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Monday, April 29, 2013

Hanging on the Telephone

Are we waiting for mobile marketing to make a move?

Mark Bridge writes:

At the beginning of the 21st century I moved from Vodafone to work for its Vizzavi multimedia portal, wooed by talk of context-specific advertising that would one day use a customer’s location and search history to ensure any ads were precisely targeted. And I’m not the only person who’s been seduced. Consumers, ad agencies, client companies and mobile networks have all been promised much by mobile marketing.

Yet more than a decade later that kind of sophistication seems to be lacking from most mobile marketing messages.

As a result, I was looking forward to last week’s Hanging on the Telephone event. It promised a look at the challenges and pitfalls of mobile marketing… and a glimpse of the future, too.

Helen Keegan chaired the session with contributions from Rube Huljev of Infobip, Amanda Singleton from Qustodian, Stephen Jenkins of Millennial Media and Strategy & Innovation Consultant James Cooper.

Stephen pointed out that consumer engagement should be the main focus of mobile advertising. “Mobile needs to cut through everything,” he explained. “The banner is just the gateway to the content experience. Rich media allows you to do much more using the native characteristics of the device”.

Rube also emphasised the importance of targeting. “It’s not a shotgun approach with mobile, it’s definitely a sniper. The best thing you can get from mobile is knowing your user personally.”

James described the current mobile marketing environment as being a “sort-of Cambrian period where there’s a huge amount of innovation going on. Loads of new species emerging. We’re tracking over 200 different mobile ad platforms - and that’s just the ones we can find.”

Questions from the audience (and answers from the panel) covered a diverse range of topics including consumers who weren’t tech-savvy, future platforms for mobile marketing, the role of mobile payments, agency ad buying and the death of the mobile banner.

Finally, each panel member was finally asked what single step they’d recommend a client took to get started on their mobile journey:

Rube: “know thy customer”

Amanda: “personalise the messaging as much as possible”

Stephen: “build a mobile web site”

James: “devote people as mobile specialists”

Yes, mobile marketing has promised a great deal - and it certainly has the potential to deliver. Yet it’s clear from the discussion that the focus needs to be on more than just technological innovation.

As Amanda emphasised, the basics of traditional marketing are still as important as ever. The best-performing Qustodian campaign was successful because of its timing and content. “It was contextually relevant, it was interesting, it was really funny. Generally, if you make stuff funny, interesting and useful, people will engage with it.”

‘Hanging on the Telephone’ was recorded as a podcast for Heroes of Mobile. For more details, follow @heroesofmobile or #hotmf on Twitter.

Our programmes can be received automatically every week by subscribing free via iTunes or by using our RSS feed. You can also listen to this programme on our website audio player or by downloading the mp3 file.
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Opinion Articles

Last week at The Fonecast: 23rd September 2013

Black days for BlackBerry

Mark Bridge writes:

There are bad weeks... and there are BAD weeks. Blackberry had one of the latter. It all started so well. The company announced a new flagship phablet – the Z30 – and said it would be launching its BBM instant messaging service for iOS and Android handsets at the weekend.

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Last week at The Fonecast: 16th September 2013

iPhone, iPhone, so good they made it twice

Mark Bridge writes:

iPhone, iPhone. Two of ‘em, one dearer than the other but neither especially cheap. One with a 64-bit look-at-me-I’m-fast processor, the other much like an iPhone 5 with a coloured rear panel.

Author: The Fonecast
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EC's Neelie Kroes says ‘we must act now’ to change European telecoms rules

Mark Bridge writes:

Following Wednesday’s ‘State of the Union’ speech by EC President Jose Manuel Barroso, EC Vice-President Neelie Kroes has emphasised the urgency of changing the way telecoms companies operate across Europe.

Ms Kroes wants to cut red tape, end roaming charges, reduce call costs and introduce ‘net neutrality’ across Europe.

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Last week at The Fonecast: 2nd September 2013

Breaking up is profitable to do

Mark Bridge writes:

So – we take a short break at the end of the August ‘silly season’ and one of the year’s biggest mobile-related rumours becomes fact. At least we’re back in time to report on the final stages of the Vodafone/Verizon deal. Yes, it looks as though Big Red will be picking up something like $130 billion for its 45% stake in Verizon Communications… possibly within the next few hours. Just don’t mention the tax, okay?

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GSMA not cowed after EC compares mobile calls with milk

Mark Bridge writes:

In this week’s podcast we talked about a recent European study into call costs that had been highlighted by European Commission Vice President Neelie Kroes.

We agreed the headline was shocking - but also said there were potentially many other tariff factors that weren’t being compared.

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