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Mobile Marketing




How-To Guide For Going Off-Portal
By Alfredo Narez, VP Marketing of Air2Web
October 11, 2006
Written for the Mobile Marketing Association

The mobile marketing industry is exploding as brands, agencies, marketers and carriers invest more in multi-modal advertising and marketing strategies. Marketers crave new revenue opportunities, ways to replace lost advertising revenues and new methods for extending brands into the mobile channel via participatory experiences with consumers. But increased fragmentation in our industry continues to cause confusion among companies aiming to launch new mobile marketing campaigns.

With the MMA’s clearly defined policies for marketing and advertising on the carrier and WAP portals, we are well on our way to solidifying standards for banner advertising on carrier WAP decks. And as marketers look to reach consumers off-portal via a variety of channels,
SMS campaigns, interactive outdoor advertising, downloadable java applications and voice all have a role to play. We must explore the vast off-deck experience and review best practices for planning and launching a successful off-deck mobile marketing campaign.

There are several elements you need to consider before executing a campaign and ensuring its long-term success.

Five Steps To Launching An Off-Deck Campaign

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1.       Outline the Objective

2.       Define Call To Action

3.       Orchestrate Mobile Execution

4.       Define Different Channels For Use

5.       Measure Results

The Objective
Brands should consider the ultimate objective of the mobile marketing campaign. Does it reinforce the brand? Can it build a community around the brand or related topics? Will it aim to increase sales or address losses at the point of sale? A successful campaign can encourage consumers to call or text into a call center with questions they have, while standing in the aisle. Other campaigns might contain a mix of strategies, combining a once-a-week participation TV element (for weekly magazines or TV shows) with an ongoing mobile trivia campaign to maintain frequent touch with consumers.

Call to Action
An easy and compelling call to action is critical to ensuring the mobile marketing campaign draws and maintains participation. Creating a highly intuitive interaction on the mobile phone, without requiring individuals to shift to the PC, ensures successful follow-through for a mobile-only campaign. But you can also design a more robust, full-service interactive mobile marketing experience to draw in audiences with the option of going to a Website, dialing a toll-free or toll number for Interactive Voice Response participation and/or mobile texting or multi-media campaign.

Bringing the Campaign Mobile
Once a call to action takes place there are certain mobile-specific issues that must be addressed. A lot of people are frustrated by the lack of baseline data in this industry. There is some broad usage information available but there is nothing that will lay out the quantifiable impact of an interactive mobile text campaign, for example. Addressing baseline data means ensuring a well-organized mobile marketing campaign: creating clear objectives upfront before addressing creative ideas and effectively measuring campaign results to determine success. This gives us baseline data to help educate the marketplace about what consumers want, how they want it and why they are participating in these campaigns.

Multi-Channel Marketing
Today's mobile market means there is little value in using only one delivery mechanism. Use voice, WAP, SMS and other methodologies so you do not exclude any part of your consumer base. In fact, according to an August 2006 study conducted by M:Metrics, 38% of American wireless subscribers send text messages every month, thus illustrating the important potential for reach this medium has.

Measurement
And then, as with any marketing project, you need to do follow-up measurements and make any necessary adjustments to your campaign before repeating it all over again. Air2Web has taken first-run mobile marketing programs from opt-out rates as high as 33% to cross-channel programs with opt-out rates as low as one percent. This reaffirms two points. 1. That measurement is absolutely critical to understanding what constitutes success in mobile marketing, and 2. Recalibrating programs to ensure more targeted and audience-relevant content and promotions is essential.

It's easy to be so enamored with the mobile experience that we forget that even early adopters are multi-modal in their normal life. They use mobile data alongside voice calls, fixed Internet access and in-person interaction. So it should be easy for someone to move from calling customer service representative to texting the call center instead.

In these ways an off-deck mobile marketing campaign can make mobile an invaluable part of your overall marketing efforts.  It is essential for extending interactive and traditional branding into the mobile medium, pushing qualified promotions, garnering participation and providing timely information to consumers, utilizing their most relied upon and personally-branded device, their mobile phone.

Alfredo Narez, VP of Marketing 
Mr. Narez joined Air2Web in 2005 and brings with him over 15 years of experience in strategic planning, marketing, product management, advertising and brand development. He currently leads the Air2Web corporate strategy and brand as well as product marketing initiatives. Prior to Air2Web, Mr. Narez served as director of marketing for Interland, a web hosting and online services company, where he led marketing, product, and sales to drive the dedicated hosting LOB to profitability. He has also held leadership positions at Telscape Communications, Epoch Internet, Bell Atlantic Global Networks and Ameritech. Mr. Narez serves on the NTObjective’s Professional Advisory Board. He holds a Bachelor of Science degree from Stanford University and earned his Master's of Business Administration from the University of Southern California.

