biggest value that mobile delivers to the apparel and accessories business is helping build a database of opted-in consumers.
Marketers can use their stores, shopping bags, wired and mobile Web sites, email newsletters and loyalty card bills to encourage customers to sign up for the mobile loyalty program.
SMS alerts on a pre-decided frequency will help inform consumers of sales, new merchandise, special offers, store openings and gifting occasions.
The mobile site should serve as a comparison-shopping service, store locator or inventory search tool. The site should actively encourage consumers to opt in for SMS alerts and for the brand’s email newsletter, thus cross-promoting with another channel.
Don’t forget the mobile coupon. While most point-of-purchase systems are not equipped for mobile coupons, it is just a matter of time before mass redemption becomes a way of life for deal-loving consumers.
And then there’s mobile video. Victoria’s Secret has its own channel on Qualcomm’s MediaFlo mobile television service. The lingerie brand recently ran a mobilecast of its famed fashion show on mobile.
Similarly, upscale fashion brand Stella McCartney launched a WAP and Apple iPhone site for its merchandise, stores and videos of its catwalk appearances. So can other fashion labels.
Arts and entertainmentThis sector has been adept at using mobile for sales of music – ringtones fetch more revenue on a per unit basis than downloads of an entire song – as well as advertising new movie releases and television shows.
What would on-the-go consumers want from their mobile for entertainment? Short clips of movies and TV shows, songs, ringtones, trailers, theater locations, SMS alerts of premieres and concerts, discounted tickets, mobile coupons, mobile fan clubs, backstage passes, mobile games and links to mobile sites.
Enabling those activities are SMS, free content, mobile sites and microsites, mobile coupons, mobile videos, in-game mobile ads and mobile banner ads on popular content sites.
AutomotiveAlas, this industry is on extremely shaky legs. But it must be said that the U.S. auto industry has been a good friend to marketing for the longest time – as one of the largest-spending ad categories and also in terms of marketing innovation.
If budgets are available, automakers should focus on using every possible channel to build a mobile database of loyal customers and prospects. Imagine a mobile fan club of Cadillac enthusiasts or the Chevy Malibu owners.
Automakers can use their wired Web sites to encourage visitors to sign up for alerts from dealers – new models, test drives, markdowns, dealer events and tune-ups.
In addition, automakers can use their various channels to encourage consumers to text in for dealer quotes by email, fax or phone call. They can also use mobile to invite consumers to car shows.
Every major auto brand should have its own mobile site, replete with specs, dealer information, pricing, images and videos. The site should offer the option for SMS and email alerts as well as feedback on the brand.
Consumers using mobile sites of auto information brands such as Cars.com, Kelley Blue Book or Edmunds.com are already comparing prices on dealer lots. It’s important to ensure that automakers and their key dealers have a comparison-shopping tool on their mobile sites.
What can mobile do to sway consumers toward an auto brand? In-game ads, mobile fan clubs, mobile videos, mobile banner ads on key auto sites, SMS alerts and mobile sites – all developed to complement existing marketing channels in their effort to create desire among consumers.
Above all, banner ads on mobile sites can work. Clicking on the banner takes the consumer to a mobile landing page, with request for further pre-qualification.
Once the ZIP code is entered, the consumer clicks through to another page to face three options: click through to a mobile microsite with the car brand’s details and videos, click to text or click to call directly to the car dealer or to a call center.
Remember, the car business is all about creating desire for a particular model – something Detroit forgot in the past 30 years. The car, the mobile phone and the house typically reflect the consumer’s personality.
Consumer electronicsIt’s a no-brainer: Use SMS alerts to invite opted-in consumers to visit stores or online for deals on various electronics items. Retailers such as Walmart and Amazon employed mobile alerts to drive consumers to shop for discounted television sets over the holidays, for example.
Consumer electronics manufacturers must work closely with retailers to encourage such mobile shopping. They must use their wired Web sites to ask consumers to opt in for SMS alerts and tips on deals at various stores based on the ZIP code volunteered.
These manufacturers show also work with comparison-shopping services to ensure a presence on mobile sites.
Finally, there’s nothing like running mobile ads on reputable mobile sites as part of a wired and mobile Web buy. A Samsung ad across The New York Times’ mobile site at http://mobile.nytimes.com/ during the holidays would have won the manufacturer precious branding time and space, for example.
Would consumers buy a big-ticket electronics item from a mobile site or by clicking on a mobile banner ad? Yes – eventually. Who thought in 1999 that consumers would buy furniture online? And yet store chains such as Crate and Barrel, Pottery Barn and Williams-Sonoma have a strong ecommerce business.
Consumer packaged goodsWithout any doubt, the No. 1 pressing need for all consumer packaged goods marketers is to list a common short code and pertinent keywords on all product packages.
There is no excuse: Research shows that consumers are trending toward more texting as data plans get cheaper. What better way to elicit feedback from consumers other than a keyword FEEDBACK texted to a short code?
Sure, CPG companies list a Web site and toll-free number on their product labels. But many consumers today prefer texting instead of calling and talking to a disinterested voice at the end of the line.
In addition to SMS for texting in praise or criticism, marketers can also use the short code for encouraging consumers to sign up for recipes, alerts, mobile coupons and fan clubs. Yes, why can’t there be a Campbell Soup mobile fan club?
Most important, SMS can help CPG companies build an opt-in mobile loyalty program. These companies are increasingly worried of becoming disconnected from their end-consumer since the retailer owns that last-mile relationship.
