Saturday, February 7, 2009

Mobile Marketing: Hot Internet Marketing Trend for 2008

To stay on top of your game, you need to stay on top of the hot trends in internet marketing, because this medium moves at nothing less than light speed. With new mobile technologies and new ways of reaching the consumer through cellular phones, mobile marketing is going to be a hot internet marketing trend in 2008.
With the advent of the Apple iPhone, mobile marketing is becoming that much easier. Touch screens, user friendly interfaces, mobile widgets, new email solutions and better web experiences are making mobile search easier to use. As the mobile internet becomes more user friendly, consumers are going to use it more, which means big opportunities for internet marketers.
Just check out some of the factors that are going to make mobile marketing explode in 2008:
Early 2008 Apple will open its iPhone deck to third party developers launching an explosion of innovative mobile solutions.
With iTunes pushing video to iPods and iPhones, mobile video is becoming more accessible to consumers.
WiMax...that’s right, high speed isn’t just going to be available to phone and cable companies. This new form of broadband technology will be creating hot spots that will span over hundreds of square miles.

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MOBILE MARKETING FORUM SERIES (MMF)

Mobile is on track to be the most pervasive media channel in the world. Over one billion mobile devices are sold annually, and ubiquitous consumer usage will soon make mobile the primary screen worldwide. Always on and always connected – even more than the TV and web – the mobile channel provides brands with the unique ability to connect with their consumer like never before, building a meaningful dialogue of engagement between the brand and the consumer.With such growth come challenges to marketers: What are the best practices for all players? How do brands engage? How are other marketers maximizing the channel, and how are they gauging their success? How can mobile technologies become more standardized and accessible when incorporating them in the marketing mix?
The Mobile Marketing Association’s Mobile Marketing Forum series brings the entire mobile marketing ecosystem together under one roof. In partnership with Informa Telecoms & Media, the series brings together leading operators, brands, agencies, content providers, entertainment and media companies from around the globe to drive the momentum for mobile marketing adoption. The forums deliver the best learning and networking experience of any event in the mobile space, complete with fully interactive agendas packed with the latest brand, operator and agency case studies designed to give you the most value from your attendance. Those new to mobile will learn best practices with real-world application, and those already engaged in mobile can learn how to deploy more advanced capabilities to enhance existing mobile initiatives.
You will hear from industry thought leaders who really challenge existing thinking and drive initiatives; you can expect powerful debate and well-facilitated interaction; you will meet new partners and business connections; and you can expect to leave each event with new ideas and perspectives that will change the way you do business.

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Mobile Commerce Services - Driving Mobile Commerce Adoption: Best Practices for a Comprehensive, Secure Mobile Commerce Strategy


Topics:
Best Practices,
Business Strategies,
E-commerce Security
Tags:
Best Practice,
Mobile,
Mobile Commerce
Source:
VeriSign

Though in their infancy, mobile commerce services are already paving the way for the increasingly dynamic, value-rich services of the future - and the consumer market that will follow. As a trusted provider of messaging, security, marketing, and payment services that support mobile commerce, VeriSign has gained unique insight into the complex requirements of the mobile commerce ecosystem. This paper discusses these requirements and outlines best practices for a comprehensive and secure mobile commerce strategy.

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Mobile Search Site Creation and Optimization: Part 1 of 2

The following is coverage of the Search Engine Strategies (SES) New York presentation called "Mobile Search Optimization" by Cindy Krum of Blue Moon Works, Gregory Markel, President of Infuse Creative LLC and Rachel Pasqua, Director of Mobile Marketing at iCrossing.

This presentation provided a fascinating glimpse into the young realm of mobile site creation, compliance and optimization. I have a lot of information to work with here so to make this article a little more digestible I have broken it into two parts; one is the site creation and the second is the site optimization.

Mobile Website Design & Creation
During this presentation two very different lines of thought were noted regarding the best method for creating a mobile website, one from Cindy Krum and the other from Rachel Pasqua.

> Cindy Krum's Presentation

Cindy Krum felt strongly that an existing website should pull double-duty as both the wired and the mobile version by using CSS to provide an alternative, mobile friendly version shown only to mobile users.

Cindy provided some great tips on how to create a hybrid mobile/wired website:


Ensure your website is 100% W3C XHTML compliant because mobile browsers are completely unforgiving when it comes to improper coding.

Follow strict XHTML accessibility guidelines to provide the best quality product for both wired, mobile, and those that require accessibility (i.e. the blind). She also noted that by following accessibility requirements any images that do not show up on the mobile browser will be defined in text format – a nice backup.

Avoid unnecessary code to minimize download times.

Ensure the site uses CSS to control content – this is critical to ensure the mobile version can have reorganized placement of content. (i.e. the menu might be at the bottom vs. the top)

Use external CSS files to provide maximum flexibility such as the ability to specify a different style sheet for each mobile browser.

Use the LINK element to attach style sheets because it is a much friendlier format for mobile browsers.

Use multiple style sheets. The minimum would be a style sheet called "screen" for regular wired visitors and a second style sheet (provided below the first) called "handheld".

Use "display: none" to hide elements in either rendering. This is useful if you have page elements you do not want to appear to mobile users or vice versa. Using this method of hiding content is part of what makes Cindy's hybrid approach feasible of using a single website for both viewing technologies (handheld, and wired).

These headers will help you identify the mobile device being used to access the content. HTTP User-Agent headers, HTTP Accept Headers, and UAProf.

