Saturday, February 19, 2011

2010 - Undoubtedly the Year of Mobile Advertising!

METRICS FROM 2010:

* 90% of the world now lives in a place with access to a mobile network, with 300 million people in the US (93% penetration) having a mobile phone.

* By 2011 over 85% of new handsets (including feature phones) will be able to access the mobile web.

* Mobile ad revenues to hit $3.5 billion this year in the US, $24 billion by 2015, with 7.3 million mobile phone users shop via mobile monthly.

* Mobile will account for 3.4 percent of global ad spend in 2015 (15.7% of digital ad market).

* Spending on mobile advertising is expected to reach $7.5 billion in the US by 2012 from $530 million in 2008.

-CTIA

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Gannett/USA Today - Doubling Down On Local And Mobile












EDITOR'S NOTE: Granted, Gannett (with nearly 6 Billion in revenues in 2009) is USA Today, but look at the LOCAL focus and the NUMBERS. They are quite impressive. This makes a great case study to use for presentation purposes.

Craig Dubow began the company’s largely positive Q4 earnings results by highlighting the local digital moves on the hyperlocal and marketing fronts and offered a lot of credit to its partners in display for newspapers and TV (Yahoo) and hyperlocal (DataSphere). Gannett has 264 hyperlocal sites in 10 markets.

In addition to building up its hyperlocal offerings, mobile is the other big bet Gannett is training its strategy on this year.

In January, Gannett had 7.3 million app downloads. Apple’s iPhone and iPad comprised 70 percent of the Gannett mobile downloads so far, but Google’s Android is catching up, as it accounted for half of the downloads Gannett recorded this past month. Mobile pageviews were up 267 percent. “We’re seeing signs for an emerging ad market for both national and local across mobile devices,” Dubow said.

The company plans to expand its mobile development platform across the rest of its community papers this year—so far, flagship paper USA Today launched its new mobile platform in December. The plan outlined by Dubow calls for new mobile 100 sites for all local U.S. news properties that will support mobile video to be rolled out this year.

During the Q&A, Dubow was asked about the company’s thinking about a subscription offering around its news apps. For example, when Gannett launched the iPad app for USAT last April, the company had eventually planned to move it to a subscription format. But as the ad market came back, especially in digital, the company decided to hold off on charging users for access. In his answer today, nothing much has changed, as Dubow didn’t close the door on eventually charging, he also seemed to say that nothing was in the works in terms of any mobile paywalls.

-Paid Content

Thursday, February 3, 2011

U.S. mobile marketing investments will surpass $1 billion in 2011

A new report from research and advisory firm Forrester Research Inc. says mobile marketing investments will surpass $1 billion this year as marketers begin to see returns on their investments from consumers buying more via mobile.

The report, “Mobile Trends 2011,” also predicts mobile will combine with social and local services through programs...to gain significant traction over standalone location-based services. However, it says that ad revenue from such services will be cut short because of privacy concerns.

The report, written by Forrester analysts, also predicts companies planning to reach large audiences via mobile apps will continue to face a fragmented market with a wide variety of mobile devices, operating systems and screen sizes.

•The term mobile will mean a lot more than mobile phones. Tablets such as Apple Inc.’s iPad will emerge as a category of their own in the years to come. However, the report says only mobile phones will sell in the hundreds of millions and are truly “pocketable,” providing anywhere/anytime connectivity.

•2011 will be the year of “the dumb smartphone user.” Because of deep discounts, smartphones will be available to the masses. That, Forrester says, means new smartphone owners will be less engaged and active than earlier Android and iPhone owners. However, thanks to customer education and the convenience that such sophisticated devices offer, even so-called “dumb smartphone users” will consume massive amounts of mobile media and data.

•NFC, augmented reality and Quick Response, or QR, two-dimensional bar codes will finally reach their tipping points. Technologies such as QR codes and mobile augmented reality, which uses the capabilities of a mobile phone to enhance a presentation, such as using the smartphone’s GPS to identify a consumer’s location and then displaying through the device’s camera view a coupon to a nearby store, are already helping bridge the real and digital worlds via mobile devices, Forrester says.

And the report predicts 2011 will finally be the year that Near Field Communication (NFC) begins to matter for mobile. The market will start to move away from the pilot stage in regions where NFC infrastructure is in place, Forrester says. "There is already quite a bit of this happening in Japan," says Ask. More of it will occur with education with consumers in the U.S. and Europe. We’re at the very, very beginning of consumers beginning to understand these use cases with their customers. NFC is a technology that enables phones (or other items, such as credit cards) to interact with objects—such as posters and payment terminals—over a distance of a few inches.

Several media outlets last week reported that Apple is working on adding NFC mobile payment capabilities to the forthcoming iPhone 5.

-Katie Deatsch