 



A Very Large Opportunity for Mobile Marketing
By Laura Marriott | September 21, 2006 | ClickZ
To View Direct Link to Article, please click HERE.

The Asia-Pacific region boasts the world's largest number of mobile phone subscribers, as well as some of the most active text messaging users.

India alone has over 75 million mobile phone users who, in 2005, sent more than 1 trillion text messages. China has more than 400 million mobile users, more than those who use a fixed line phone, and boasts impressive wireless data statistics. The most impressive mobile text usage market in the region is the Philippines. Philippine consumers send over 120 million text messages a day -- that's 43 billion messages a year! For comparative purposes, the United States has approximately 219 million wireless subscribers sending approximately 10 billion text messages a year.

The conclusion? Mobile users in the region utilize their mobile phones as their primary form of communication. Mobile interactions and experiences are a way of life.

Given the statistics, the region's marketing potential is enormous. But understanding the intricacies and differences between the countries and how mobile is intertwined into inhabitants' daily lives poses a challenge for some. In many regions where fixed line access isn't available or is too expensive, many consumers use their mobiles for communications access. E-mail, television, and Internet are all accessed through the mobile device. This drives a new kind of consumer, one who's accustomed to seeing mobile integrated into cross-media initiatives and who's technically savvy. Mobile is integral to daily life. As such, brands are seizing the opportunity to instantaneously engage with consumers.

Use of the mobile channel for marketing has achieved success in the Asia-Pacific region and is growing rapidly. China was the first to deploy mobile advertising using the Mobile Marketing Association's (MMA's) Mobile Advertising Guidelines (PDF download) for mobile Web banners. To illustrate the types of campaigns and brands active in the region, here are a couple illustrative case studies:<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />

  • Short-code campaign (China). Beijing Innovative Linkage Technology Ltd. (DNS) recently launched a new mobile marketing program in China called "Come In." The program is the first of its type to utilize a short code ("50120") across both the China Mobile and China Unicom networks. Users join the program via a membership then are encouraged to send messages to win prizes. During the program's five months, the winning consumer will become the Lucky Star and receives a trip for two to Singapore. Enterprises are encouraged to participate and can establish their own short codes and award their own prizes. The program's goal of the program is to drive mobile marketing adoption in the Chinese market, reduce the cost for enterprises to participate in mobile campaigns, and advance the interaction between enterprises and consumers. This innovative program, launched in August, is expected to draw over a million participants.
  • Adidas Real Madrid tour of China (Hong Kong). This interactive mobile campaign was designed to leverage adidas' sponsorship of Real Madrid and its August '05 tour of China. The program featured a fully branded adidas 3G and WAP channel, including exclusive mobile video content (interviews with leading soccer stars), MTV-produced video content exclusive for the mobile device, event information, and the launch of a new, star-studded mobile TV show. The adidas Real Madrid 3G channel was one of the most successful programs on the Hutchinson 3G network. It generated over 10,000 downloads in nine days, with the audience spending an average 7 minutes interacting with the program, which was launched by the Hyperfactory.

Key to ensuring the Asia-Pacific market's long-term growth and sustainability is the development of guidelines and best practices that not only to protect consumer privacy but also ensure brand integrity. Mobile spam has become an issue in many Asia-Pacific markets, and protecting the channel is paramount. The MMA will launch an Asia-Pacific (APAC) chapter in the next 45 days. Current APAC MMA members include 21 Communications, DNS, Coca-Cola, Enpocket, Isobar, Mobile Messenger, Netpia.com Inc., Ogilvy, PUCA China, and the Hyperfactory. If you're interested in participating in leading the development of the emerging APAC market, please contact me.



Which Mobile Marketer Are You? Scoping the Showdown Between the Cool Kids and the Pragmatists
Written on September 21st 2006, published on www.adotas.com
By Brian Hecht 
Used with permission from ADOTAS, Copyright 2006. All rights reserved
Submitted to the MMA by Kikucall

To View Direct Article, please click HERE.

Last week, thousands of businesspeople gathered at the CTIA convention in Los Angeles, the semi-annual show where companies unveil the latest and greatest mobile products and services. I was among those wandering the show floor in a state of over-stimulation that is the hallmark effect of a good tradeshow. CTIA is catering to a sector that is having its “golden moment.”