A mobile loyalty program keeps CPG players connected to their end-consumer, just as their online loyalty programs do with their newsletter updates, helpful tips and special-deals news.
CPG companies should employ SMS alerts, mobile banner ads on targeted sites, mobile coupons and a mobile loyalty program.
EducationStudents are the most text-savvy demographic nationwide and around the world. Talk to them in their language: SMS alerts for classes and recorded wakeup or reminder calls from professors for their classes – all opt-in, of course.
Every university and college should have a short code. The short code can be used in conjunction with various keywords for purposes such as open houses, campus-wide alerts of closures or security threats, reminders, recruiting and feedback.
All campus bookstores should use mobile coupons to encourage student visits. So should campus and off-campus restaurants.
Educational institutions should begin working on building opted-in mobile databases for alumni activities. There’s a fair chance those students will retain their mobile phone numbers for a number of years, so texting them alerts on alumni gatherings, recruiting or fundraising events seem logical.
It is also common sense for every university or college to have a mobile site with class schedules and the ability to sign up for SMS alerts.
The institution’s mobile site and short code should be publicized everywhere: prospectuses, wired Web site and in stores.
Come enrollment time, educational institutional should run banner ads on top-notch publisher sites to attract not just the potential students but their parents. How about mobile banner ads on the mobile sites of U.S. News and BusinessWeek? They are known for their college rankings.
Let’s not forget mobile videos of lectures. Why not sell them a week after the class? It’s a good revenue stream for the university or college and a resource for the student who may have attended or missed the class.
Mobile videos – including a brief introduction from the dean – on the institution’s mobile site is also a powerful recruitment tool. The video file can also be delivered to the email account if the prospective student texts in to request.
Oh yes, how about the admission news by SMS?
Financial servicesFor all the turmoil that investment and retail banks have wrought, they are pioneers in mobile commerce. Bank of America, for example, has signed up more than 1 million customers for mobile banking. And that’s only since the summer, when it launched that facility.
Similarly, Chase ran a $70 million ad campaign on television, with supporting mail, online and in-bank collateral to promote its mobile banking service. Text alerts on balances, transfers from one account to another, checking balances, updates – you name it, these pioneering banks have it on their mobile applications.
Sure, security is a major fear with mobile, just as it is for online banking. But it is yet another option for customers on the go. So mobile Web sites and SMS alerts make absolute sense in this case.
Food and beverageWhy can’t every can of Coke and Pepsi have a short code with the keyword FEEDBACK? Why can’t every pack promote a mobile game or promotion? Why can’t Coca-Cola actively promote its MyCokeRewards mobile effort on its packages?
It’s the same argument as the consumer packaged goods segment: Food and beverage marketers need to engage with their end-customers to engender lasting loyalty with the brand, not the retailer selling it.
Fast food chains get mobile. McDonald’s and Subway franchisees are using mobile coupons to drive traffic in-store. Domino’s Pizza and Papa John’s Pizza allow consumers to order food and drinks from their mobile sites.
In fact, Papa John’s recorded more than $1 million in mobile Web sales from the five months since the mobile ordering system’s launch in July.
Restaurants can encourage consumers to sign up for mobile alerts geared to deals and special offers. Domino’s, for example, sends SMS alerts during lunch time.
Some food manufacturers are already texting recipes in the late afternoon so that consumers can shop for the ingredients on the way home to prepare dinner.
Employ the same tools as the CPG players: SMS alerts, mobile sites, mobile loyalty program, ringtones, leveraging television advertising on mobile, mobile coupons, in-game advertising, mobile banner ads and mobile videos.
GovernmentMobile can be a legal swamp for government. But government departments can learn from online. How about allowing consumers to pay bills on mobile in the same manner as they do online? Local town councils can certainly benefit from that facility.
What government can certainly do is ensure that all public spaces – airports and train stations, for example – have Wi-Fi coverage to help laptop warriors and mobile users.
Another must for each town and city is a short code and keyword FEEDBACK. Town and city councils must know what’s on the mind of their citizenry.
And it should be mandatory for every town, city and state to have a mobile site and short code. Tourism and business visits play an important role in this interconnected world.
So, make sure that every city or state’s visitor’s bureau has a mobile site with all the details that their wired Web site would have – where to stay, tourist attractions, videos, video welcome from the governor or mayor, shopping destinations, parks, museums, beaches and the most important of all – maps.
Encourage visitors to those mobile sites to sign up for alerts for the duration of their stay. Those signed up can get text messages on shopping and dining deals, museum visits, hotels and tourist attractions. Serve mobile coupons, too.
HealthcareAnother area where the lawyers take a look before the ad agency. The highly regulated healthcare industry can certainly stand up informational mobile sites modeled on their wired Web sites.
A major utility is the use of SMS to alert opted-in consumers of the next refill of their prescription. This alert can come from a pharmacy such as CVS/pharmacy or Walgreens or from a pharmaceutical manufacturer such as Pfizer or Johnson & Johnson.
Pharma companies can also offer allergy information on their mobile sites and via text messages.
SMS is the best tool for pharma companies simply because some patients – the elderly, for example – may not care much for fancy mobile stuff. But given the fact that 99 percent of mobile phones nationwide have SMS, the channel is ideal for delivering refill reminders or health alerts.
It makes sense for pharma manufacturers to run mobile banner ads with links to microsites or videos on reputable publisher sites – weather.com, AccuWeather.com or the various newspaper brands with a mobile presence, for example.
