News for Mobile Bulls
Considering this is the end of August, last week was surprisingly full of news in the mobile arena. There were several market studies released in the past month, and they’ve got me excited about mobile again.
Jumptap just announced a very major Series D raise - $26 Million led by AllianceBernstein. They will be using the funds to build out and improve their growing mobile advertising platform, with the plan to capitalize on the growing mobile search and advertising market. In their release Dan Olshwang also points out that mobile devices now outnumber PC’s with over 3.3 billion devices in use worldwide.
“Internet advertising is currently growing at a compound annual rate of 18.3% and will reach $73 billion in 2011. What is really exciting about mobile advertising is its ability to eclipse Internet advertising,” said Dan Olschwang, President and Chief Executive Officer of JumpTap.
Those are some really smart people pouring huge amounts of money into Mobile search. Considering the overwhelmingly tight credit market right now, this is a really astonishing deal. And its really not getting any major press (at least that I’ve found). I had to dig all the way to JumpTap’s “News” page to find the release.
One of the reasons why there seems to be a recent resurgence of mobile is that there is data flowing out of all the major research firms indicating significant growth in mobile use, both the volume and frequency. Gerg Sterling pointed out an interesting report from Nielsen Mobile that shows some intersting data on mobile search (and surpise - domination by Google of the market). According to the report about 89% of searches were in the three categories of “Information,” “Local Listings” “and Websites/Navigation.”
Most relevant to my local interests is that 29% of all mobile searches were for “local listings” and 33% were for “Information” (- thats a pretty broad term). In an August 12th report Neilsen Mobile noted that US and Eurpoean markets were “more mature” and mobile use was focused around email and search, compared to entertainment as the leading segment in Brazil, Russia, India and China. Entertainment doesn’t fall in the top 5 for US and EU - (But city guides/maps do!). This data goes along with a trend that JumpTap is reporting as well:
JumpTap notices a shift away from entertainment-centric searches, such as ring tones and downloads. It reports more navigational searches: Users looking for websites (such as specific social networking sites) and utilities (such as email) on their devices. (From msearchgroove)
This data points out that people are beginning to use their mobile devices for real life tasks, perhaps representing the beginning of the shift from computers to Mobile Devices. One of the frequent arguments against mobile advertising was that mostly people were going online to download wallpapers and ringtones for the phones (which is pretty uselss for any marketer not representing wallpapers or ringtones), but now a widespread adoption of mobile use is changing that argument.
The market is maturing and the huge investment by AB shows that the day when our phones replace our laptops is one day closer. I hadn’t put much thought into mobile until recently, but all this talk of Googles Android and their “Content Market“, iPhone and of course their apps, is hard to ignore. Will marketers begin to listen, or will old school execs continue their slow migration to online media one step at a time?
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