Hundreds of millions of dollars of venture capital have flooded into mobile, yielding a bumper crop of offerings that are just now beginning to compete in the marketplace. The moment is golden because few of these offerings have had the chance to disappoint or fail, so everyone’s outlook is rosy, everyone’s projections a hockeystick. When Tony Hawk launches a new mobile game by giving an extreme skateboarding performance on an enormous half-pipe built in the middle of the Los Angeles Convention Center, that’s when you know a market is overripe.

I visited the show not as a mobile enthusiast, but as a marketer, trying to understand exactly how all of this innovation could help us grow our brands and reach our marketing goals. It is not an easy puzzle to piece together. This proliferation of mobile service companies has brought an onslaught of services that sound neat but are difficult to decipher.

For example, I encountered no fewer than four companies that have competing technologies that allow consumers to upload photos or video from their mobile phone to a blog, a Website, or any other virtual destination. Sounds neat, very Web 2.0. There was another phalanx of companies that allow any owner of a Website to host a “mobile storefront,” selling a selection of ringtones, wallpaper, and mobile phone software for revenue that eventually gets split with the technology provider and the wireless carriers . Also pretty neat.

It’s exciting to glimpse into the world of gee-whiz innovation, but how much of this can we put to work for us as marketers right now?, My experience in building dozens of mobile promotions for major brands has taught me there is a what I call a “Gee Whiz Gap” – the gap between what technology can do and what marketers can use. My most recent visit to CTIA brought this into clear view. We marketers must be aware of the Gap if we are to successfully navigate the shoals of mobile marketing. The goal is not to be a skeptic, but rather to be selective and brutally realistic about which mobile offerings can help us reach the measurable results our brands and clients demand.

So how do you know which mobile strategy to deploy? Of course, it depends on your marketing goals. The first question to ask yourself is: What type of marketing are you trying to do? There are two types of marketers when it comes to mobile. Type A, let’s call them the “Cool Kids” want to use mobile to align their brand with cutting-edge technology and youth trends. They are less interested in how many people actually use the technology or in concrete metrics like response rates or sales lift.

For the Cool Kids, the ultimate win is an awesome press clip or a mention on MTV. As a mobile agency serving marketers, my company loves working with the Cool Kids. Who wouldn’t? Budgets are fat, the ideas are super creative, and the clients are energized. The Cool Kids don’t care about the Gee Whiz Gap. Like Tony Hawk, they’ll race right to the precipice and never look down.

Then there’s Type B, the Pragmatists. For Pragmatists, mobile marketing is a means to a concrete, measurable goal. Often, mobile will be an experimental part of a media mix that is firmly grounded in a traditional interactive media buy. The Pragmatist has entered mobile not because it is cool, but because it has the potential to achieve certain marketing goals that other media miss. The Pragmatist is likely to have a limited budget and a low tolerance for risk. Results will be scrutinized and mobile’s contribution will be compared to the contribution of other channels. It is hard to make a mobile program work for the Pragmatist, but it is often worth the effort, because success is built on a solid foundation of measurable results.

Which kind of marketer are you? There’s a mobile niche for each type, and determining your niche depends on where you stand in relation to the Gee Whiz Gap. The cold hard truth is that despite the coolness factor and the CTIA hype, relatively few Americans have the types of phones that allow them to accomplish advanced mobile tasks like downloading complicated applications and viewing mobile video. Of those that have phones with these capabilities, the percentages of consumers who actually use those functions is even smaller.

The numbers are increasing, but if you are looking for mass reach, you will find yourself in the Pragmatist camp, and will want to stay away from advanced mobile applications that require downloads or videos. Simple text messaging remains the single best tool of the Pragmatist marketer. There is a wide variety of very cool promotional tactics open to you using simple text messaging, including alerts, voting, and interactive quizzes. And enough Americans now have and use text messaging that, as a Pragmatist, you have a good shot at getting the reach and results you crave.

And if you are, in fact, a Cool Kid, the Gee Whiz Gap is your friend. There has never been a better time to experiment with cutting-edge technology. The wave of innovation unleashed by the boom in mobile will work to your advantage. Technology companies will compete for your business, and they will engage in a virtual dance-off to demonstrate that their wares are the coolest. The Cool Kids may still use text messaging as the core of a mobile promotion, but they may just as easily create “mobisodes,” short video clips optimized for viewing on a mobile phone.