Home furnishingsSimilar to apparel and accessories and the retail sectors, the home furnishings business can benefit vastly from using mobile to develop deeper ties with customers.
Don’t expect consumers to buy a sofa from the mobile site – it may happen yet, especially on an iPhone-friendly site – but at least it offers pricing and style information that help with store, online or telephone purchases.
All home furnishings brands should list a short code and keyword DEALS on their catalogs. They should encourage consumers to opt into the mobile database to receive timely SMS updates of new merchandise, special offers, coupons or sales, be it cookware, tabletop items, rugs or furniture. The messages can drive consumers to the store or online.
LegalLaw firms can certainly use a short code and keyword ADVICE on all marketing material – ads in publications, television and radio commercials or on the subway. The goal should be to encourage those in need of legal help to text in if they haven’t already been recommended a law firm.
A mobile site would help, outlining the biographies of the attorneys, their specialties, victories and contact details. A video from one of the top partners would reinforce the credentials of the firm.
Media/publishingThe media industry, just like the financial services and automotive industries, is in for the ride of its life. The entire media business model has changed.
Compound that misery with an economic slowdown where advertising and marketing budgets are the first casualty.
Print advertising revenue that used to support a publisher’s operations is on a rapid decline, especially across daily newspapers and business and trade magazines nationwide. Blame the reader’s preference for consuming free content on the Web for this malaise. Advertisers have gauged that trend and moved budgets online, but with vastly smaller spend than in print.
Web advertising and content-access revenues alone will not be able to support a publisher’s expenses – mortgage or rent, salaries for staff or columnists, transportation, printing, postage, insurance and technology.
Now add to that another gathering trend: consumption of news on mobile phones. Ad revenues for Web aren’t even there yet, and mobile is still a rounding number for most publishers, so what to do?
Have a mobile-friendly Web site with banner space for advertising. Strike single-sponsorship deals with existing advertisers to combine their online buys with mobile. It is key to link the two channels.
What an established publisher has on mobile is a brand that advertisers can trust and place their ads next to without fear of unpredictability. Publishers and content owners need to leverage that reputation.
Also, work with advertisers to sponsor channels and text alerts. That’s another SMS-based revenue stream.
And then there’s mobile video that again can be sponsored.
There is no easy solution for publishers at this time. But their survival is critical for banner-based mobile advertising to flourish. Mobile ad networks and ad agencies should work closely with publishers and content owners to ensure that mobile is a complement to online.
The unspoken fear is that mobile sites will do to the wired Web sites what the wired Web did to print: not just complement, but cannibalize and question print’s utility in an interactive world.
NonprofitsEvery nonprofit must have two mobile tools: a short code and a mobile-friendly site. Individual donations are falling to below the $10-level, especially when large nonprofits such as the American Red Cross suck up all the household charity budgets during hurricanes and large-scale calamities.
So it is critical for smaller nonprofits, and even the bigger charities such as the Red Cross or The Salvation Army, to raise donations by text to rapidly respond to emergencies.
The Red Cross, for example, has successfully worked with the wireless carriers to encourage $5 donations for its disaster relief fund. The organization raised more than $200,000 in its most recent September through December appeal.
Subscribers of participating wireless carriers can donate $5 up to five times per month by texting the keyword GIVE to 2HELP (24357).
Charges for these donations will appear on the subscriber’s mobile phone bill each month. They can also be debited from prepaid account balances for those mobile consumers without a contract.
Standard text messaging rates may apply to those texted donations.
Other charities can follow the Red Cross’ example. Publicize the short code on the direct mail, email and Web sites. Encourage donors to sign up with the mobile program. Strike a similar billing relationship as the Red Cross did with the carriers and also work with an SMS aggregator.
Building a mobile database not only will save smaller charities in these hard-pressed times, but will also result in repeat donations.
Mobile also cuts creative, printing and postage costs out of a charity’s operations. Thus, a larger percentage of the donations can go to the actual cause for which the funds are raised.
PoliticsBarack Obama.
Yes, ask Team Obama how they used the combination of a mobile Web site and SMS text alerts to elect the 44th president of the United States.
Ask them how they used SMS to build a database of grassroots supporters.
Ask them how much they spent on the Obama Mobile site. They will tell you: $7,000. Highly subsidized, of course.
Every politician needs to have a mobile database of voters, just like they do of mailing and emailing lists. That’s the future of get-out-the-vote efforts and stirring the base.
But the key point here is that mobile was used effectively in conjunction with other channels to elect a candidate to the highest office nationwide.
Real estateBad time to suggest mobile, isn’t it? But the irony is, mobile can help get those lots and houses sold.
Smart agents and Realtors will use short codes and keywords unique to each house on the signs or placards over the property.
Consumers walking or driving by can text in for information on that property, with returned links to the mobile site, images, videos and pricing information. They can also click to text or click to call the Realtor.
Agents get to know that a prospect is interested when that initial text is sent. So they are completely alert and informed and can respond accordingly.
RetailRetail is the biggest beneficiary of mobile. Every retailer worth its salt should have a short code and mobile Web site.
Retailers should use mobile to build a mobile database of opted-in consumers signed up for the mobile loyalty program. Offer existing online and offline loyalty program members that option.
Once in the mobile database, retailers can text alerts on offers, discounts, store openings, sales, new merchandise and events.
