Category: Geolocation Technology

Location based marketing is growing in importance over mobile

Success in advertising over smartphones is beginning to require this vital component.

Although location based marketing may not be the entire issue when it comes to mobile, it is easily proving itself to be the most important factor over this channel, says a new report from Thinknear.

The company specializes in this area and is now claiming that it is vital to advertising success on smartphones.

General Manager Eli Portnoy of Thinknear, a mobile advertising firm that focuses on location based marketing, explained that “The phone is a portable device we carry in our pocket and is a part of what we are doing all day and every day. You have your phone with you when you are commuting, when you are at work, when you are seeing friends, when you go home. It’s ubiquitous. And you use it to interact with your world and what’s important to you.”

That said, Portnoy pointed out that many businesses forget how precise location based marketing can be.

He pointed out that many mobile marketing firms and advertisers forget that smartphones are an exceptionally portable device and that people take them along no matter where they go. This makes it possible for “very precise location capabilities.”Location Based Marketing - Mobile Growth

Using the geolocation technology that is built into the majority of smartphones, these days, can give companies the ability to better understand who their main customers actually are and what they typically do. This insight can be invaluable to being able to provide those consumers with just what they want, at the time that it is most relevant to them.

The main issue standing between companies and their ability to actually obtain accurate location data, which they can then use, is the same as the one standing in the way of the use of many other parts of the mobile marketing industry. While the technology is out there, it isn’t always possible to use it to capture the valuable data. Portnoy explained that “Users have to have their GPS on, give the app permission to use their location, have a clear line of sight to a GPS satellite, and so on.”

Therefore, not every impression will provide usable location based marketing data. However, there are ways around it and firms such as Thinknear appear to be able to help to provide strategies that will guide companies and show them the mobile ropes.

Geolocation technology from Qualcomm could change everything

A new tech from the company could be able to alter the way that mobile device users function.

A new form of Qualcomm geolocation technology that can be used for the formation of a series of on-the-fly, reliable wireless networks could soon also be able to provide the users of high end mobile devices throughout the United States with a completely new and different experience that would marry their digital identity and their live presence.

The tech has been labeled with the name GIMBAL smartphone technology.

GIMBAL has just recently been moved from the Qualcomm Labs into that chip makers unit for retail services. This geolocation based tech could prove to have a tremendous range of different applications. At the moment, focus is starting to be placed on the possibility that consumers will be willing to share their location in order to receive shopping offers and deals and improved convenience, in return.

Devices powered by GIMBAL could help to skyrocket geolocation based digital content.

This could help the location based marketing and advertising industry to take off, beyond the requirement for internet WiFi connection. This mobile tech first proved itself in Austin at the SXSW, in which it allowed the automatic establishment – and subsequent dismantling – of a number of ad hoc, secure networks for 150 highly interactive design sessions. This was accomplished by a Vancouver, Canada based wireless events startup.Geolocation Technology Could be Changing

According to the co-founder of Eventbase, Jeff Sinclair, “This wasn’t possible before GIMBAL. GPS wasn’t precise enough,” to spontaneously create indoor mapping and data collection at live events. Eventbase was the Canadian company that provided the service to the SXSW event.

A more basic version of this service was provided by the company to the Sochi, Russia Winter Olympics, as well as at the Summer Olympics in London in 2012. It started providing these services at the Winter Olympics in 2010 in its own home city.

Now that GIMBAL powered wireless services have successfully proven themselves through the trial at the SXSW, similar geolocation services will be available to iPhone and iPad users at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York, which will be held in April, as well as to the advertising awards show, Cannes Lion, in June in the South of France.