Category — Mobile
A little break, but not from my BB
Last night Ryan Seacrest was on Larry King, and was speaking on a variety of issues, including the usual useless gossip, but he also touched on his BlackBerry Addiction. Larry asked him about the several businesses he runs and how he manages to keep them all together and when he sleeps. His response was basically that he turns his BlackBerry to silent, but wakes up routinely to check it through the night. I was watching this with my girlfriend and she informed me that Ryan’ BlackBerry use sounded an awful lot like mine.
Took a fairly last minute trip to North Carolina to visit my Grandmother, and we crushed the BlackBerry on the way here. Same old stuff for me that I’ve written about before, but it emphasizes how relevant it truly is. AT&T has announced that it will subsidize the release of the 3G iPhone this summer by as much as $200. BlackBerry announced its new “Bold” device (with 3G). Overall, the market for mobile phones and web-rich devices is growing enourmously. If people are able to buy iPhones for 2 or 3 hundred dollars, imagine how many they will sell.
Once everyday people, not just the early adopters and business savvy customers, but everyday Jones is able to access rich, mobile internet - then we will see the explosive growth in mobile advertising. I’m very excited to see what happens in the 4th quarter this year…
May 16, 2008 Comments
Mobile is Progressing
This week I saw a few examples of how mobile is finally beginning to cross the chasm between innovators and early adopters. Large players are seeing a shift in their advertising dollars, Google announced it was making a major partnership with Sprint, and launched their international portal for iPhones, iMedia Connection came out with a great overview of mobile barcodes, and also yesterday my BlackBerry was with out data for about 4 hours and I kind of freaked out.
The combination of these events, along with specific posts from two of my favorite bloggers (David Berkowitz on privacy and Darren Herman on privacy) led me to the conclusion that we are near the tipping point of doing something great with mobile (working on a very cool new mobile tool for our company).
If you read David and Darren’s posts, you’ll see that they feel strongly about privacy and the prospect of invasion of your personal space on a cell phone. I don’t see mobile marketing being a success if its seen as an invasion; however, mobile marketing becomes a success when marketers are able to reach people as they are in transaction mode. Transaction mode being any of the following: “Lets find a hotel nearby,” “I’m hungry,” “I’m thirsty,” “I really want one of those…” etc. As marketers see the value in reaching users searching for this information, and the mobile device becomes more of a “pocket” notebook computer more dollars will flow across the mobile airwaves.
As the devices transition, the dollars will transition behind them.
May 9, 2008 Comments
Early Adopters and You/Me
Today’s Fast Company Big Idea is:
“Anyone who says early adopters don’t matter needs to go back to business school. Facebook and Twitter are beginning to impact business just as much as advertising ”
I follow these daily thought provokers from Fast Company because they are usually fairly interesting. I think this one is excellent. I don’t consider myself to be an innovator, but a late moving early adopter, I am becoming more early in the adoption cycle, but still I’m typically a little behind (particularly in the larger technology space, which I am still new to).
But the importance of early adopters has never left my thoughts. The early adopters are the business owners we seek out first when entering a new market, and they are precisely not the end users that we seek to reach on our website. They are the people who determine whether new technologies fail or succeed and build momentum for those that do. So I wait for the early adopters to try things out see if they fail. Early adopters are the front line in end user technology, and they need to be taken seriously.
A few days ago, I mentioned Lewis Black (ok, I’ve been a little harsh on Lewis, but I’m actually a huge fan) and his mocking of internet addicts - essentially early adopters. Again, a prime example of the lack of understanding most people have of how new technologies can help us do things better and faster, or sometimes just have more fun doing them. MySpace, turned into Facebook, then Twitter became the next hot thing.
Many of my clients are now “working” on a Facebook page, and already have a MySpace page. Do these pages help them at all? Not measurably, but the point is that even these late adopters and slow moving businesses now see that they “really should” be on Facebook. Do a quick google of “Facebook Marketing” (an auto suggestion in firefox!) and you can see that people are making entire businesses out of advertising consulting for Facebook.
But now, the innovators are moving elsewhere, which means the early adopters will be soon to follow. Where will they go, and what will be that next cool technology that will be affecting the way people to business? I would say mobile, but the iPhone already happened and the flurry of 3G phones coming out this summer will blow that away. Its not a new social network, because I believe people are getting fatigued. Semantic Web 3 dot 0, fancy buzz words? I think we are a year or two away from anything drastic coming across the radar.
