Archive for the ‘mobile marketing’ Category

Integrated marketing needs mobile

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

Posted by Horden Wiltshire, Chief Executive Officer

I recently spoke on a panel at Mobile Content World 2008 in Sydney with Dave Mallam (MD Cogs Media), Kerry Field (Director MindShare Interaction), Sasha Hunt (Head of Digital and Direct, BT Financial) and Cameron Wall (Technical Director, G-Nius Mobile Intelligence). The panel was ably moderated by Jim Shomos, writer/producer of Let’s Talk.

The panel session discussed “Using Mobile to Drive Brand Awareness” and all the speakers gave a different and relevant view on this topic. There was a broad discussion that covered everything from the challenges of mobile marketing campaigns in financial services, the different technologies and enablers for mobile campaigns through to the barriers to uptake for mobile marketing.

One of the comments I made during the panel was that from our perspective we are starting to see clients looking to integrate mobile across more than one element of the marketing mix. Over the last 12 months m.Net has integrated many mobile marketing campaigns into all the major media formats; television, radio, print, ambient, and web. We see mobile as having the potential to be the glue across the different media channels in marketing campaigns. Increasingly we see customers incorporating the mobile campaign across more than one channel. Recently we developed a mobile site for Toyota to promote their latest Camry range. The mobile site provided information on the range and allowed potential customers to register for a test drive. This mobile site was integrated into the television campaign via a key word that viewers could text to a short code. The same mobile site was integrated into a mobile banner campaign within the Yahoo!7 mobile portal. My belief is that this trend will accelerate over coming years.

All of the panelists in the session gave great insights into the market from their perspective and the audience were active throughout the discussion raising questions about the best ways to encourage education in the market place. One common theme throughout the panel and Mobile Content World more broadly was the high data plans from the carriers were one of the key barriers to customer adoption. The reality is that data charges are coming down quickly; even Telstra’s casual roaming post-paid plan has come down by 90% over the last 18months. The challenge however is that users still perceive that data costs are high. Based on overseas evidence I am confident this trend in pricing will continue and this augurs well for the future of mobile marketing in the Australian market.

Adelaide City Council goes live with an Earth Hour mobile-marketing campaign!

Monday, March 31st, 2008

Posted by Scott Johnson, Chief Marketing Officer

Earth Hour sponsor the Adelaide City Council has creatively used Campaign Mobile to promote the international energy-conservation campaign.

On the 28th of March a broadcast email was sent to South Australians directing them to a Campaign Mobile call to action on the Adelaide City Council website. The ACC Earth Hour mobile site features Earth Hour branding, written content, and links to downloadable imagery and video.

m.Net provided development support to the ACC, extending the functionality of the Campaign-Mobile-produced mobile site to enable seamless download of mobile content including Earth Hour wallpaper, video messages from the Adelaide Lord Mayor and Adelaide Football Club player Kris Massie, and an Earth Hour advertisement. Click here to view the live Campaign Mobile execution!

We are starting to see an incredible array of campaigns deployed using Campaign Mobile. Other recent executions of note include:

Showcasing Campaign Mobile at ad:tech Sydney

Thursday, February 28th, 2008

Posted by Scott Johnson, Chief Marketing Officer

We are pleased to confirm that we will be exhibiting Campaign Mobile – and the rest of the m.Net product range – at the massive ad:tech Sydney show from 12-13 March at Hilton Sydney. This show is promoted as Australia’s number 1 interactive event and it’s the place to learn from the sharpest minds in the industry.

Come to Stand 236 at ad:tech to see us put Campaign Mobile through its paces. You can register for a free pass to the exhibitor hall by clicking here.

If you are attending the conference, please ensure you attend our session on Thursday 13 March entitled Tailoring content for the mobile device (more details here). In this session we explore the changing consumer landscape and mobile-marketing best practices using the ongoing relationship with have with Warner Music and award-winning country music artist Steve Forde. This session aims to inform and entertain – see you there!

