Tag: mobile trends

Mobile trends at Samsung send profits downward by 64 percent

At the same time that Apple’s profits are breaking records, this company’s execs didn’t have the same news.

According to the news on the latest mobile trends from Samsung when the South Korean company’s fourth quarter financial results were released, there was a 23 percent drop in smartphone, tablet, and wearable technology based revenues when compared to the same time in 2013.

During that same period, the mobile profits at the company fell even more dramatically, dropping by 64 percent.

In that fourth quarter, Samsung posted earnings of $1.8 billion. This mobile trend has been a continuing one for the company that has been experiencing a growing struggle in selling its less expensive smartphones in emerging markets, where there is notable competition in cheaply priced devices from rapidly growing brands in the tech industry such as Xiaomi. Moreover, Samsung has also placed itself at risk by moving toward powering its first phone with its Tizen operating system. Recent reports have indicated that the recent launch of that OS may not have been quite as positive as the company had likely hoped.

At the same time, the mobile trends with regards to the higher end offerings at Samsung aren’t looking much better.

Mobile Trends - Samsung profits declineAt the same time that Apple’s popularity and successes have been skyrocketing since it has launched its larger screened iPhone 6 devices, Samsung’s high end devices have been continuing to do well, but not nearly to the degree of its top competition.

At the same time, it is important to note that while the growth may have slowed down by quite a bit, Samsung is far from seeing an all out halt in its unit sales. Recently, analysts from the Wall Street Journal predicted that the company had sold somewhere between 74 and 77 million smartphones within the last quarter of last year. That may be a notable stumble from the 86 million that were sold the year before in the same quarter, but it remains an exceptionally large figure.

It is clear that the mobile trends at Samsung are headed downward, but the size of the company’s sales still provides room for the brand to turn things around.

Mobile marketing is seeing click growth

The number of people who are accessing ads on their smartphones and tablets has been steadily rising.

According to the a new report that was recently published by Marin Software, mobile marketing is seeing a steady improvement in the number of people who are clicking on ads displayed on their smartphone and tablet screens as they browse the web and shop online.

In fact, the number of clicks of those mobile ads has risen to make up about half of the UK market.

The report showed that fifty percent of all of the clicks that were made to online ads came through mobile marketing channels, revealing the importance of tablets and smartphones to advertising online. It also suggests that there could be a time in the near future in which the number of clicks over mobile devices will exceed that of laptops and desktops.

The conversion rates for clicked ads were also quite high, revealing an increased importance to mobile marketing.

Mobile Marketing - Click GrowthAmong all of the people who clicked on ads – regardless of the device that was used – forty three percent who went on to be converted into paying customers were using smartphones or tablets. This showed that people aren’t just using their mobile devices to browse products and read reviews, but they are also making actual purchases and are completing their transactions.

While desktop and laptop computers may have a higher conversion rate than mobile devices, the issue is that the advertising over that channel costs considerably more than it does in the over mobile. That said, regardless of its growth, mobile advertising has been greatly undervalued.

The annual rise in the number of sales that are being generated over mobile devices is being interpreted by many experts in the industry as a sign that the use of laptops and PCs for the completion of secure online shopping will one day move into the mainstream, instead of being something that only the minority of people actually do. The report showed that the United Kingdom was the only location in Europe in which mobile marketing was shown to be less effective than online advertising over PCs and laptops.