Any thoughts…
May 2, 2008 Comments
Weekend Tidbits and Discovery
I came across a few new interesting things this weekend. Here’s a quick overview as I’ve got a busy day and I’m stealing time right now…
Outside.in (http://outside.in/) Outside.in is an interesting example of aggregating local news and information. I discovered some new things happening in Providence, that I wasn’t aware of. It does a pretty good job of collecting different stories from different perspectives and on a variety topics, all focused around local. It does not, however, do a particularly good job facilitating an experience in Providence beyond the discussions being had on their page. Again, their revenue model seems to be based on supplying relevant content and serving your standard skyscraper ads from national brands (that don’t seem to be well targeted).
They claim to have discussions on 11,860 towns and neighborhoods on their site, but most of them seem to be large towns/cities in the Northeast / West Coast. (nothing new there). Anyway, an interesting take on local and I’m intrigued to see where they take it or what I can learn from it.
NY Times Mobile Real Estate: I noticed this ad on the back page of the Business section this morning as I was reading with my coffee. It basically allows you to text the number of a listing in the NYT to their number and it sends you back more details and a link to that listing’s mobile site. I tried it out, but the first listing I sent returned “We’re sorry but that listing is not available in NYT Mobile,” I tried it again and voila! it sent me the name of the property, the location of the property, the price, the listing agent and a link to the mobile site for that listing. The link took me a mobile site about the listing, and had every little detail I could want about the property (photos, taxes, schools, etc).
I think its a somewhat cool implementation of mobile for the NYT, however its not very out of the box. I am still tied to looking up these listing numbers either in print or on their website. A better and perhaps more useful application would be to incorporate location based services into this app and have it feed you back listings in your area. I walk to Chelsea and say, “I want to live here” and the NYT (or anyone else) tells me what is available literally in this area.
Those are my thoughts for the morning, what do you think?…
April 28, 2008 Comments
A Mobile Weekend
I spent this absolutely beautiful weekend in NYC. My college roomate’s 25 birthday party Friday night, and an afternoon and evening of exploring the upper east side with my girlfriend. Almost everything we did was facilitated by my mobile device (Verizon BlackBerry 8830). I love this phone, its my second BlackBerry and a HUGE upgrade from my last.
Regardless of the device, we used it for just about everything we did (even a bit of navigating in Central Park). On the train we read about a dozen different reviews to get a sense for what we were in for. We used its GPS functions to give us directions to the Club we went to Friday night (Azza @ 55th and Lex), after we got in the cab. Saturday, we looked up the Pope’s schedule using the browser (yes we saw him in the flesh, along with his 4 block motorcade). Then we found an excellent Brasserie on 79th Street using the Google Maps App. As we waited for our food, we looked at a Map of Central Park to figure out the best path for where we were heading (Belvedere Castle - man what a beautiful day). On our way home, we looked up Movie Showtimes.
The point of this story is that in the past 48 hours I used a mobile device to facilitate 3 transactions, and to find and research essential information that I otherwise would have had to look up prior to leaving my apartment. Each one of those was an opportunity for an advertiser to reach me, while I was interested, while I was about to make a purchasing decision, literally at that moment. How valuable would it have been to the Brasserie across the street from the one I found online? - $38. How much was it worth to Azza to get us there and not have us stop somewhere else? - way more than $38.
Why are people still so bearish about mobile? Nearly everyone in NYC has a mobile device capable of using the internet, millions of people are purchasing them everyday, and the state of Mobile in Japan and in Europe is way ahead of ours. And the Instant return for advertisers must be so appetizing to marketers.
The iPhone, BlackBerries, and all the new broadband capable mobile devices are facilitating easier access to valued information via the mobile web. Once marketers figure out how to reach this growing base of mobile users (which they are beginning to , see Amazon), its going to get hot. And quickly. Mobile has to be the next arena of growth, because everyone else is doing it.
Almost everything I do, I use my mobile device to help me do it better or faster. I read the news, blogs and email. I get directions to my appointments and meetings, I get the latest scores on demand.
There is so much that I do that I am transitioning to my phone. Remember when people started transitioning to the web? I see that happening with mobile.
April 20, 2008 Comments