A mobile-friendly site is a must. Consumers must have the convenience of shopping and searching for merchandise as comfortably as they would on the wired Web, keeping in mind the screen-size and download-speed limitations of mobile.
As cheaper data plans proliferate, more consumers will expect to have the same experience on the retailer’s mobile site as they did on the wired Web site. That’s just the way it is – see what happened with ecommerce as it developed in the early years of this decade.
A presence on mobile comparison-shopping sites is a must. Consumers will flock to such sites to compare prices, especially as more iPhone-friendly sites proliferate.
Retailers must use SMS, mobile sites, mobile videos, coupons, mobile banner ads on content sites mobile email, mobile search and a mobile loyalty program.
This industry must also prepare for mobile commerce.
It is a matter of time before impulse or smaller-ticket purchases – flowers, books, music, theater tickets, utility bills, travel and food – migrate to mobile. In that respect, mobile will take cues from the wired Web, which poached those purchases from store, telephone and catalog.
Yes, many have security concerns over mobile commerce. And many still do harbor fears over online shopping. That still hasn’t stopped tens of millions of shoppers from making ecommerce the one bright spot for retail this holiday season.
Retailers shouldn’t let their fears hold them back. Eventually, almost every mobile phone nationwide will have Web-capability and every subscriber will have the same expectations of mobile commerce as they have of ecommerce.
Better to be prepared now, with mobile marketing and commerce, and learn on the job with a smaller audience than have an outage during a future holiday season because of crushing demand.
Amazon and Walmart are smart in that respect. They have got their alerts program up and running and are sure to analyze the response to mobile overtures this holiday season.
Walmart’s mobile holiday alerts program is a pioneering venture that few expect from a limbering retail giant whose superstores lack gloss.
Carriers have to gear up, too. Mobile commerce can not only be an opportunity – the purchases can be added to the subscriber’s bill if a retailer has partnered with the carrier – but it can also threaten the network.
Too much shopping traffic during the holidays and the network may slow down crash, unable to pull up the request Web pages. That could harm the retailer’s brand and also the carrier’s reputation.
So carriers need to anticipate that by 2010 or 2011, mobile purchases will become second-nature to consumers as ecommerce.
SportsThe opportunity for sports publishers and franchises on mobile is tremendous. Checking sports scores is one of the top activities on mobile. So it’s no surprise that ESPN Mobile is one of the top mobile destinations nationwide.
For publishers, the sports section or the sports mobile site is an ideal opportunity to sell banner ads or sponsorships against content. Marketers can also sponsor text alerts to opted-in consumers, as well as run ads in mobile videos of games.
Sports franchises such as Major League Baseball or the National Football League can transfer their wired Web dominance to mobile.
With their grip on content, these organizations can charge consumers for access to their mobile sites for exclusives, screensavers, ringtones and videos. Don’t forget the potential to sell tickets to games.
Selling mobile with the wired Web in a package would be ideal.
Team owners can pretty much do on mobile – content-, commerce- and advertising-wise – what they do on the wired Web. Only the imagination limits.
TravelTravel is ideally suited for mobile. So it’s not a surprise that the industry is one of the most mobile-savvy.
Mobile sites and SMS alerts to hotel and airline deals as well as gate changes have become standard issue. Many hotel chains allow mobile bookings. Airlines let fliers change flight details as well.
All players in the hospitality and travel business are acutely aware of mobile’s valuable use. Hence the emphasis of getting consumers signed up for the mobile loyalty program. Hotels, for example, can text guests that a restaurant on the property has a special deal for dinner.
Likewise, casino players such as Harrah’s are using mobile to track the movements of loyalty club members on their premises. Driving traffic to the desired venues and to increase spending per guest are key objectives.
In addition to SMS, the mobile database and the mobile site, hotels and airlines must use mobile banners on reputed publisher sites to advertise packages and deals.
There’s no reason why, say, a British Airways media buy on The New York Times’ wired Web site can't extend to the publication’s mobile site, since the demographic will likely mirror.
In conclusion, regardless of the state of the economy, budgets are moving toward more measurable, ROI-focused media. That means Internet marketing and mobile marketing.
This is not the time for mobile marketers to hibernate, but to press their case to marketers looking for value from their advertising and marketing budgets.
Neither is this the time for marketers and brands to completely disappear from the consumer marketing scene. Remember, out of sight is out of mind. Better to trust a short code than a short memory.
http://www.bluespotmedia.ning.com/
ProximityMedia’s Bluetooth Marketing Making Progress
We at ProxiBlaster believe that the market is going to take off this year here in the USA . Last year was a banner year for the UK and now the rest of EU is rapidly getting involved .
The products are growing as well . Our BlueCastBox bluetooth advertising server has the capability of being controlled en-masse via the internet , in other words you could create a large network of ProxiBlaster BlueCastBoxes and control all of them at the same time from one simple web based control panel or create zones of BlueCastBoxes and control each zone seperately. We have also dramatically extended the working range of the Bluetooth Advertising with ranges extending up to 600ft .
Bluetooth advertising is here and poised to hit the US this year !
visit Proxiblaster.com to learn more !
www.bluespotmedia.ning.com
ProximityMedia’s Bluetooth Marketing Making Progress
We are an Egyptian based company and we are the sole provider of Bluetooth marketing solution in the Middle East.