Use the appropriate MIME type: "text/html" or "application/xhtml+xml".

> Rachel Pasqua's Presentation

At the opposite spectrum was Rachel Pasqua who firmly stated that offering your current website to users, reformatted or not, would likely provide a less than desirable user experience. She went on to explain that mobile users should see an entirely different, more time efficient version of your website because such users are task oriented. Rachel put her thoughts into excellent perspective when she stated that mobile search is "not surf media, it's search media". She also went on to state that iCrossing decided to proceed with the subdomain concept rather than a separate domain such as a .mobi. In this case their mobile site is located at mobile.icrossing.com; a sensible concept that retained the branding of the top level domain name without having to rebrand a new one (i.e. going with the .mobi version)

Rachel had some interesting metrics and tips to share with the group that were researched at iCrossing using focus groups and other research (sorry I don't know the source but the report is due to be released soon I hear). Here are a few tidbits that I caught on paper:

Mobile searchers tend to utilize the same search engine they use when they are on their PC.

Only 10% of the estimated 234 million US wireless subscribers are active users of mobile search.

Searchers are task oriented, they tend to want to get their information and get out; mobile surfing is extremely uncommon.

My Take on Hybrid Sites Versus A Separate Mobile Website
Of the two beliefs I felt myself more strongly drawn to the concept of a separate mobile site. Why? I think the maintenance of a hybrid website is bound to be far more difficult because design updates will require designers to think in both realms which is likely to make updates laborious for the average business owner.


> Gregory Markel's Presentation
Gregory Markel of Infuse Creative LLC, dropped a very intriguing bombshell at the beginning of his discussion when he noted that Google's Voice Local Search just might take the world of mobile search in an entirely different direction. According to Gregory, his friends and network of mobile enthusiasts have been impressed by the results of using 800-GOOG-411 and conducting a free voice search; the results have been extremely relevant and Google immediately connects the user to their preferred result by phone. After this bombshell had sunk in, he went on to discuss many of the points already mentioned by Cindy but he had a few highlights definitely worth mentioning including this valuable tip: get into Google local for your area so that you can be found on Google's Voice Local Search, it is free and easy to do. (Note, I wrote an article on how to do this a few months back called: Have Your Company Listed Free in Google Maps). Unfortunately, Google Voice Local Search is experimental and only available in the United States.

Highlights from Markel:

Mobile search adoption has been slower in the US than expected at only 19%

An excellent source of mobile statistics is the self-described authority on mobile metrics, MMetrics.com.

When users conduct searches, they are more likely to search using 2 or a maximum of 3 words.

Nokia has decided to try to simplify the process of searching by integrating it into its future line of cell phones.

Mobile devices require ultimate simplicity to ensure compatibility across the vast number of proprietary mobile browsers available.

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Mobile Search Site Creation and Optimization: Part 2 of 2

The following is Part 2 of the coverage of the Search Engine Strategies (SES) New York presentation called "Mobile Search Optimization" by Cindy Krum of Blue Moon Works, Gregory Markel, President of Infuse Creative LLC and Rachel Pasqua, Director of Mobile Marketing at iCrossing.Part 2: Mobile Site OptimizationThe question remains; how should you optimize a mobile web page? All of the presenters provided tips, but Cindy Krum's presentation provided the majority of information. I listed a blend of the tips from all presenters below:
Make certain that no information is located more than 3 clicks from the home page
Organize the page so the main content appears first on the page followed by the navigation. For most this will seem counter intuitive, but by laying out the mobile page in this manner mobile users will see the content they want faster and thus know they are on a different page; versus seeing the same navigation listing again if the navigation was at the top – which would look the same across all pages. In addition, mobile users want to avoid scrolling as much as possible so having the content first will offer better visitor retention.
Organize your navigation in the most logical fashion. In other words, place what is likely to be the most popular buttons first using text links, followed by the others in order. In addition, make certain to word the buttons clearly and succinctly to use as little screen real estate as possible while applying good call to action principles.
Offer a sitemap so that spiders and users alike can quickly navigate the mobile site if need be.
Keep the filenames for the mobile pages short and keyword rich.
Do not use pop-ups, frames or Flash because these are likely to block mobile browsers, not just search engine spiders.
Optimize mobile pages for short keyword phrases since mobile users tend search using up to three words in a single phrase.
Rely only on the textual content, not on images, objects or scripts because they may not appear on handheld browsers.
Minimize file size for faster content loading.
Use optimized heading tags wherever appropriate. Just like standard web pages, properly optimized Heading Tags play a significant role in search engine algorithms.
Test and validate your mobile website to ensure maximum effectiveness for both users and spiders alike. Here are some options that Cindy Klum provided in her presentation:Simulators: Skweezer, Google,Validators: .Mobi Validator, W3C Mobile Web Validator
Conduct a traditional link building campaign specifically for your mobile website. Do this by submitting to local and mobile directories and getting links from other mobile websites. Also, purchase text links from other mobile and traditional websites.
Announce to the world that your mobile website now exists through press releases. This will add bonus backlinks to your website.
Offer social book marking and tagging functionality to your mobile website.
When a user clicks on one of these phone numbers their mobile phone will immediately connect them to the number.Include your main website address in the footer of the mobile page and make your phone numbers clickable using the following sample syntax:< href="tel:2503851190">250-385-1190< /a >Note: eliminate spacing immediately beside brackets for the code to work.Other Tips from the Mobile Optimization PanelAmidst discussion and the question and answer period there were a few great points that I felt were worth adding to this summary:
If you choose not to use a .mobi domain as your primary address for the mobile website then you should still purchase the domain and forward traffic to the alternate address. In this way, you will at least protect your brand. As an added note, I would strongly recommend using a 301 redirect from the .mobi to the main address if you decide to follow this path.
Google offers a transcoding system that will attempt to change any website into a mobile website automatically. It was universally agreed on the panel that depending on transcoding to provide your mobile users with a mobile-friendly website is a very bad idea.
According to Gregory Markel, approximately 17% of mobile traffic comes from users navigating directly to a URL. As a result, it is strongly recommended that your mobile URL is very simple to remember and easily typed in (no too long or difficult to spell).
The current best source for mobile user statistics is http://www.mmetrics.com/
Google produced a (PDF) Mobile Search Behavior study that Gregory Markel mentioned was an excellent source of information.
I will end this synopsis with an apt quote that Rachel Pasqua began her presentation with:
"... it's really not a matter IF the mobile phone will become the dominant internet platform any more but WHEN..." - Yahoo! analyst Russell Beattie
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Mobile Search Optimization Essentials