The real marketing dream, however, is the rare effort that manages to straddle the worlds of the Cool Kids and the Pragmatists. If you are really ambitious, this is how to shoot the mobile moon: Starting on the Pragmatist side, select a mobile technology that is just far out enough that it would also capture the imagination of the Cool Kids. If you find the right balance, then your promotion will hit the sweet spot on the consumer’s adoption curve, just like Apple did when it launched the Ipod. Such successes may come only once a generation, but if it happens anywhere, it could well happen out on the mobile frontier. <?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />

 




Forgetting the “Marketing” in Mobile? How Advertisers Can Gain Advantage in the Wireless World<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />

Written on August 14th 2006, published on www.adotas.com
By Brian Hecht 
Used with permission from ADOTAS, Copyright 2006. All rights reserved
Submitted to the MMA by Kikucall

To View Direct Article, please click HERE.

After years of “coming soon,” the age of Mobile Marketing finally seems to be upon us. You only need to take a casual stroll through the mall, or a leisurely flip through the television channels to see the telltale signs of a tipping point: On a recent trip to the mall, I spotted a major retailer sporting window displays urging passers-by to enter a “text-to-win” contest by sending a text message from a mobile phone.

The consumer gains a bit of amusement, and the retailer gains a valuable name in its database. Most major film releases now advertise an opportunity for potential fans to download ringtones, wallpapers, and even movie clips to their mobile phones. And it’s hard to watch a reality television show without being urged to weigh in on the various contestants with American Idol-style text voting.

But is all this really mobile marketing? Is it living up to its potential? And is it really achieving any measurable results?

It’s still early days, of course. As marketers, we are notoriously reluctant to release confidential results of individual campaigns, so reliable data is hard to come by. Press releases only tend to advertise selected statistics from winning campaigns, ignoring the dozens of tests that may have preceded them.

Still, based on four years of working with marketers to develop mobile programs, I’ve developed a pretty clear idea of the main challenge that confronts mobile marketing. It’s a pretty simple theory, really. Too many mobile marketers are focusing on the “mobile” and are neglecting the “marketing.” It’s understandable. It’s easy to become enamored with the neat capabilities of a new technology.

But time and again, I see marketers spending 90% of their time, energy, and creativity on the relatively mundane mechanics of the mobile channel, and only 10% on developing a really great underlying marketing strategy. Shockingly, some skip the marketing strategy altogether. Marketers who adhere to the time-tested principles of good marketing are likely to yield useful tests and successful campaigns. Marketers who ignore those principles are, sadly, wasting their time and money. Inevitably, they fail.

I learned this lesson very early on. More than two years ago, my mobile marketing agency executed a test program intended get retailers interested in simple mobile coupons intended to drive incremental foot traffic at holiday time. The idea was simple: Consumers in a selected area (downtown Manhattan) would opt in to receive valuable “mobile coupons” by text message for the days leading up to the December holidays.  They would get a 10-day series of exclusive discounts for top brands and retailers. We successfully sold the mobile coupon slots to various retailers, each promising to provide a valuable offer to our enrolled consumers. We determined we’d need at least 5,000 participating consumers to make the program a success. The only problem was: how do we get consumers to enroll?

So we hired a lively (and expensive) street team to stand on crowded pedestrian corners with handbills touting free coupons for top retailers. The retailers were all named, complete with their glistening recognizable logos. We made it super-easy for consumers to enroll, allowing them to dial a 1-800 number, since this was before most people were comfortable sending a text message. Upon dialing the number, the consumer heard a brief recording with the terms of the program and, presto, they would be opted in. After a few days of street-corner marketing, we reviewed the results: they were truly dismal. The program was on the verge of failure.

Our team brainstormed ways to promote the program better. We sifted through dozens of ideas before we decided that the best strategy would be to borrow one of the oldest tricks in the marketing book: We decided to incentivize participation. We decided to paste one-dollar bills on the backs of the fliers we’d been using.

That’s how market researchers get consumers to answer surveys in the mail, and it seems to work for them. Instead of shouting out “Free coupons,” the street team would shout out: “We’re giving away free money.” Curious consumers would approach and hear about the program. They would be given their dollar-bill once they dialed in right then and there. The results were astounding. Participants started streaming in. We exceeded our enrollment quote in the next few days and delivered a valuable and sizable audience to our roster of mobile advertisers.

The difference between abject failure and astonishing success wasn’t brain surgery: it was a simple change in tactics that aligned us with a best-practice proven by decades of direct marketers. We were asking consumers to take an unfamiliar and, frankly, peculiar, action, and we needed to ground that in a tangible immediate benefit. The cost of the incentives was minimal compared to the profitability of the program. And we’d stumbled on the most important principle of mobile marketing: it’s all about the marketing.

