Category: Mobile Marketing

Mobile marketing isn’t well connected among many companies

Consumers are opting for a cross channel experience more than ever before while shopping in an average day.

Despite many different mobile marketing strategies and attempts at campaigns that will provide consumers with the ideal cross channel experience that will be able to reach them in a meaningful way that will encourage them to act on what they have seen.

The average consumer will easily hop from laptop to smartphone or tablet to a brick and mortar store for one purchase.

While mobile marketing companies know that this is the case, actually figuring out how to track any given consumer from one platform to the next has provided them with a highly challenging experience. This is among the reasons that many client side marketers have revealed that advertising and promoting over a string of different channels is among their lead priorities as of May 2014, when a study was conducted by Econsultancy in association with Oracle Marketing Cloud.

Over two thirds of the respondents said that cross channel and mobile marketing are a primary goal.

Mobile Marketing connectionsHowever, just because they have been taking aim at more than one platform, it doesn’t mean that they are necessarily seeing the results of their efforts. For instance, eMarketer recently stated in a report about the study that “43 percent said that they could understand their consumers’ journeys and change their marketing mix as a result, while 30 percent had implemented teams to work on integrated marketing.”

Moreover, that firm also explained that under twenty percent of the participants in the study were capable of actually measuring the financial results of having made cross channel efforts. This is problematic when taking into consideration the importance of the outcomes of online and mobile marketing, among other efforts. Moreover, these same respondents also said that they were even less able to be able to measure their customer retention rate as a result of advertising over a range of different channels.

Possibly more striking was that a mere 7 percent of the participants felt that their companies were actually ready to successfully take part in cross-channel advertising. On the whole, 62 percent of the respondents felt that their efforts were not aligned across each channel. Only 10 percent felt that their strategies that included several channels – such as radio, television, print, online, and mobile marketing – aligned from one touchpoint to the next.

Mobile advertising growth in India is accelerating at record speed

India’s mobile ad impression volume has grown by over 200% since 2013.

According to Opera Mediaworks’ State of Mobile Advertising report, since July 2013, India’s mobile ad impression volume has increased by 260%, making the country the most powerful driver in the Asia-Pacific market in this field, and the record growth is largely due to the rise in smartphone users.

Android is, without a doubt, the dominate platform in India.

There has been a huge shift across the country, with Indian consumers advancing from feature phones to smartphones. According to the report, the market is almost completely dominated by Android, which has a 41.7% share compared to iOS’ 0.4%.

The report from Opera Mediaworks learned that social apps and social sites rank as the most popular in terms of usage, which is consistent with the worldwide trend. However, for Indian users in particular, apps, education and gaming sites, and mobile app stores are a close second to the most popular trend.

Simple banner ads are the most common form of mobile advertising used.

mobile advertising growth - IndiaEven though the ads that are used the most are common banner advertisements, sophisticated rich media ads are being used more and are finding success. The report found that even though rich media only makes up 3.2% of impression, these ads drive 26.6% of revenue.

Almost half of all ad impression (48.1%) were advertisements for mobile devices and games. That being said, classified ads also made up a significant percentage, with one in five impressions designed for the direct sale of personal transportation, such as bicycles, motorcycles, trucks and cars.

The CEO of Opera Mediaworks, Mahi de Silva, commented that future opportunity was the “biggest trend” that the report identified. The CEO elaborated by saying “Mobile users in India, who have shifted to smartphones, have done so with Android, and we can see that those users are far more interested in categories like News & Information, Arts & Entertainment and Business, Finance & Investing than the India average.”

Among other subjects, the Opera Mediaworks report, which is the leading mobile advertising platform’s first India-focused report, included data on mobile consumption patterns, mobile device adoption, and ad types in the sub-continent.