First, for a sobering look at how your site parses in mobile browsers, check out these mobile preview applications: Skweezer, Google, and the live demo of Opera Mini. Chances are your site is not immediately navigable in the mobile environment or you’ll hate what it looks like.When polled during a recent Chris Sherman mobile search web event, most pro SEM attendees indicated that they had not yet geared shop production to consider and exploit the rapidly expanding field of mobile search. This will certainly change.
“… it’s really not a matter IF the mobile phone will become the dominant internet platform any more but WHEN…” - Yahoo! analyst Russell Beattie
Adopt Mobile EarlyCompared to traditional web search, mobile search remains a relatively small piece of the pie. That said, the looming mobile marketplace is vast and can’t be ignored. We advise our clients to consider mobile versions of their sites for any web production with an expected shelf life of over 18 months.Last September comScore Networks estimated that in the United States only about 19% of mobile owners were use phones like Treos, Blackberries, and Q’s to access the Internet. However there were approximately 2 billion mobile phone users globally compared to a measly 750 million Internet users. In some European countries like Spain nearly 25% of mobile phone owners use mobile search to access the Internet, mostly via big-engine portals like Google and Yahoo. I recommend mMetrics as a source for statistics on mobile usage.
There are a number of issues. This post discusses tips, tricks, and techniques for successful development of alternate mobile versions while demystifying the action-steps required to design, build, deploy, and market mobile websites.
2 Schools of Mobile ThoughtThere are 2 schools of thought regarding mobile site creation, double duty sites (where a single site acts as both mobile and wired) and multiple site versions. Each method can involve HTTP User-Agent headers, HTTP Accept Headers, and UAProf to identify the mobile browser and redirect to properly formatted content as appropriate. Wikipedia has a very useful list of user agents for your reference. It is possible to use.asp or PHP to detect mobile phones.
Double-Duty SitesIt can be practical to adapt existing website hierarchical structure. The site map is already there as are content attributes like text. The “double-duty” approach uses CSS to configure a single website to “auto-adapt,” functioning as both the mobile and wired editions. Exclusions, based on browser platforms, make available an alternative mobile-friendly version which only mobile users see. In essence this method “hides” page elements from mobile users or traditional (wired) browsers.
Double-Duty and TricksEmploy multiple style sheets. At minimum designate one style sheet for normal web browsers (wired traffic) and a second style sheet (below the first) for mobile browsers.
Employ the CSS attribute “display: none” to mask page elements for either mobile or wired renderings. This method makes it possible to hide page elements from each type of visitor. The hybrid approach makes it feasible to use a single site structure for both browsing environments.
Use these headers to identify your visitor’s mobile device: HTTP User-Agent headers, HTTP Accept Headers, and UAProf. Be sure to utilize the appropriate MIME type: “text/html” or “application/xhtml+xml”.
The Multiple Sites ApproachOthers prefer completely separate creative and technical processes for wired and mobile site design and development. The basis of this approach is rooted in the belief that mobile visitors should experience a totally different and more streamlined user experience and information design because they are more task-oriented. At SES Rachael Pasqua suggested that mobile is “not surf media, it’s search media”. She recommends developing on a subdomain (mobile.yourDomain.com) rather than a .mobi extension in order to retain the top level domain name without having to re-brand.
Mobile Website Design EssentialsRegardless of the approach you choose, it is critical that mobile websites be 100% W3C XHTML compliant because mobile browsers are completely unforgiving when it comes to improper coding. Strict adherence to XHTML accessibility guidelines offers the most reliable website experience for users. As an important aside XHTML compliance also provides adaptive users, who have special accessibility needs like the deaf and blind, access to content via their interpretative devices.
Mobile browsing requires different content placement like big navigation buttons at the top and bottom of the screen. Keep download times short. Bandwidth is still an issue in the mobile environment.
Make sure the site uses CSS to control the appearance of content. External CSS files can be used to designate a different style sheet for each mobile browser. When attaching style sheets, use the LINK element because is a friendlier format for mobile browsers.
Mobile Site OptimizationSome mobile optimization techniques are entirely different than wired sites. Other basic principles still hold true. For starters, the screen is only 2 or 3 inches, downloads can be slow, and visitors tend to be more results oriented. Here are some tips:
Key performance marketing goals (KPI) should be no more than 1-3 clicks away from the homepage. Don’t use fancy funnels to convert.
Place main content at the top of the first page and follow with navigation. Though opposite from traditional web design (nav bars on top), mobile users want to see changing content quickly enough to know they are on a different page- as opposed to a replay of navigation elements. In this small screen format, top nav bars eat up a significant portion each pages first field of view. Mobile visitors do not want to scroll to realize that they are on a new page holding the content they seek.Keep the navigation very simple using large text links. Provide fewer navigation options to pages that have less information. Use images only when needed to accomplish the KPI. For more complex navigation, create menu-only pages with big text link nav options. Practice good old fashioned call-to-action principles early and often.
Use sitemaps and robots.txt so that spiders can quickly index your mobile site while avoiding the possibility of duplicate content.Use pretty URLs which employ keywords.Do not use Flash, pop ups, iframes, javascript or frames. Some of these technologies block mobile spiders and none can be expected to render well on mobile platforms at this time.Optimize your site for 1-2 word keyphrases. Mobile users tend to search for smaller phrases with fewer words (the big thumb factor).Use (heading) and bold html tags. As with traditional web design, html tags like H and Bold send signals to mobile search engines regarding content you designate as core.Be strategic and intentional in mobile specific link building campaigns and dedicate efforts to mobile URL marketing tactics. Submit to mobile and local directories and seek links from other mobile sites.Traditional PR buzz tactics like brick and online press releases help to garner additional inbound links. Mobile search is still young enough that it is “news” in some arenas that your product or services are offered via mobile. Take advantage of being an early adopter with good PR.Integrate social media tagging and social bookmarking tools on your mobile pages. My belief is that social behavior via the mobile web is the future. All we need to look at is text messaging as the harbinger.
Be sure phone numbers are clickable. Keep in mind while mobile handsets usually render phone numbers clickable, the following syntax helps to ensure this: < href="”tel:2503851190″">250-385-1190. It should be obvious that the KPI for mobile applications is often a visitor calling a phone number. Your clickable phone number and main website address should be in the footer of each mobile page.
Caveats:Protect your brand. If you decide not to use the .mobi domain for your brand’s mobile site, purchase it anyway to defend your brand. Forward traffic to the actual mobile site by way of a 301 redirect from the .mobi address.It is true that Google offers a transcoding application which does it’s level best to parse any website to mobile automatically. Do not depend on this technology. You likely won’t enjoy the results.Keep your mobile URL very short and easy to remember. A significant amount of mobile traffic comes from direct visitors who type in your URL.Additional Resources: http://www.cameronmoll.com/archives/000577.html
http://blogs.feedburner.com/tips/optimize/make_your_site_mobile_in_under/
http://www.andymoore.info/wordpress-mobile-plugin/
http://www.w3.org/TR/mobile-bp/
http://dev.mobi/book/export/html/373
http://www.quirksmode.org/blog/archives/2007/03/mobile_web_dev.html
http://www.thescripts.com/forum/thread647122.html
http://www.developershome.com/wap/wcss/wcss_tutorial.asp?page=toDiffUserAgents2
Large Scale Study of Wireless Search Behavior: Google Mobile Search
http://www.google.com/mobile/
http://www.seroundtable.com/archives/006868.html
http://mobile.yahoo.com/onesearch
http://mobile.ask.com/
http://mobile.search.live.com/about/
http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/feb2007/tc20070220_828216.htm
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20070524-the-future-of-google-mobile-search-mapped-results.html