Inevitably, many of the early mobile marketing tests that we’re now seeing in the marketplace yield disappointing results. It’s a pity that some marketers use this limited experience to conclude that mobile marketing won’t work for them. But the problem is usually not with the mobile. The common theme I detect in nearly all of them is a neglect of basic marketing principles.

Here are five of the top principles that we’ve learned can guide your mobile marketing program to success. They are all borrowed from the world of traditional marketing.

Define your metrics and goals. Too many mobile marketing campaigns operate on the lazy premise of “let’s just try it and see what happens.” But if you are using resources to test a new channel, you need to have some expectation of what you want to learn. Otherwise, how will you know if you’ve succeeded or failed? You wouldn’t launch a direct mail campaign without some projection of the response rate. Taking the time to lay out a few key benchmarks before the campaign launches is indispensable to evaluating your results.

Use a reasonable sample size. If you’ve decided to measure participation or redemption rates, it is essential that your sample size is adequate to provide statistically relevant results. Sending out 10 messages and getting three responses does not mean you are getting a 30% response rate. I’ve witnessed many declarations of success or failure based on vanishingly small sample sizes; sadly, they’re almost always misleading. The danger runs both ways: you can be tricked into rolling out an expensive campaign based on inaccurately high projections, or be fooled into shelving an otherwise promising program based on an inaccurate diagnosis of failure.

Support your program with adequate media. It’s hard to believe, but I’ve seen marketers invest heavily in advanced mobile functionality and then neglect to think about how they are going to drive usership. You wouldn’t launch a Website without having a plan to drive traffic to it. There are many possible tactics available, including TV, radio, posters, in-store, live events, email, and Web-to-phone. But a mobile program without an accompanying media plan is like the proverbial tree falling in a forest with no one to witness it.

Provide a clear benefit. As mobile advertising begins to proliferate, sophisticated consumers are rightly wary of giving marketers license to communicate with them via their mobile phone. As a marketer, you need to overcome this resistance by offering a clear benefit and reason for them to participate. Studies and experience indicate that consumers are, indeed, willing to participate in mobile programs with a select group of trusted brands, but only if they derive a clear benefit that can only be delivered by mobile phone.

Provide a clear call to action. Traditional marketing has already done the heavy lifting for you here. Mobile programs that have complicated instructions, or require confusing specialized technology requirements simply do not compel the consumer to act. We find that we get the best results when we borrow copy and promotional tactics from the experts who live or die by response rates in fields such as direct-mail solicitations and infomercial television. Your message to the consumer should focus on the one clear thing you want consumers to do, and then make it incredibly and easy compelling for them to do it now.

It goes without saying that attention must always be paid to the mobile technology components, as well. There are unique challenges that come with operating a program using new technology, and the consumer has little tolerance for glitchy interaction with your brand. But you’ll never have the opportunity to demonstrate your new mobile benefits to consumers if you don’t successfully reach and engage them. And for that, investing time and energy in the underlying marketing strategy will deliver ample rewards.

 



Hands-on with the QuickPlayer at CTIA
By Doug Soltys
As published on www.blackberrycool.com
Submitted to the MMA by QuickPlay Media


To View Direct Article, please click HERE.

Our trip to CTIA was fruitful, it seems. We’ve talked about the QuickPlayer for BlackBerry time and time again, but as the title reads, we got a little more intimate with this app from QuickPlay today, and let us tell you, we’re all smiles over here. With the news of exciting (and streaming) content like ABC News and the like being added to the QuickPlayer, the salivating started, and once we were able to sit down and explore, the auditory awesomeness was slightly overwhelming.

This is a gorgeous application, let’s get that out of the way. It doesn’t look like other BlackBerry applications with a confusing interface, horrid color scheme and font choices, among other issues. While getting hands-on with it using our 7130, even with a smaller screen than say that of the 8700, we could still read and navigate seamlessly. Simple green/black/navy colouring takes over the interface, making it look similar to the Pearl’s. Don’t worry, this isn’t a Pearl piece, we’ll stop now.

How good could audio be coming from the BlackBerry, though? We’re all aware that the devices lack a little on the phone audio quality, so there was some worry heading into the content. But even before we could get into it, we noticed a little word - “buffering”. Streaming audio? Thank you, QuickPlay. Even though the buffering lacks some speed (about 15 seconds to get to a 2-minute ABCNews clip), all is forgiven once the news, literally, gets out.