Bluetooth marketing solution is a small hardware (hard desk size) and a software that automatically send content to mobiles within 100 m.. For more details about us, kindly visit our website: http://www.goiblue.com
iBlue not just provides you with the solution to start your marketing campaign, It also gives you the ability to build your own Bluetooth marketing solution with your own brand in…
If you are interested in starting your own Bluetooth marketing business you can simply provide IBlue Company with you logo, your color scheme and you will get your special custom Bluetooth marketing solution.
You have two options:
1. Option one: Software Only:
You will get the CD/ DVD containing your Branded proximity solution installer software that you can install on any x 86 architecture PC. The software after its installation will ask you to activate it. option one will costs you: 500 USD as a setup fee and for developing your own branded copy of the Proximity marketing software, not including the shipment of CD/DVD 60 USD per device this will be collected once for each device during activation after installation our CD/DVD as if you reinstall the CD/DVD package in the same device the online activation will be free. Kindly be noted that activation fees are to be paid in advance. you will also get full online support from us for 18 mo. as any update will be free during the 18 mo period, no annual license required no extra or hidden fees.
2. Option two: Software and Hardware:
You can get the software and the hardware packaged together. Installed and for plug and play. Price will go down if you purchase 10 devices the price will be 550 with your brand instead of iBlue
iBlue has a Bluetooth mini-server that is superior to anything I have seen in the marketplace. I have tried numerous other companies and they all seem to fall short. iBlue exceeds the other companies when it comes to software. Bluetooth radios are everywhere but if you don’t go with a company that has excellent software to support your needs you’ll end up wasting your money. For more details about us, kindly visit our website http://www.goiblue.com
Comment by iBlue April 13, 2008 @ 5:28 pmPlease visit BlueMediaServer.com for a more effective Bluetooth marketing solution.
BlueMediaServer is completely stand alone and portable. It does not require a network and is easy to manage thanks to a Windows application. It weights 100 g and can run on battery, solar panel or AC.
Bluetooth marketing is very personal and requires the user to read a visual and open his/her Bluetooth. It is best used as a pull technology with a small range.
BlueMediaServer has adjustable range between 4 and 50m, but for an effective campaign, the range should be set to the same range as the one that the reader can read the information poster from.
BlueMediaServer consumes less than 10% the power of any other Bluetooth solution, and costs less than 20% of any other solution.
It is currently used by Sony Electronics in all its stores in Latin America, as well as multiple mobile marketing provider is over 30 countries.
www.bluespotmedia.ning.com
ProximityMedia’s Bluetooth Marketing Making Progress
Filed under: Cafes & Restaurants, Offline Marketing Top Tips, Retail Industry, Technology and Gadgets, bluetooth, bluetooth advertising, bluetooth marketing, cell phone, marketing, mobile phone, nightclub, proximity advertising, proximity marketing, restaurants, retail, retailers, south africa, storefront, technology
Proximity marketing is finally starting to shape up. With companies like ProximityMedia starting to make progress in the field I look forward to seeing what lies ahead. The most recent press release from ProximityMedia discusses their relationship with Adtech, a giant in advertising tradeshow business. When Bluetooth advertising gets this kind of recognition, we should begin to take notice.
When the Hood is a Shanty Town
Lots of hip-hop videos feature shots of the 'Hood and anyone around in the 90s grew up with a view of the projects from watching films like Boys in the Hood and so on. Anyway here's an amazing South African Kwaito hip-hop video where the 'hood is a shanty town in South Africa. The track is on the film Tsotsi and it's by the guy in the film who plays the king pin (Zola) - amazing video, great track - Zola - Mdlwembe
Mobile Blogging over at mjelly
These days a lot of stuff on the PC internet feels quite boring, it's as if the industry is maturing. On the other hand mobile internet still has a bit more of a frontier element to it which makes it a lot more exciting. When you see the growth rate of mobile in places like Africa it seems more likely that mobile internet will have a bigger impact on those countries than the web as accessed from a PC screen. If you're interested in the mobile internet check out the mjelly blog, covering everything to do with mobile internet, mobile web development, mobile advertising and marketing. Here are some links to posts on:
Mobile Web Statistics and Case Studies
Colgate Get the Smile Bebo.com Campaign
Saw this digital ad on the tube in London for Colgate:
The interesting thing is that they are using a URL for a profile on the bebo social network at the bottom of the ad.
The profile is www.bebo.com/getthesmile which is full of competitions, videos, photos etc around the campaign. First example I have seen of a brand using Bebo like this.
www.bluespotmedia.ning.comSharing Mobile Campaign Results.. or lack thereof
September 20th, 2008 The Insider Posted in 2D Codes - Camera Applications, Mobile TV, Reach |
RCR Wireless’ Colin Gibbs had a nice article related to the recent Olympics and related consumer use of Mobile Video. The article noted that neither AT&T nor MobiTV would discuss uptake of their video offerings…MedioFlo also declined to discuss how many viewers tuned into the games, but VP of Programming, Mike Bailey said the company “was extremely pleased” with the results and performance” of its Olympics channel.
Other notable Mobile initiatives…
Papa John’s Pizza 2D mobile barcode campaign.. - The 2D barcode partner in this case is NeoMedia. NeoMedia’s CEO, Iain McCready, was quoted as saying “The test was operationally very successful” (Is that a euphemism for a low participation rate?)
Yahoo’s download numbers for its Yahoo! Go their J2ME application. How many downloads to date?? What handset types are dominating the downloads?? Hell, they probably have the best distribution outlets outside of the Carrier decks.