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Mobile marketing strategy in 2008: The race for tiny space

So it’s the end of 2007 and your online business is humming. You’ve honed your Value Proposition to a razor-sharp message. You’re always in the top 10 search results, and your Incentives and Friction control make doing business with you as silky as Yves Delorme sheets.
Then mobile marketing comes along.
With the current mobile seascape roiling with search engine companies, carriers, and content producers all trying to dominate new territory, it’s enough to make even the hardiest CMOs feel like losing their lunch over the side.
Google is (allegedly) working on the mobile phone Operating System (OS) of the future. Once Google gets a phone pre-conditioned for optimal search and ad delivery into the hands of millions of searching, discovering customers, ads could pay enough of the freight to make owning and operating the phone virtually free. The price of cellular services on all networks could drop substantially if that strategy becomes reality, as long as you don’t mind hearing five second pitches before every call or seeing tiny ads in, on, and around your display.
AOL is undergoing its own major transformation, repositioning itself as another device-agnostic portal leading you to services like MapQuest, CityGuide, and Moviefone, search, mail, and IM. They’ll also let you personalize the page and find your friends with GPS widgets. Of course Third Screen Media, AOL’s ad placement firm, will show you ads based on what you’re searching for, where you are going, and what you are doing.
Yahoo’s oneSearch also wants to be your default mobile search engine. Their strategy is to grow their global market as quickly as possible, talking with European and South American mobile behemoth Telefonica about being the primary cellular search engine in 15 countries.
But if you’re interested in reaching the Asian mobile market, better talk to Google. Though Baidu claims 60% of online search in China, Google crafted its own deal with China Mobile, the biggest cellular network in Asia with 300 million subscribers, back in January.
Meantime the carriers—the network providers—are trying to maintain their lucrative corner on cell phone “decks”—those menus of services pre-set on the phones they sell. Content producers like ESPN, Weather.com and game vendors cut lucrative deals with the carriers to be “on-deck,” and ad buyers cut deals with the content producers. Google’s new phone strategy could make those lists obsolete, replacing them with good ol’ top 10 search results and PPC ads.
According to a report by Colin Gibbs released by RCRWirelessnews.com last week, off-deck content producers have their own problems, citing inadequate billing systems and onerous revenue-share models.
With new developments and challenges in the mobile market coming out every day, will hard-won expertise in landing page optimization and search engine marketing be directly transferrable to your mobile strategy?
Yes and maybe.
Yes, because you must still answer the basic questions: who your customers are, where they came from, what they are looking for, how to get them to convert once they get to you, and how to keep improving your results.Maybe, because the current lack of real estate (a handful at best) on mobile devices and the state of flux in mobile technology mean optimization, search, and testing techniques and tools will need tweaking, if not a purpose-built redesign. It’s certainly an exciting opportunity to find out what really works when it comes to mobile marketing.
If you consider yourself an old hand at mobile marketing and you’ve already got some tips and anecdotes, please share. We’d certainly love to hear them.