Yes, the sound (and content) quality from channel to channel will vary, but 95% of the content currently on the QuickPlayer sounds better than it does on any radio. Even after turning the volume up, which often distorts sound quality, ABC and MarketWatch were still keeping me in the loop with crystal-clear audio. Don’t be overly concerned about poor quality, though, with the names that have signed on to provide content, the reputable names should provide reputable quality.

Being able to be kept up-to-date while your PC boosts up in the morning, on the drive home from work stuck in rush-hour traffic, or even before bed, and doing so with streaming audio (there’s been talk of video) sounds like a great plan to us. Even with the currently limited content (22 channels, mostly containing news and weather for major US cities), lack of compatibility with a headset (solved with the Pearl and future devices) and slightly slow buffering times, we’re seeing the QuickPlayer as a pretty great addition to your BlackBerry. <?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />

 



ThinkPad, Think Lenovo, Think Mobile, Think Big
By Tom Burgess, CEO, Third Screen Media

In the course of the past year, we’ve seen many major brands dip their toes in the mobile advertising pond.  And for good reason. The water was pristine and inviting.  The pond has grown into a large body of water, and the swell of many major brands, publishers, agencies and carriers joining in has led the banks to flood.  Our pond runneth over.

Now that the water has been tested, more brands than ever are diving in.  When once an average mobile advertising campaign neared $25,000, some now average well over $350,000.  With an ever-growing inventory from which to choose, major brands are realizing the possibilities of the mobile platform, including reaching a targeted, influential consumer base that has become increasingly mobile.

One of the global brands that recently sought to connect with a mobile audience was Chinese computer giant, Lenovo.  Since acquiring IBM’s PC business lines back in late 2004, Lenovo has struggled to change consumer association of the ThinkPad brand with Lenovo, rather than with its birthparent, Big Blue. In June of 2006, Lenovo decided to incorporate mobile in its overall advertising efforts to help shift brand association.  Handled by Ogilvy, the campaign sought to reach Lenovo’s target audience through WAP banners on selected sites such as USA TODAY, CBS SportsLine, go2 and others.. The campaign was followed up by the implementation of an industry first survey tool—TSM|MediaEffect—which delivered the data necessary to determine the success of the campaign.

During the WAP campaign, mobile subscribers were provided special offers on banner ads, where they could link to a survey and be entered to win a free phone upgrade.  Consumers not only actively engaged in the media, but the campaign garnered an unprecedented click-through rate of 6.66%. 

In the traditional online world, a 0.2% advertising click-through rate is the industry norm.  Compare that to the mobile industry average of 3% and you can immediately see the success of the Lenovo campaign and the impact these results will have on the decision-makers at brands and agencies considering mobile advertising initiatives.  In addition to a high rate of click-throughs, the campaign also aided Lenovo in their primary goal: increasing brand awareness.  Among the TSM|MediaEffect survey respondents who were exposed to the media and visited the WAP site, there was an increase of 74% and 156%, respectively, in aided brand recall.  This meant that a considerable number of consumers associated the ThinkPad laptop with its new parent brand, Lenovo, considerably diminishing the product’s association with IBM.

The metrics mentioned above represent a new era for the mobile advertising industry.  The technology and expertise is now available to not only accurately target the campaigns and capture the data, but to measure and evaluate the overall effectiveness of campaigns.  For the first time, agencies and their respective brands have the capability to evaluate their executed campaigns at levels that were once not possible, and this has added considerable value to the ad buy.

As brands such as Lenovo leverage new technology offerings to reach a more targeted consumer base, we’ll continue to see numerous success stories on the mobile platform.  Yet, with extensive metrics and a winning report card, the Lenovo campaign will serve as a benchmark as the market expands and embraces brands who have decided to think big and think mobile.<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />

 

Mobile Search

By Laura Marriott | August 10, 2006

To View Direct Article, click HERE.

Internet users tend to surf the Web to find information for term papers, business competitors, and prices for flights, used cars, and mortgages. Mobile subscribers, on the other hand, look for ring tones, graphics, games, and, at times, hotels, weather, or sport scores. In the near term, we expect Internet searches to cover a broader range of searches, while mobile searches, by either design or user-demonstrated usage, will be more mobile specific.

According to the Mobile Marketing Association's (MMA's) "Introduction to Mobile Search,” people consider mobile search just for entertainment. Yet mobile search can fulfill several useful roles, including helping users find a local address while traveling and checking on a flight's departure time.