Marketers continue to gripe about the Mobile Channel’s lack of benchmarks to help them gauge the success of their Mobile efforts. Certainly the lack of sharing by experimenting brands is understandable from a competitive standpoint, but a little sharing could go a long way. Kudos to Adidas’ Chris Murphy at the past MMA Marketing conference in New York for sharing an in-depth look at his company’s integrated Mobile campaign that was run with help from agencies Carat & Isobar.
Also noted in the aforementioned RCR Wireless Article, Nicholas Covey, director of insights for Nielsen Mobile said, “much of the lack of transparency in mobile is the fact that the industry has yet to develop real-time measurement systems”.. “Largely, the mobile industry right now is not like the television or online industries where you get overnight ratings,” Covey explained. “Mobile is generally measured in 3-day increments.”
Well, I agree that at the macro-aggregate level that Nielsen Mobile deals with they don’t get real-time metrics, but at an application level, i.e. the mobile marketing company and aggregator, that is NOT the case. The beauty of Mobile as a direct response mechanism is that it is instant. If I configure a mobile marketing campaign for a Txt2Vote or Sweepstakes, etc.. I can instantly see when results start rolling in.
Discover Card Launches Mobile Site
Discover Financial Services, a leading credit card issuer and electronic payment services company, has announced that its card-members will now be able to manage their credit card account directly from their mobile phone’s browser. It has launched Discover.com Mobile, the mobile version of the Discover Card Web site.
The new mobile Web site will offer a simplified version of the Discover.com account summary interface. Users will be able to make a payment, view recent transactions, view recent and pending payments, view rewards activity, and enroll in the 5% Cashback Bonus program.
“At Discover, we know that busy consumers are constantly looking for more convenient ways to stay in control of their finances,” said Sarah Alter, vice president of e-business and new markets at Discover Financial Services.
Discover.com Mobile is the latest of the portfolio of products and services Discover Card has introduced to help card-members stay in control of their finances. The company recently launched the Spend Analyzer, an online personal finance tool that allows card-members to see exactly how and where they are spending their money through graphical charts that organize their purchases into broad categories.
It has also launched Paydown Planner, a tool that gives card-members a customized look at how long it should take to pay down their balances over a specific timeframe, while the Purchase Planner helps them understand how a large purchase could affect their monthly payment.
“Discover.com Mobile provides a new service channel that allows card-members to have access to their account information right at their fingertips. Whether by telephone, Internet or now mobile phone, Discover Card is committed to providing card-members with the services they need at the time, place and method they choose.”
Mobile Banking is available for free to all Discover Card members.Users can visit Discover.com Mobile at m.discover.com from any mobile device that supports web browsing functionality. Discover Cardmembers will be able to use their existing Discover.com User ID and password to log in.
Source: Discover Financial Services
www.bluespotmedia.ning.comMobile Posse Offers Risk-Free Idle Screen Mobile Advertising Trial to Advertisers
“Double-Digits Pledge” is an innovative sales promotion launched by Mobile Posse, a provider of content and advertising delivery solutions for mobile, to allow advertisers try idle screen advertising risk-free. The new solution has been developed for agencies and brands looking to extend their advertising campaigns to mobile. Participating advertisers are guaranteed a minimum 10% click-through-rate (CTR) on campaigns delivered via the Mobile Posse platform. The company also claimed that it will refund the advertising fees for ads that do not generate the promised consumer response, to the advertiser.
“In a tough economy, marketers need to make every marketing dollar count,” said Bill Jennings, Chief Revenue Officer of Mobile Posse. “We are pleased to be able to offer agencies and brands an economical and risk-free means to pilot idle screen mobile advertising campaigns.”
Mobile Posse is a leading provider of idle screen advertising solutions in the U.S. Commercially deployed with both national and regional carriers, Mobile Posse’s advertising platform proactively delivers content and programming to the home screen of the mobile device. Users opt-in to the service and receive free content like weather, trivia, and celebrity gossip, in addition to valued offers including coupons and discounts.
Users of the Mobile Posse solution receive informational and entertainment content in exchange for viewing occasional promotional offers. The platform delivers mobile content directly to the idle screen of the mobile device when not in use. Phone calls, text messages, and mobile web browsing are never interrupted, ensuring a superior user experience. The service is free for users and also to those that do not have a data plan.
In a survey of Mobile Posse users, over 65% were highly satisfied with the mix the content and offers delivered, and over 75% would recommend the service to a friend.
“Idle screen advertising is the cutting-edge of mobile advertising technologies,” said Jon Jackson, CEO of Mobile Posse. “Our platform proves that mobile advertising – done right – provides unmatched value per advertising dollar spent. We invite advertisers to experience the performance of our solution first-hand, risk-free. If your mobile ad doesn’t perform – you don’t pay.”
Mobile Posse’s Double-Digits Pledge will be available to customers placing advertising insertion orders between January 15, 2009 and March 1, 2009. The offer is open to new customers only, and additional restrictions may apply.
“Advertisers can leverage the platform to quickly and easily deploy graphical and interactive mobile advertising campaigns to consumers. Sophisticated targeting capabilities allow advertisers to effectively reach their desired target market, to maximize consumer response. For example, a coupon promoting 10% off a lunch special at a local restaurant can be delivered at 11AM on weekdays. Consumers can also easily re-engage with the offer at any time during the promotional period through the application’s Recent Offers Menu. The flexibility of the platform makes it an ideal mobile complement to existing campaigns, capable of supporting virtually any product or service,” according to the company release.