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Mobile Marketing: Quick Overview of Options

Ready to dip into mobile marketing but don't know where to get started? The buzz is confusing, but with 40% of the big brands already testing the waters, time's a wasting.
In MarketingSherpa's quick overview, discover: the costs behind developing and launching a mobile campaign; how to keep users interested once the novelty wears off; and successful efforts from McDonald's, Procter & Gamble and other top brands. Plus, 10 links to creative samples, a useful glossary of terms, newly updated best practices and a fun tool that shows you what your Web site looks like on a mobile phone.
This full article is available only to MarketingSherpa Members. You can set up your FREE trial and read the article at https://www.marketingsherpa.com/.
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One-Day "Crash Course" on Mobile Marketing - Leveraging Experience of Leading Firms

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
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More Ad Dollars Head Towards Mobile, Social Media

Posted by Adena on Feb 5, 2009 in Featured, Mobile Marketing 2 Comments
It always amuses me when a “new report” comes out that state the obvious - “the pullback of ad dollars and mobile devices becoming personal computers are the most disruptive forces in media today,” according to a new survey by KPMG LLP, the U.S. audit, tax and advisory firm.
As a mobile marketer, what’s bad news for old media is (mostly) good news for us. In polling more than 200 media, marketing, and advertising execs, KPMG found that some 75 percent of executives predict that advertisers will move more than a quarter of media time and spending away from traditional channels in the next five years, while social networks and mobile marketing are expected to see increased activity.
With regard to mobile marketing, KPMG found that 65 percent of executives say media companies currently adapt less than a quarter of their content for mobile consumption, while 27 percent believe the current content adaptation rate is between 26 and 50 percent. However, 87 percent of respondents say media companies will move more content for mobile consumption in the next two years.
KPMG conducted the survey in collaboration with AlwaysOn, the venture capital new media organization. In the survey, 49 percent of respondents said that the pullback of advertising dollars is the most disruptive force in media today, followed closely by mobile devices becoming personal computers (40 percent).
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Mobile Brings Value to Traditional Channels

Matt Lauer helped me have a great workout Monday morning. There I was, finishing up my last few steps on the StairMaster, when I looked up at the large TVs looming over the battalion of young professionals sweating off their weekend fun. On the screen displaying "The Today Show" was a shot of a mobile phone using Cellfire.
I quickly tuned my audio to the channel and heard them talking about the mobile coupon company. I ended up watching the entire segment -- staying on the StairMaster much longer than I had originally planned -- just to make sure I didn't miss anything. Thanks for the extra minutes, Matt.
Wouldn't it be great if mobile programs such as couponing hit the mainstream? Mobile phones can function as a channel while also bringing value to other channels.
Ad-spending growth is projected to slow down in this tough economic climate, but online advertising is still expected to gain share due to the medium's measurability. These gains will likely be at the expense of traditionally static and less measurable media formats, such as newspapers, magazines, and radio. The ability for consumers to respond immediately to a banner or search ad -- the click -- persuades many marketers to shift budgets to online.
Whether click-throughs are a good method of gauging advertising effectiveness is debatable, but clicks on online banners or search ads are cheap and easy to measure, and bring the consumer closer to purchase. This still holds incredible power for many marketers. Adding a mobile component to a print ad, for example, can bring two attributes consumers and advertisers love to the traditional table: interactivity and accountability.
Although I like CellFire, marketers should first explore SMS (define). In a recent issue of Wired, Ford included an SMS code in an advertisement for the Ford Flex. Interested readers could send a text message reading "FLEX4" to 4FORD to receive a link to more information.
This sort of execution is great for consumers and marketers. Wired readers had easy access to information like car specs and pricing, and the advertiser delivered more information to interested users than they could in a print ad alone. Plus, they get a sense of how many magazine readers were interested in the Ford Flex. I could even envision Ford using multiple unique codes to compare responses from different magazines.
SMS is a widely adopted mobile technology, far ahead of application downloads and mobile Internet usage. According to research from Nielsen's Telecom Practice Group, 77 percent of U.S. wireless phone users use text messaging. In a month, the average cell phone user sends and receives more text messages (357) than phone calls (204). The average age of those using text messaging is 35.
Nielsen also reports that text messaging usage by those over 35 has grown by almost 60 percent in the last year. This usage among adults is substantial: text-versus-call ratio leans in favor of SMS into middle age. As you move up in age groups, it isn't until age 45 that you find consumers who call more than they text. This is "The Today Show" audience.
How do marketers incorporate SMS into their clients' media plans?
A lot goes into an SMS campaign. An advertiser should approach creating its own program from scratch with caution. There are fees associated with purchasing a vanity short code, such as the one in the Ford example.
However, print publishers have an opportunity here. They should consider partnering with aggregators, the mobile companies that offer short-code text-message programs.
If a woman flipping through People magazine saw a Gap ad inviting her to text "4Gap" to PEOPL to get $10 off, I bet she'd respond. People magazine could offer participation in such a program to multiple advertisers all on its one short code. This would be a great way for the publication to differentiate itself to advertisers and consumers. It might even get Matt Lauer talking about it.

http://bluespotmedia.ning.com/

Mobile Advertising: Off-the-Shelf or Custom?