"Although it has functions similar to Internet search," the report states, "subscribers using mobile search tend to look for an experience that offers answers and actionable results rather than links that lead to more searching."

The report notes mobile phones have several advantages over PCs when accessing the Internet:<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />

  • Mobile phones are always on, always available, and always "connected." Subscribers can gain access to information anywhere; at home, in the office, at a restaurant, or from the car.
  • Ability to immediately connect people to phone numbers, since they already have a device in hand.
  • When conducting mobile search, the users are in an atmosphere, situation and environment more likely to result in a purchase. Most of the time they are on the go and out of the home.

The report also notes mobile phones have some limitations compared to PCs:

  • PCs have big screens that can show lots of detailed information and numerous search results. Mobile phones have tiny screens with limited real estate.
  • PCs have large, comfortable keyboards with easy-to-use pointing tools like a mouse, trackball, or touchpad. Mobile phones have compact number pads, commonly with arrow keys to navigate up, down, left and right.
  • PCs and the Internet have consistent color displays, screen sizes, browsers, and open programming standards. Mobile phones are the epitome of variety with varying input methods, display screens, browsers, operating systems, and user interfaces. Mobile devices do not conform to any standards.

The report goes on to say:

In addition to these immediate differences, future mobile search applications may be able to capitalize on user specific information. Mobile phones are joined to individuals and are representative of their owners' personalities, with specific demographics, behavior patterns, and personal interests. This information may allow more relevant search results.

The MMA released a mobile search study earlier this week that highlights mobile search habits and awareness among American consumers. The study's key findings include:

  • Mobile search is in its early stages of adoption, but there's significant upside potential. Thirty-one percent of respondents used mobile search for the first time in the past month. Current users conducted an average nine searches in the past month.
  • Cell phone owners who aren't aware of mobile search recognize its benefits after they're introduced to the technology. Half of non-users were interested in trying mobile search over the next few months. Forty-eight percent of non-users expect to start using mobile search at least once per week.
  • Approximately 41 percent of all respondents indicate sponsored links wouldn't have an effect on their mobile search use.
  • Current mobile search users represent several attractive market segments for advertisers. Respondents with an annual household income of $50,000-$75,000 conduct an average of almost 16 searches per month, the most of any demographic segment. Consumers age 45-54, college grads, and people with children at home all reported using search more than 11 times per month.
  • Sixty-nine percent of respondents prefer advertisements related to local products and services.
  • The ability to search by voice was the top-rated feature. Thirty-seven percent of current mobile search users would be "a lot more likely" to use mobile search if voice control were added.

Mobile search provides consumers anytime, anywhere access to information via the mobile Web. Awareness of mobile search continues to grow with U.S. consumers, creating new opportunities for brands and agencies to exploit the power of the mobile channel.



Off the Hook!

By Steve Smith, August 2006 issue

Mobile Marketing Gets Creative

Published and printed in MediaPost Publications
This article was submitted to the MMA by Mobot, a NeoMedia Technologies Company.

Remember all those crappy banner ads in the 1990s, when it seemed that any intern with html skills could become an interactive account executive?

You’re not likely to see the same mistake with the emerging mobile platform. Even at this nascent stage, the creative juices are gushing from seasoned teams that are thinking hard about the unique interactive aspects of this platform.

The industry’s best minds know the world doesn’t need another ringtone, wallpaper, or short-code sweepstakes. The most creative mobile executions these days aggressively explore the wireless device itself — what the technology does, where it does it, and how marketing messages can be integrated into our most intimate communications habits.

To view the article in its entirety, please click HERE.



InFocus: Overcoming competitive threats
By Olivier Jamaigne and Patricia Lopes

Posted and published on July 26, 2006 in Telephony Online

Next-generation networks are driving radical changes in the content delivery value chain by spawning disruptive business models and enabling players such as Internet-based portals. The Internet Protocol (IP) has given birth to a number of applications like search engines, voice over IP (VoIP), instant messaging, and information services, as well as the advent of e-commerce. In addition, the migration to IP has led to some weakening of control over end-user data and network access by communications service providers.

These changes in the content delivery value chain represent both an opportunity and a threat to service providers. On the one hand, some service providers have been capturing new revenues from non-traditional applications like mobile TV, push-to-talk, and multimedia messaging, and they are poised to expand their position in the content delivery value chain. On the other hand, there is an increasing risk of forfeiting voice communications revenues and missing out on new revenue streams from advertising and content services due to diminishing control over end-user data and network access.

