Tag: mobile advertising

Mobile marketing goes awry for Pandora

Pandora Media Inc. experiences location based marketing flub.

Pandora, the online radio company, gives mobile advertisers the ability to target their users through the zip code the consumer enters upon signing up but, what has recently been discovered, is that the trouble with this mobile marketing technique is if the advertiser’s customers do not manually change their zip code data in the event that they move, they will continue to receive adds that would only be relevant to their previous place of address.

Many mobile ads that use latitude and longitude for targeting a user’s location are inaccurate.

According to a recent Thinknear survey of 53 million ad impressions, only 34% of mobile ads that use geolocation technology for the purpose of targeting mobile users in a specific location are accurate within 328 feet (100 meters). Meanwhile, 27% are inaccurate by over 32808 feet (10,000 meters).

Thinknear General Manager Eli Portnoy said that mobile users on the go create problems for these apps. Although an application developer may believe to have the proper longitude and latitude coordinates that are equal to a one meter (3.2 ft) by one meter location on a map, in reality, these coordinates could be way off by hundreds of meters. Therefore, if an app publisher utilized the zip code that was entered in during sign up as a central point, the user could, in fact, be traveling in a completely different zip code.Mobile Marketing fail

Portnoy commented that “The industry is moving very, very quickly, and location is very hard.” He added, “A lot of publishers are not location experts, and they are trying to get location, and they don’t understand how.”

To boost its mobile marketing technique, Pandora has started to check IP addresses.

According to Pandora, the majority of its advertisers are interested in running large-scale campaigns that are nationwide. They have no interest in trying to reach mobile users who are located on a specific city block. For this reason, the internet radio company does not try for a target that would be narrower than zip code.

To enhance its more targeted advertisements, Pandora is now checking from where the IP address of a mobile device is coming and will notify a user to change their zip code if this is required. Pandora’s director of product management, Jack Krawczyk, said that the company’s surveys have revealed that its mobile marketing location accuracy scores are in the high 90s on a percentage scale due to the fact that people do not move that often.

Mobile marketing over email is becoming vital

Of all of the retail emails sent, nearly half are being opened on smartphones and tablets.

According to the results of research conducted by a mobile marketing firm, Knotice, almost half of all retail advertising and promotional emails that were sent during the last two quarters of 2013 were opened using smartphones and tablets.

This represented a considerable increase over the percentage of emails opened on mobile devices before that.

During the first two quarters of 2013, these emails were being opened 43.2 percent of the time over mobile devices. This represents a 13.9 percent increase in the number of emails that are being seen as mobile marketing instead of over laptops and desktop computers. This insight helps to show advertisers how important it is to ensure that their messages and any links that are provided will be compatible with these smaller screen gadgets.

As 49.2 percent of these communications are now mobile marketing emails, it is clear that a tipping point is reached.

Mobile Marketing - emailMobility has now reached an important tipping point as this figure is near enough to half to say that one in every two emails will be opened using a smartphone or tablet. The study that was conducted by Knotice took millions of different retail emails into account during those two half year periods in order to come up with the data that it has recently published. Knotice is a mobile marketing unit of IgnitionOne Inc.

At the moment, the devices that are used to pen the largest number of retail emails are Apple’s iPhone and iPad. That said, it is important to note that Knotice measured the opening of an email as the successful rendering of the images in the message. As the “on” for image rendering in emails is the default setting with which all Apple products are shipped, and as “off” is the default setting for many Android devices, this could cause the natural bias to be skewed toward Apple’s devices.

Equally, though, a growing body of evidence is also showing that Apple devices lead the way when it comes to acting on mobile marketing by registering, participating, and purchasing, so it could be that these are the most relevant devices, at the moment, when it comes to m-commerce.