I got an e-mail earlier this week with the following headline: "Mobile advertising just got easier!" The announcement was, of course, from my dear friends at MSN informing me of the new opportunity to buy mobile WAP (define) banners across their mobile WAP pages. These pages help connect consumers to MSN content like Windows Messenger, MSNBC, and Hotmail. The announcement states that almost 10 million mobile consumers access MSN WAP pages on a monthly basis. It also clearly points out that the opportunity for media buyers is to extend reach and introduce clients to mobile via an optimization of mobile WAP impressions.
In my grumpy Monday-morning, pre-caffeine state, I mumbled "I wish!" rather loudly and to no one in particular.
It's not that I don't think highly of MSN or applaud its move into the space. It's big news when a reputable traditional and digital media content owner translates offerings into mobile, let alone works toward making it a profitable revenue stream. Rather, I'm naturally skeptical of any e-mail subject header that indicates my job will be made "easier." This is quite a claim for a Monday morning late in the fourth quarter. The term "easy" makes me think of the big red easy button made popular by :30 and :60 commercials; the mobile ecosystem is far from easy-button status when it comes to tactical mobile program executions.
The MSN announcement actually brings up another issue for those involved in selling clients on the mobile space. Regardless of whether you sell from the media side or from within the agency, you have a choice in mobile advertising: including off-the-shelf mobile WAP ad programs in a digital strategy plan or ideating a customizable mobile program. Frankly, neither is easy at this point in the buying process. However, both are worth revisiting as a way to highlight their differences and point out how improvements can eventually be made to get them to resemble the one-stop shop synonymous with the big red button.
Off-the-shelf mobile programs are those that can be included within an RFP (define) response. They usually come from digital media partners or specialized mobile ad networks, both of which speak to the buyer in the digital ad language of impressions and CPMs (define). These buys work well for clients who have good relationships with media vendors or known site destinations. And the MSN announcement will help extend an existing campaign's reach and represent an optimization of media dollars because there are several types of campaigns that can be linked to the basic WAP ad banner (click-to-video, click-to-promotion, click-to-call, etc.). The challenge, though, lies in educating the client on why mobile CPMs are higher (made trickier when the digital and mobile sites on the plan are the same), why the creative messaging is best not taken exactly from the digital, and why the serving and tracking of WAP ads doesn't happen (with the majority of publishers) from DoubleClick's DART for Advertisers or Microsoft's Atlas.
Custom mobile programs generally take the form of messaging or downloadable applications. These programs require a middleman, better know as a boutique mobile vendor or aggregator, and a case-by-case carrier approval. They often tie into a larger communications plan and need media support to build awareness and, ultimately, consumer participation. The planning time is longer than that needed to execute a basic WAP banner ad program. Additionally, the cost structures involve hosting and development fees that aren't generally associated with basic WAP programs.
As with any new or emerging media, mobile marketing has its fair share of challenges. Some can be overcome with experience and marketplace education. In other cases, it isn't that simple. Passionate sellers and eager mobile buyers are in short supply. The marketplace continues to be so liquid that just keeping up with the mergers and acquisitions can be a full-time job. To continue to move this market forward, an open and frank conversation is needed between all facets of the ecosystem. Traditional telcos, television, print, and even digital media players must learn a new language, one that isn't hyped with the promise of being easy.
http://bluespotmedia.ning.com/