Alternative mobile payment methods - PayPal Mobile

Monday, February 25th, 2008

Posted by Scott Johnson, Chief Marketing Officer

m.Net is now able to offer its clients Paypal Mobile as a mobile payment method, and we have already launched our first PayPal Mobile site, Warner Music’s Steve Forde artist mobile-marketing WAP site.

With over 5 million Australian PayPal users, and as the default payment method for eBay, PayPal Mobile is not a niche opportunity.

Why am I so excited about this?

  • Prior to this the only viable mass market opportunity for payments was Premium SMS. The challenge for the content owner with this method was the scale of the revenue share most telecommunication carriers require for these services. With PayPal Mobile the fees are more analogous to those of a credit card which potentially means a cheaper product for the mobile consumer and more revenue to the content owner.
  • Premium SMS really only worked for digital goods for the mobile (e.g. ringtones, wallpapers, games) since the product delivery was to the handset. The benefit of PayPal is that a real-world delivery address is stored for purchases, so users don’t have to attempt to type an address using predictive text and a small phone keyboard. You can pay for physical goods now via your phone using PayPal Mobile with the knowledge that they will be delivered to your preferred delivery address.

It is very early days but this is development in mobile payments is encouraging for both consumers and retailers.

Campaign Mobile Public Beta goes live

Monday, January 14th, 2008

Posted by Scott Johnson, Chief Marketing Officer

Today sees a really big milestone for m.Net and marks a huge leap forward for web developers and digital agencies. Today we launch the Campaign Mobile Public Beta – www.campaignmobile.com.

Campaign Mobile is a complete online mobile marketing platform for web developers and digital agencies. We have worked closely with a national group of web developers and agencies via an extensive alpha and private beta programme, and the beta launched today is the culmination of extensive market research and direct client trials.

So what makes Campaign Mobile special?

It is a completely online product easily accessible using a Web browser. Mobile marketing is now easier than ever before thanks to Campaign Mobile’s template-driven generation of mobile websites, mobile coupons, broadcast SMS campaigns, web triggers, and opt-in databases.

Mobile campaigns can be created, deployed and optimised quickly and easily. A basic web-to-mobile or SMS campaign can be created and deployed in under ten minutes. No mobile development expertise is required – so developers and agencies can focus on the important aspects of creative expression and campaign planning, confident that the technology is covered by Campaign Mobile. Our mobile device profiling technology is fully integrated into the platform, enabling campaign delivery in 170 countries and territories to over 6,500 mobile devices.

Today we have kicked off a (primarily) online and mobile marketing campaign promoting our initial offer of “one month free including an initial credit of 100 SMS messages”.

This is just the beginning. We will be rolling out new features and functions based on market research and direct feedback from our customer base.

What’s different about mobile as a medium for content and brand messages?

Thursday, December 6th, 2007

Posted by Paul Daly, Director of Innovation

The mobile phone has become incredibly pervasive. Leading research company Informa has announced that there are now 3.3 billion active mobile accounts in the world. This means that there is approximately one mobile phone account operating for every two people on the planet! There are now 59 countries where mobile penetration exceeds 100%, with a significant number of people maintaining more than one mobile account.

The mobile phone has joined keys and wallet/purse as one of those things that one simply does not leave the house without. Indeed, there has been some speculation about its potential to replace those other two must-haves in the future.

In this–my first post to the m.Net blog!–I aim to discuss some of the things that differentiate the mobile screen as a new medium for content, and acknowledge some of its limitations.

Here at m.Net have identified the following differentiators for mobile: omnipresence and accessibility. Very soon the mobile phone will be everywhere, and everyone will have access to one. However these are not the only differentiators!

Other differentiators include:

  • The mobile phone is more personal. There is a much stronger level of assignment between the consumer and his/her mobile phone than exists with a home phone or an Internet connection, where other users in the family may share the same connection or device. There is also an expectation on the part of subscribers that messages they receive will, in general, be of higher relevance to them.
  • Meaningful context as a result of location. For many years there has been talk of location-based services for mobile phones as a possible killer application. Finally, the pieces are beginning to fall into place for new services that take advantage of the user’s location in order to provide value.