In the near future, players like Amazon, eBay, Google, MSN, and Yahoo! are expected to pose a critical threat given their brand strength, disruptive revenue models, powerful use of end-user data, and geographic pervasiveness. This article discusses how communications service providers can compete, or cooperate, effectively with Internet-based portals.

Radical Changes in the Content Delivery Value Chain

The content delivery value chain is no longer linear, but resembles overlapping circles gravitating around end-users (see Figure 1). End-users have moved to the center of the value chain, with content providers, aggregators, application and platform providers, and service providers surrounding and serving them.

In a linear content delivery value chain, content providers typically extract a large share of the revenue that is created, while service providers exercise influence by controlling access to their network. In a non-linear value chain, a large number of participants enjoy direct relationships with end-users and can leverage these relationships to gain share.
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Mobile Marketing: An Agency Perspective

By Laura Marriott | July 27, 2006

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Check out this great ad from Optimus in Portugal, which demonstrates the viral power of mobile. A woman discovers a beached whale and, via mobile, sends video and picture messages to all her friends. This results in a large gathering, and, somehow, they actually manage to push the whale back into the ocean.

A stretch in terms of plausibility, perhaps, but the story illustrates the power of this highly personal, immediate, and intimate device. The mobile phone, unlike any other medium, has been able to merge lifestyles and consumers together. It's one-to-one dialogue from friend to friend and, ultimately, brand to consumer. (The ad, by the way, demonstrates the power of 3G mobile data).

This column has focused a lot on wireless media types and case studies, so I thought I'd highlight the agency perspective on mobile marketing by talking with Mobile Marketing Association (MMA) board member and Isobar's VP mobile, Gene Keenan. I spoke with Keenan about brand perceptions, mobile successes, and overall inhibitors to mobile channel growth.

Keenan agrees mobile turns advertising, once static, is now interactive. Mobile can turn traditional exposures, such as billboards and print, into instantaneous consumer engagements. Consumers needn't remember a call to action from a traditional media type. They can immediately connect to the brand, wherever and whenever. Mobile will continue to have a tremendous effect on traditional media channels as it helps revitalize each of these media, turn it interactive, and in a way blur the lines between what is and what isn't digital.

Industry conferences and published case studies are a great start in educating brands on the mobile channel's power. Keenan feels the industry needs more transparency from an overall effectiveness and traceability perspective. Studies like MMA's "Mobile Marketing Effectiveness" research and other leading industry studies will be key to providing solid quantitative data on the medium's power.

Mobile is often viewed as very abstract and tough to get one's arms around. Although the industry has created a baseline set of rules and guidelines, each vendor in the community will outline its method for engaging the brand, often in very different and sometimes confusing ways. If the brand understands its goals from a specific campaign, finding and selecting the right partner should be fairly seamless (just don't get overwhelmed).

There are three inhibitors to brands engaging the mobile channel at the agency level:<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />

  • Where does mobile fits in an agency, in offline or digital? In many cases, agencies establish mobile-specific divisions or practices to get around this issue.
  • There's a lack of hard data on what works and what doesn't. Today, agency statistics vary widely, depending on campaign type, cross media integration, and so forth. Greater transparency is required to see broad scale adoption (as mentioned earlier).
  • Mobile is abstract -- and changes the model for consumer interaction. As an advertising industry, we've been geared toward interruption or campaign-based advertising. With mobile, we're moving away from a push model toward a pull model. Consumers are now in complete control of their interaction with the brand. Consumers now form and dictate the relationship. This is outside many advertisers' comfort zone.

The goal is to create new models that work for mobile, not merely to move models that have been applied to other media types. This is the challenge for agencies and their brands, and one they're stepping up to.

What does Keenan see as the future of mobile? Due to increasing popularity of social networking tools, such as My Space.com, Keenan believes the killer applications will be those that merge lifestyle applications and services with consumer experience. Ideally, this will be a world in which it's difficult to separate lifestyle from brand. A good example of this is the iPod. There are many MP3 players in the market today, but with the iPod you don't buy the product, you buy the lifestyle. Try separating the two. You can't.

According to Forrester Research, mobile marketing adoption rates continue to increase, with 43 percent of U.S. marketers using, piloting, or expecting to pilot mobile marketing in the next 12 months. So if you haven't already engaged the mobile channel, try it. Adding mobile to your mix isn't a case of experimentation, it's one of refinement. That means launching a mobile program, then continuing to refine based on your target demographic and overall campaign goals.