Mobile Advertising: The Super Bowl's Big Loser

About 90 million Americans tuned in to Sunday night's Super Bowl XLIII in Tampa, FL, according to early estimates. Many of us tuned in for the football game itself, others gathered to watch the spectacle -- Faith Hill, Jennifer Hudson, The Boss, and those much-hyped $3 million commercials. Perhaps uniquely, I was watching to see if any of those marketers shelling out $100,000 per second of commercial time used mobile in any way. I'll leave performance and the commercial content analysis to the celebrity blogs and the "USA Today" Ad Meter.
How did mobile do? Let me put it this way: the Arizona Cardinals could have given some of its near-record 11 penalties to marketers.
Play60
NBC ran a spot for the NFL's anti-youth obesity program, Play 60. This program, run in partnership with the United Way, helps to fight childhood obesity by encouraging kids to get out and exercise. Consumers were urged to donate $5 by spokesman Dallas Cowboy Jason Witten by texting the word FIT to short code 864833 (UNITED). The problem here is the ad was way too short. I'm not sure who was being the scrooge here, NFL or NBC, but this was a :15 commercial. That length of time allowed Witten to give a quick stat on youth obesity (one in three kids is overweight) and the SMS instructions -- barely. There was no explanation of where the $5 would go and how it would get there. Heck, the short code was on screen for only about three seconds. This was hardly enough time to pull your phone out of your pocket and type the code in. Also, this ad wasn't on Hulu or in the YouTube Ad Blitz channel with the rest of the Super Bowl commercials.
I was able to track down the commercial on YouTube, though not with the rest of the Super Bowl commercials. From there, I texted the word "FIT" to 864833. I received a text asking me to confirm my donation to United Way Youth Fitness by replying "Y" to the message. The message also included a Web link for terms and conditions. I typed in "Y" and received a thank you and the instructions that I could donate up to five times. There was still no description of how the $5 will get there. I had to go online to the terms and conditions to discover that the $5 dollar charges will show up on my AT&T bill. That's actually pretty convenient, although AT&T's bills are very hard to digest.
While SMS (define) is a great way to make micropayments and donations because of that convenience factor, the United Way would have been better served by a :30 spot that allowed for a more screen time for that short code. In addition, a better description of the mechanism should have been on screen or in the initial text. The ad also should have been online with the rest of the Super Bowl ads.
Fandemonium
Monster.com also used SMS in its ad. The spot listed the perks of the director of fandemonium job, which include announcing a pick at the NFL draft, calling a play at the Pro Bowl, and more. It also called people to "apply" online at nfl.monster.com or by texting "Fan" to 24421. This is exactly what several mobile experts have been calling for -- the use of SMS or mobile sites as another point of entry for people. Here again, SMS seems an ideal vehicle because a text can be sent immediately and without really breaking your attention to the TV screen. Monster also has the ad posted on Hulu and YouTube, so it's getting additional views as well from people who may have made a guacamole run when the ad aired. The problem with this execution is there is very little pay off for the consumer for texting.
The text I received back from 24421 -- and I think memorable short codes are better, such as "NFLFAN" -- instructed me to go to the Web site. That was it. While I suppose this could function as a reminder note of sorts, it was hardly worth it. How about asking for an e-mail address and using a reverse lookup to get the rest of my information?
Anheuser-Busch
There's one more penalty flag to throw. Anheuser-Busch failed to incorporate its mobile Web site into its slew of commercial spots in the game. The St. Louis brewer has a mobile site housing its "secret spot," a funny and mildly risqué ad called "Magazine Buyer." However, it didn't mention this site in its spots at all. This is a lost opportunity to get traffic to a mobile site and perhaps collect some mobile numbers to market Bud events and specials to later.
It would indeed be overkill for every ad to have a text message call to action, but the United Way and Monster had the right idea to give consumers a convenient and easy means of interacting with their spots, although they fumbled the execution. Anheuser-Busch didn't even get its mobile player on the field, which is a shame. Mobile marketing, like Cardinals fans, will have to wait till next year to win the big game.

http://bluespotmedia.ning.com/

Driving Mobile With Full Visibility

As cold Arctic blasts descend on our continent, imagine your car is fully covered with ice but for a six-inch hole cleared on your windshield. Now drive full speed and find a store that has a Nintendo Wii on sale.
If you're thinking about mobile marketing as a digital channel, you may be driving this car (even in summer), settling for games of Pong on your Atari, and blowing past a few stores along the road.
Almost everyone I talk to about mobile thinks of it as a digital channel. And it is. But it's much more than that, and I cringe when marketers limit their efforts to using mobile only for display advertising, sponsorships, or extending online search.
Mobile is as much an out-of-home, print, radio, direct, and promotions medium as it is a digital one.
First, consumers of all stripes have their mobile devices with them wherever they go, which means marketers can reach them when they're on the run, looking for products, in transit, waiting in public, and gathering with friends at a pub or in a stadium. And there are plenty of reasons to use devices at home, which means they can be coupled with traditional media.
Second, mobile devices allow consumers to interact with printed messages and immediately respond to radio ads. If you've listened to any form of radio lately (terrestrial, online, or satellite), you know mobile response to ads and contests has increased enormously. It has all but replaced the call-in function, and judging from the huge volumes of text voters on "American Idol," consumers seem to prefer it.
Many out-of-home opportunities involve using mobile devices as the response mechanism, enabling consumers to interact with a static ad or message. And that's a key use. But don't assume this capability only offers direct response possibilities at the expense of branding opportunities. Mobile devices can engage consumers in elaborate, useful mobile Web sites and applications, and the activity is highly measurable. Also, environments in which mobile ads appear are very uncluttered, which amplifies the branding effect. If the message is relevant and attractive, it has almost no other advertising to compete with. Invariably, recall, favorability, and consideration scores are very strong on mobile media.
Entertainment brands are already using mobile to achieve marketing objectives that haven't been possible through other channels. Adding a simple short code (define) to an outdoor board advertising a new movie allows consumers to link to the film's trailer, interact with deep content, and purchase tickets, all with a few keystrokes. The context and moment of that interaction make a big difference for movie marketers. Up to this point, they had to hope audiences could remember the advertising well enough to purchase tickets online when they get home, which could be hours or days later. Worse, they had to hope audiences could summon the title and interest in it when they're at the theater and under the influence of peers, time, and competing movies. Motivating consumers to get informed and buy a ticket when they see or hear the media can make all the difference in the media spend's effectiveness.
None of this replaces traditional or digital channels. Most media plans still need efficient mass reach. In fact, research shows that mobile performs far better when supported (or in support of) television, print, out-of-home, and other mass media. In designing effective mobile campaigns, we work hard to make sure there are as many other impressions in the marketplace as possible.
Display and search advertising are important components of any campaign that involves mobile. But the campaigns shouldn't just be extensions of online advertising and therefore shouldn't just be a function of a digital budget, a digital team in an agency, or an in-house digital department.
Digital teams may have been the spenders so far, but mobile is also the domain of print advertisers who want to drive interactions from their print investment, out-of-home advertisers who want to diversify static media, and direct marketers who want to reach consumers who can click to call as an immediate response.
There are a lot of outlets to consider on the road, and there's no reason to drive with limited visibility. Let's clear the windshield and pull into a few places that may have just what we need.
http://bluespotmedia.ning.com/