    Telstra has a model that allows service providers to provide access to information and other services based on the location of the handset. The subscriber must have opted in to this service and Telstra charges a fee to the service provider for each location request.

    Google has just announced a feature in Google Maps that allows a mobile subscriber to locate his or her own position within an on-screen map. If the handset has GPS capability it will source the location from there and, if not, it uses an algorithm that calculates approximate position based on signal strength from one or more mobile-phone base stations. While resolution is not perfect, it is certainly accurate enough for many applications.

    Today, the Google system only works with certain handsets; however it provides some really interesting insights into the scope for location-based services in the near term.

  • Value added by other elements of context. The use of location as a variable is just one form of context that makes the mobile experience more interesting and relevant. If we know that the user of a particular mobile is unique, then we can assume that their browsing and purchasing behaviour provides a more accurate view of their preferences than it does when several people were sharing a connection to the Internet (e.g. from a home computer). This allows us to improve the relevance of the information and services that we offer them and provides a greater return on investment for our promotional spend. Our ability to leverage contextual information is very important in providing access to a better user experience. The better we handle this context the more likely it is that we will maintain an effective relationship with the consumer and the easier it will be for them to navigate to information and services of interest to them.
  • The ability of the mobile screen to complement existing media. Because of its portability the mobile screen provides an ideal way for consumers to maintain a connection with sources of news entertainment and information while they are on the move. This is best implemented as a complement to their existing patterns for consuming content – via television, radio, print and the Internet. Early work in using the mobile as an interactive back channel for television through voting applications and the use of SMS response for participation in competitions and other forms of product promotion has been remarkably successful. The most successful campaigns involving a mobile element have been complemented by promotion in other media and this is certainly the way we at m.Net see the landscape well into the future.

Of course mobile does have its drawbacks as a medium for content. We speak of mobile as the very small screen and although the quality and resolution of mobile displays is constantly improving, it its still a much smaller window for navigating and viewing content. For this reason, we develop mobile Internet sites in ways that are significantly different from those used to develop traditional Web Internet sites. We also pay particular attention to the size of graphics, videos and animations so that screens of varying size can render them well. We also aim to keep page size down in recognition that until the tipping point for mobile data arrives, the carriage cost of data can be a major issue for consumers of mobile Internet content.

Perhaps the biggest problem faced by people developing and implementing content on mobiles is the lack of any real standardisation for access devices. Mobile phones have screens of all shapes and sizes, wildly-varying resolutions, different models for accommodating input from the user, different operating systems, and different amounts of memory.

The job of delivering content that renders consistently-well across a wide cross-section of the most popular handsets has become an area of specialisation. It is an problem to which companies like m.Net are able to provide an effective solution, removing a major headache for people looking to the use of mobile as an exciting new medium for content. With this type of specialist help mobile can become a powerful complement to traditional media in extending brand relationships with consumers.

The latest from m.Net at AIMIA SA: Interact

Friday, November 9th, 2007

Posted by Scott Johnson, Chief Marketing Officer

View the latest mobile marketing and advertising technology from m.Net at AIMIA SA: Interact.

6pm-9pm, Nov 30 at the Saso Café Bar
157 Waymouth Street, Light Square, Adelaide
Entry: Gold Coin Donation

At the m.Net stand we will be demonstrating the range of solutions and the latest offerings that are used by brands including Yahoo!7, Nokia, Warner Music and Lion Nathan.

I hope to meet many of our SA clients and partners at the event.

Closing the loop with mobile coupons

Monday, October 22nd, 2007

Posted by Scott Johnson, Chief Marketing Officer

Australians (unlike our US counterparts) are not known for having a coupon-clipping culture. Sure we have “shopper dockets”, some specials arrive in the mailbox from time to time for pizza, and we have been trained to keep our grocery receipts to get discount fuel… but responding to such offers is not ingrained in our behaviour.

This may be changing through new advertising products available now on mobile devices. m.Net is increasingly providing mobile coupon solutions for clients seeking to drive foot traffic in store and to close the loop on their advertising in other media.