Earlier this month, Mobile Posse had partnered with Distributive Networks to offer free informational and entertainment programming such as Celebrity Gossip, Fortune Cookie, Horoscopes, Jokes, Movie Buzz, Quirky News, Sports Trivia, Word of the Day, etc. to its users.
Source: Mobile Posse
www.bluespotmedia.ning.comMobile Internet 2010 - Emerging Markets Will See Fastest Growth
These are exciting times for mobile Internet as it comes of age. Patterns and preferences in user behaviours and preferences are emerging and it is possible to start discerning market trends and with greater detail predict coming development. The number of PCs in use worldwide has surpassed 1 billion and there are one and a half billion Internet users globally. At the same time there are more than 4 billion mobile subscribers, indicating the vast growth potential for mobile Internet, especially considering that 58% of the world’s installed PCs are in markets that account for only 15% of the world’s population, meaning that for a majority of the potential users the handset is their main Internet terminal.
The global migration to 3G is also picking up pace and the base of WCDMA 3G subscribers more than doubled during both 2006 and 2007. By June 2008 there were more than 235 million WCDMA subscribers, representing a 6.4% penetration looking at all mobile subscribers worldwide, and 11% if only considering WCDMA markets. Furthermore the number of EVDO subscribers was about 100 million in mid-2008.
A new report by Berg Insight, "Mobile Internet 2010", discusses significant trends and initiatives in usage and applications of mobile Internet during 2008, and what development can be expected in the coming years.
Executive Summary of the report:
Faster networks alone are not enough to stimulate the uptake of mobile Internet. Even among the 3G subscribers in the Western world, the share of mobile Internet users remains low. This confirms that it is vital that service providers, operators and handset manufacturers ensure that the overall experience of the first-time user is smooth, intuitive, reliable and confidence-inspiring. Berg Insight recommends that services are designed so that there is a straight-forward and guided way to access attractive contents for the first-time user, bypassing complex applications and advanced features until the user is ready for them. One way of achieving this is through free broadcasting services or widgets, making attractive contents available with one click on a running teaser-banner.
Mobile surfers in Western markets are to a large degree fixed Internet users that use the mobile device as an alternative channel. There is a larger degree of mobile Internet users among the general population of Internet users than there is in the general population of mobile users. It is therefore important for mobile service providers and operators to recognize that it is the PC and what users see and come across there that to a large degree inspires and motivates what they do on the mobile Internet and what they expect from services there.
The report discusses significant Internet trends that application designers and providers need to consider regardless of from which terminal their users access their services. One such trend concerns how social services become more sophisticated and content sharing is evolving into content collaboration; another one is that information is increasingly becoming available for free while filtering and attention are value-added features that come with a price.
When introducing mobile services that are established in the fixed world and marketed as such, customers will expect to find familiar content titles and similar features. As exemplified in the report, service providers should not be afraid to exploit cross-over recognition to attract fixed users to the portable net. Berg Insight believes that any operator trying to limit access and keep the user from his or her favourite Internet sites and applications will lose in the long run.
But to create new user behaviours it is not enough just to be present on both fixed and mobile with the same features and look-and-feel, but the fixed and mobile qualities should complement each other. Berg Insight believes that presence is a key feature that has the potential to transform mobile applications for communications, such as instant messaging and e-mail, as well as for example social networking and advertising. With presence and location information connected to e.g. the entries in the phone’s address book, we can imagine one single application to integrate all communications and social functions, which adapts to the availability of different contacts, selecting appropriate communications modes depending on context.
Currently the mobile Internet market is fragmented between operators, Internet players and content aggregators trying to find a way to get on to the small screens, but in a not too distant future, handset-embedded browsers and automatic re-directs to mobile-adopted sites will make the surfing experience smooth regardless of terminal. Then the users will select and stay with mobile services that give them what they have come to expect from the Internet (browsing, e-mail, IM, media, networking…) with the addition of inherit differentiators of surfing-on-the-go - such as instantaneity, personalisation, location, efficiency in presentation - into added value. The challenge for service developers and providers will be to design, package and introduce these features so that they become a natural and easily accepted evolution of online communication, which will require a deep understanding of how users communicate and how they interact with mobile technology. It will be crucial that in an already complex networking environment, adding e.g. presence as a mobile feature increases control and simplifies, not the opposite.
It is important to not overlook the emerging markets which comprise the majority of the world’s mobile users and is the fastest growing one. Surveys consistently show that the largest interest for data services over mobile handsets is found in emerging markets, where under-supplied fixed infrastructure makes the portable phone a viable utility for many practical applications, not just communication but also banking, entertainment, commerce and similar. However, since these users often do not come from a PC background, and often do not have PC-based Internet experience or any fixed access alternative, their expectations are fundamentally different and the markets consequently behave differently.
Similarly, there exists in all geographical markets a significant segment of mobile users without PC background or access. With the right easily understood, service-focused introduction, the familiar and non-intimidating mobile phone is well positioned to enable data services for communications, media sharing, information and similar. In areas with mature mobile usage this segment, comprising for example elderly, has generated a substantial market, not only in adapted mobile terminals and services, but also in peripheral mobile-centric equipment such as printers and speakers.