The ABCs of Mobile Marketing

By Laura Marriott, ClickZ, Jun 14, 2007

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This column was originally intended to be split into two installments to explain the basics of mobile marketing, lessons we've learned, and how to choose a partner. But after conversations with many brands and agencies, I've determined that choosing a partner is a complex process for many marketers. It deserves its own column -- and quickly!
If you're unfamiliar with the mobile space's players and ecosystem, selecting the ideal mobile partner can be daunting. This column will explain the mobile value chain and provides some questions for you -- the brand or agency -- to ask your prospective mobile partners, prior to making any selection decisions.
Although many players in the space are integrating across the value chain, there are four main elements:
Products and services. Includes brands, agencies, and third-party content providers. These are the companies seeking collaboration and partnership with others within the value chain. We also see the emergence of mobile agencies and the creation of mobile divisions within larger agencies, which help with the end-to-end decisions around the mobile campaign. Depending on your needs, the mobile agencies may be what you're looking for.
Mobile ASPs (define). Includes application and technology providers, along with the MASP. The MASP is the mobile partner that can provide a complete, one-stop solution for a mobile campaign, including mobile storefronts, campaign planning, and connectivity.
Connection. Includes aggregators and wireless operators. Many players in the mobile space are focused on connection only. Many MASPs are partnered with these companies, and thus connection players don't need to be contacted directly (although, again, it depends on your needs).
Media and retail. Includes brick-and-mortar, e-tail, and so on.
Many brands are baffled. With so many companies to choose from and so many differences between the companies, how can you possibly find the right partner? It's best to first determine the capabilities you're looking for, then develop a checklist so you can narrow the selections and determine the partner that's right for you. According to Nihal Mehta, CEO of ipsh!, finding the right partner is one of the most important decisions you can make when choosing to integrate mobile into your cross media campaign. "Finding the right partner in the mobile marketing space makes the difference between a successful campaign and a complete flop," says Nihal.
Develop a checklist that includes the elements important to you and your company. Also ensure you include the following:
How many campaigns has your mobile company launched? With which companies and brands? The number of campaigns and the size of the brands a company's worked with helps you understand its level of expertise. A partner should provide you with a list of contact companies and brands it's worked with, along with references.
What are your company's customer care resources? Do I receive a dedicated account manager or support person? This should include number of support individuals, response times, levels of care (SLAs), and so forth. For those who appreciate personalized service, understanding if the same individual will be involved throughout your campaign may be important.
Does your company provide proactive monitoring and reporting on my campaign? For example, does the company provide statistics and information throughout the campaign, or only at the end? Is this information available via a client extranet or must you depend on the agency to supply this data? Answers to these questions are important as ongoing feedback will help you understand and tweak the campaign throughout (iterative feedback and refinement).
To what extent is the mobile company focused on your particular niche? If you're a player in the business-to-business (B2B) space, does the mobile partner understand how you do business? If you're a nonprofit, does your mobile partner understand the intricate nature of grassroots fundraising and donor management? If you're a large brand marketer, does your mobile partner understand all the channels you speak through and can it help augment them with a mobile program that works in concert?
What types of services are offered? Is the partner company a mobile agency, an aggregator, other? Can you provide Web-related development that brings a mobile program to life or help to guide this process? How does its services match to your specific needs? For example, will you look to the partner company to execute creative and strategic direction in addition to connectivity?In this case, developing a needs checklist is important in assessing a potential partner company. Be honest about which services you need and which you don't. If you're looking for creative input, ensure you pick a company that values creativity and personalization.
Can the mobile partner help determine the campaign objectives through an ROI (define) calculation or other quantitative or qualitative means? This will help you determine if your mobile partner understands what your needs and priorities are prior to the campaign launch. Some mobile companies specialize in certain vertical segments. If you're looking for expertise for your vertical, ask around.
What wireless carriers do you have direct or indirect connectivity to? Depending on your campaign, this is an important question if you're planning to launch nationwide or global campaigns across all carriers, or only with one carrier, standard or premium rate.
How stable is the partner company? What are the funding and employee count, and how long has the company been in operation? What's its core focus and competencies (e.g., aggregation, licensing, creative, etc.)? If you're considering a long-term partnership for your mobile initiatives, these are important questions to ask. There are a large number of both established and new entrants in the space.
Though not exhaustive, these questions should help narrow the partner-selection process. Remember, your mobile partner is the expert in mobile marketing and will help guide and assist you. There are lots of options to choose from, so choose the partner that's right for you and your business.
Still lost? The Mobile Marketing Association Web site contains information on successful mobile case studies, mobile marketing basics, and general information that will help educate you prior to approaching prospective partners.

http://bluespotmedia.ning.com/

HOT Mobile Marketing (Innovation 604 Inc. & BlueSPOTmedia)