So what is a mobile coupon? Generally it is a mobile Internet (WAP) site that is only one page in depth. It typically contains the logo of the product, some imagery and copy on the offer and where to redeem it, and in some cases a unique number or identifier. Some recent examples driven out of print executions are shown below.

Elizabeth Arden print advertisement with
mobile-coupon call to action in top right corner
(click for full-size version - 450kb)

Myer/Sarah Jessica Parker
mobile coupon

Myer/David Jones/Elizabeth Arden
mobile coupon

So why are leading advertisers experimenting with mobile coupons?

  1. In Australia this is a mass-market opportunity. Just about all consumers have a mobile phone
  2. It’s personal. Advertisers depending on their opt-in database or the call to action on surrounding media can profile and target the offer to the consumer.
  3. It is not intrusive. In most forms that m.Net executes for brands, the consumer requests the coupon by texting a keyword to a premium number, so the consumer is requesting this coupon.
  4. For FMCG it can reduce switch selling at the point of sale. The consumer goes into the store armed with a rich photo of the product for instant identification.
  5. It drives traffic in store to redeem the offer and can be tracked for campaign effectiveness.

So what is in it for consumers?

  1. It is not spam or junk mail; the customer requests it by texting in for the offer.
  2. It is more portable; it is always with the customer as a bookmark or a link in an SMS message.

The tipping point for mobile Internet

Tuesday, September 4th, 2007

Posted by Scott Johnson, Chief Marketing Officer

The full Australian-financial-year reporting season is over and I have trawled through the annual reports and press announcements (where available) to put together the following breakdown of the state of the mobile market.

So how big is the Australian Mobile market? Approximately 20.3 million subscribers.

Australian mobile market share by carrier

The Australian mobile market by carrier

Telstra is streets ahead with approximately 42% of the total market share, followed by Optus with approximately 32%.

The Australian Bureau of Statistics population clock estimates there are 21,054,836 of us Aussies at the time of writing. The last census indicated that less than 20% of the population is children 15 years or younger. So the end result is that there are nearly 1.2 handsets for every adult Australian (over 15yrs).

The really interesting number for mobile Internet access is the 3G market size. My best estimate is that there are approximately 4.5 million 3G subscribers. In past quarters Hutchison has been the clear leader due to its early development of a 3G service and single-minded focus on this network. In the past quarter, the Telstra marketing machine has caught up and passed it. Telstra is now the leading network in terms of 3G subscribers.

Australian 3G market share by carrier

The Australian 3G market by carrier

This is good news for marketers looking to explore the mobile Internet and the advanced marketing applications that it can provide, as approximately 22% of the market can now receive 3G content. We know many more 2G handsets are WAP-capable so this is really a scale opportunity for marketing. For me this is the tipping point where the opportunity for marketing is really interesting!

Phone users want innovation, not replication

Tuesday, September 4th, 2007

Posted by Marisa Maio Mackay, Director of Research

Mobile phones have had a profound impact on the way that Australians communicate and interact with each other and their environment. But the world of communication, information, and entertainment isn’t limited to that accessed through a mobile phone. Rather, it encompasses media through all channels — including the World-Wide Web, television, and print.

The challenge for mobile marketers is to leverage the unique strengths of each medium, and to understand the power of the today’s mobile phone. The television has a large screen, magazines are nice and glossy, and the World-Wide Web is fairly easy to navigate… so what do today’s media consumers want out of their mobile phones?

m.Net research suggests that mobile phone subscribers are most positive and receptive to services that:

  • are practical;
  • have intrinsic value;
  • are free;
  • are easy to use;
  • are transparent — that communicate what the product or service is upfront; and
  • are immediate in terms of delivering benefit.

Underlying all of these points is the need for the service or product to complement that which can be accessed through other channels. A common assumption is that people want the ability to access on their mobiles exactly that which can be accessed via computer web-browsers; however, the reality is that people want the mobile phone to enhance their lifestyles, not change or direct their behaviours.

So, providers – when creating the next ideal mobile service, remember that the mobile phone is a powerful force in the entertainment, information and communication space – but not the sole force. So give the people want they want: innovation, not replication!