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Author: Dan Gendro

Location based marketing service offered by the Weather Company

These ads would tell marketers when consumers have entered their shops, instead of requiring clicks.

The Weather Company has now entered into a new location based marketing partnership that is allowing it to connect its smartphone based ads with the real world so that clicks won’t be required as it will bring consumers to physical stores, instead.

This has been made possible due to an agreement with Placed Attribution, an analytics company.

Together, the Weather Company and Placed Attribution make it possible for advertisers interested in location based marketing to be able to actually see how many people are entering physical shops as a result of the smartphone based advertising campaigns that they have launched. This allows them to step away from many of the currently used attribution methods that are applied to online ads.

The Weather Company feels that this location based marketing shows advertisers when they are effective.

Location-based marketing serviceAccording to Alex Linde, the Weather Company’s senior vice president of monetization, “If we want marketers to spend their money on the Weather Company, we need a way to show them it’s effective.”

Currently, one of the top methods of judging whether or not a digital ad is actually effective is through the number of clicks that have directly led to a desired action such as a registration, a subscription, or a sale. While this can be useful information, there is no way of knowing exactly how accurate it may be. For example, it could leave marketers exposed to fraud or it may lead them to optimize their campaigns for the wrong metrics. The Weather Company is hoping that this problem will be solved through their geolocation technology strategy.

Linde explained that “In a lot of cases, there’s no correlation between clicks and store visits, so trying to optimize for clicks is a false economy.” He also pointed out that this location based marketing strategy “is a great way to validate the true value of publisher inventory as it doesn’t concern itself with clicks and would fail to work if the ads were not seen.” As 120 million mobile app installs of the Weather Company’s app have already occurred and this is paired with the panel of 150,000 people from Placed Attribution, a powerful opportunity is created.

UK retailers are falling behind when it comes to mobile commerce and consumer engagement

Mobile consumers are not getting enough attention from UK retailers

As consumers in the United Kingdom become more interested in mobile shopping, retailers may be falling behind in their ability to accommodate this change in consumer behavior. A new report from Skava highlights this fact, showing that many of the country’s top retailers are not effectively engaging mobile consumers. This is largely due to the fact that these retailers have not optimized themselves for the mobile world. Their websites, including e-commerce gateways, are not suited for use on mobile devices, which makes them somewhat unattractive to mobile consumers and lowers their performance in mobile commerce.

Many top retailers are not optimized for the mobile space

According to the report, 24% of the United Kingdom’s top 100 retailers are not mobile optimized. These retailers are finding it difficult to engage a mobile audience that is becoming larger and more influential by the day. The mobile space now accounts for 20% of all e-commerce traffic, but retailers that are not optimized for mobile are missing out on this traffic and potential sales. For many retailers, whether mobile commerce has any importance is a matter of debate, with some of the largest retailers suggesting that the mobile space is nothing more than a passing novelty.

Argos finds success in embracing mobile consumers

UK mobile commerce - FailArgos, one of the United Kingdom’s leading retailers, generated nearly $800 million in mobile sales in 2013. The retailer has been seeing a steady rise in mobile commerce sales over the past few years and have begun to engage mobile consumers more aggressively as a result. The retailer has taken steps to ensure that it its mobile friendly, changing its website and e-commerce services to be more accommodating to smartphones and tablets.

Poor mobile services leave consumers with a sour experience

Poorly designed mobile commerce services have a negative effect on consumers when it comes to the mobile shopping experience. A poor experience can prevent a consumer from making use of a particular service in the future or simply make it impossible for people to actually pay for products that they are interested in when shopping online.