Source: Berg Insight
www.bluespotmedia.ning.comSee Grassroots ‘Snapshot’ View of Barack Obama’s Presidential Inauguration Event on SnapMyLife
U.S. President-elect, Barack Obama will be swearing in as the next President of the United States next Tuesday, January 20 during the Presidential Inauguration. Tens of thousands of citizens will converge for the inauguration and many others events that place next week. During these events, SnapMyLife, a mobile photo-sharing site, has announced that many of its 600,000 members will be able to snap photos from their mobile phones at locations around Washington, DC and the world. SnapMyLife’s mobile, grassroots campaign will cover ‘LIVE’, a host of inauguration events taking place next week and its users will be able to see photos people are sharing in real-time directly from their mobile phones.
Needham, Massachusetts-based SnapMyLife is a mobile-web community that allows users to instantly share and discover photos from locations around the world. The site is optimized for viewing directly on mobile phones, offers location tagging and interactive picture maps, and uses sophisticated filtering technology to ensure a great experience for a wide range of audiences and advertisers. It was launched in April 2008, and now boasts of more than 1.5 million unique visitors per month and over 600,000 registered users.
“Barack Obama’s campaign broke new ground with its extensive use of social media and new technology,” said David Chang, co-founder of SnapMyLife.

SnapMyLife Website
SnapMyLife’s mobile-web community enables consumers to instantly share, discover and location-tag photos from any place in the world. The company invites the tens of thousands of citizens planning to converge for the inauguration, or many regional events across the country, to participate by snapping photos with their mobile phones and sharing them instantly.
“On election day, SnapMyLife users from around the world openly shared their experiences live as the votes were tallied deep into the night. On inauguration day, we are encouraging people to share their memories from events in Washington, DC and around the world,” added Chang.
To submit a photo, users have to create a free account on SnapMyLife and email or MMS the photo to a personal upload address with the tag ‘Obama’ in the body of the message. Users can participate in the event or see the inauguration photos streaming live on www.snapmylife.com/tags/show/obama. They can also see photos from regional inaugural events on www.snapmylife.com/maps.
Source: SnapMyLife
www.bluespotmedia.ning.comRecord 1.4 Billion Mobile Messages on Inauguration Day?
Posted by Adena on Jan 15, 2009 in Mobile Marketing
Mobile messaging played a huge role in the 2008 presidential election, and there’s no reason for its popularity to wane in 2009. On election day, a record-breaking 1.4 billion mobile messages will be sent, according to a new report by VeriSign.
The Washington Post calls it “the participatory inaugural.” The Obama campaign wants to keep its young, mobile-savvy audience involved with the political process. Using the mobile platform to reach their younger audience is key.
“You don’t have to brave the crowds and commotion in order to participate in this celebration, because we’ve made this Inauguration open and accessible to communities across our nation,” Obama says in his latest YouTube video release. “Just text the word ‘open’ to 56333 for news, transportation updates, and ways you can participate.”
Compare the upcoming inauguration day’s 1.4 billion messages to election day numbers: on Nov. 4, 803 million messages were caried over VeriSign’s network. The internet infastructure company estimates mobile messaging to increase by approximately 15 percent on the day that Barack Obama and Vice-President Joe Biden take the oath of office.
VeriSign releases a quarterly Mobile Messaging Index that summarizes total traffic volume by measuring the number of A2P/P2P mobile messages (SMS, MMS) the company handles each day. VeriSign’s Q4 2008 and Year End 2008 Mobile Messaging Index is expected in February 2009.
Subway + GoMobo = Text 4 Sammiches
Posted by eydie on Jan 15, 2009 in Mobile Marketing, Mobile Shopping, SMS / Text
Manhattanites craving sub sandwiches can now satiate themselves via SMS–and sammich-sellers are reaping the benefits.
Every Subway franchise in the New York city borough has started offering text-message ordering, powered by GoMobo–which, as Michael told us a year ago, aims to permanently simplify and standardize the way busy people everywhere pre-purchase their fast food or hot cup of coffee.
To participate in Subway Now, customers need to go online and set up their “favorite” food items and desired shop locations. When they’re hungry, they text the keyword MENU to the short code 466626 to receive the list of their favorites. Then they reply via SMS with the number of their desired food. Subway then texts out an order confirmation and pick-up time.
The campaign, launched January 5, is a permanent one for the participating shops, and could lead to a national expansion if successful. I’m told that the restaurant owners have seen their average order sizes grow 50 percent since starting Subway Now–$9.45 from $6.32.
This boon is a testament to the multi-channel as well. Subway’s campaign has been promoted with marketing both traditional (ads within the New York City subway system, direct mail with partner American Express ) and new (online ads on sites like Gawker and Gothamist).
Metro Station Goes Mobile
Posted by michael on Jan 16, 2009 in Mobile Commerce, Mobile Marketing
The Knitting Factory in Los Angeles is partnering with Mozes to launch the first West Coast installment of the “Music-to-Go” concert series, featuring Columbia Records’ Metro Station, on January 21.
Details about the exclusive show, along with free streaming music and video playlists from Metro Station, are available now on the social music service imeem (www.imeem.com/metrostation). According to the announcement, mobile tickets to the free concert will be offered exclusively to members of Metro Station’s mob (which is their mobile fan club) and to select music and cultural “influencers” in the LA area. Mozes has set up the phone number 310-341-4437 for fans to receive a mobile ticket directly to their phones.
This works out great because no paper tickets will be issued. Only the power of mobile can make possible a huge concert for a huge act with no paper tickets available. In 2008, “Shake It” was the first Metro Station record to break into the Top 10 of the U.S. Hot 100 chart, and was the band’s first single to reach the Top 5 on America’s Top 40 pop radio charts.