Archive for March, 2011

Mobile – the next internet boom?

Mobile is booming. But how should it be approached strategically?

There are now 5.2 billion (and counting) mobile phone subscribers on planet Earth. Given that there are 5.3 billion people who have access to electricity, we are now reaching the time that everyone who can have a mobile now has a mobile.

Within the developed world, smartphones are also seeing a similar explosive growth. To call the iPhone, Blackberry or Android device a phone, almost seems to be missing the point. These are pocket computers – with as much power in them as a desktop had in them ten years ago, during the first dot-com boom. The Economist estimates by 2015, all new phones will be smartphones.

All the numbers and pundits are all pointing towards a mobile future that’s far bigger than any bubble from Silicon Valley ever had the potential to be. So, you’ve got to grips with your website, you’ve integrated it with your wider marketing strategy, and you’ve now got a new channel to play with. How does this fit in with everything else?

In addition to reading the other mobile focused article in this newsletter which will guide you in deciding the best technical route to follow, here are a few strategic considerations to bear in mind in this new mobile ubiquity.

1) The most personal device – Mobiles are used by everyone, everywhere – and carried on their person in a way that no technological device can match. When the phone rings, when you get a text, or when you get an email, you interrupt what you’re doing to respond. This mean that too many marketing messages have the additional tendency to provide annoyance instead of value. Think about how personal mobile use is and plan your experience accordingly.
2) Where do they read your emails? – Allied to this point, we’ve been hearing for years that email is in decline. Well, last year, use of mobile email actually went up – and this may even reverse the decline of email in the longer run. Given the small screen and shorter user sessions that mobile users manifest, check if your content works on the smaller screen. Newsletters should not be essays with content simple and to the point.
3) When do people use it? Mobile use comes into its own, when it’s… mobile. At Vexed we see in the sites we host that mobile sessions are short, driven by utility and to the point. Make sure your sites reflect this and serve this in how they are designed.
4) You know where they are. Both apps and browsers on mobile devices are now capable of ascertaining user location (with permissions collected). This offers new opportunities – everything from targeted offers through to real time traffic information. Used sensitively this can vastly improve the targeting of your customer messages.
5) The second (third, fourth) screen Users at home are increasingly using different devices at the same time. Each new device into the mix alters the way that the previous devices are used. Increasingly, consumers expect a relevant, consistent and connected advertising and content experience across screens. Make sure every channel provides its own value – and can stand on its own. A recent Microsoft white paper provides some great case studies for further reading here.

Next read the mobile options you have in our other mobile article this month.

Problems down on the (content) farm

How Google face the first serious threat they’ve faced in years (and what it means for you and your brand)

We don’t search anymore. We Google. Google is by far the biggest search engine provider globally, and is so ingrained into our lives that it’s hard to think of a viable alternative. Other search engines have just faded into oblivion. For brands, this has led to a fairly simple search strategy in recent years – get it right with Google and the rest will follow.

One of the main ways that this was achieved was through a good content strategy. Building content pages specifically designed to appear in relevant key results pages and attract visitors was a highly productive and completely above board approach – far more than the many failed ways of ‘gaming’ Google.

Yet, big brands weren’t the only people that noticed the effectiveness of this ploy. The strategy is now coming under fire from the prolonged existence of content farms – which also represent one of the first serious threats that Google has faced for a few years.

Unlike sites such as Wikipedia and Wikihow, which rely on user-created and edited content, which has been shown to be of a higher quality and on a par with the Encyclopedia Brittanica, content farms generate content by aggregating it from other websites, resulting in high quantity of SEO optimised, low quality information. Demand Media for example, churns out 4000 new pieces of content a day, and articles range from the regular pieces on How to Cook a Turkey to the bizarre How to Be a Hobo with a Web Based Income.

These results have been increasingly noticeable in Google search results in recent months, with many commentators writing how they dilute useful results and remove relevance. Given this was always Google’s biggest strength over the competition, this does present a serious issue.

In response to this, Google released a new algorithm at the end of February, nicknamed the ‘Farmer Update’ which aimed to combat the problem of content farms clogging up your search results. However this has also affected some legitimate sites.

As a brand, it’s worthwhile keeping a close eye over the next few months on how Google’s new search algorithm impacts your brand and how to redefine your SEO strategy. Additionally, SERPs (search engine result pages from insignificant sites and link spamming can lead to your brand dropping out of the top search listings, so it is worthwhile analysing where your incoming traffic is coming from.

Moreover, it remains to be seen if Google can cut the content farms out of results, whilst keeping the high quality relevant results it is known for. Should market share decline – Adwords revenue, Google’s main source of income (and a major source of traffic for many brands) could also fall. In the meantime, brands need to keep an eye on three main things…

1) Do you face competition from content farms in key niches – both in organic and paid search?
2) If you’re syndicating content on site, how is this rated by Google?
3) Is your own content rated highly by Google, and isn’t being adversely affected by the recent changes?

Finally, you’ve personally noticed the decline in Google’s search results, Vexed recommends DuckDuckGo, a neat search engine already featured in Wired, CNN and The Wall Street Journal. With no tracking of your personal data or search history, DuckDuckGo returns relevant results with no sponsored links.

Mobile: what are the choices?

It seems like one of the longest running ‘next big thing’ – the growth of mobile. In the last few years it has actually arrived, and with it a whole new series of options.

Yet, the simplest place to start is with your website; how it looks on a mobile phone – and not just your own. Just as different browsers affect how a site looks on your desktop, the same is true for mobile phones. Ideally, take a look at your site analytics and see what are the most common mobile phones visiting your site are. Then look at the user experience that you do provide and if it is lacking, make sure it’s adapted accordingly – just as you would do for different desktop browsers.

The phenomenal rise in the use of apps (10 billion have been downloaded through the iTunes store) may tempt you to consider launching one for your brand. Before you make the final decision, there are a few things that are worth thinking about before you proceed. Broadly there are three approaches you can look at when developing a mobile strategy – here’s how we see the pros and cons of each.

1) A mobile site

Of the three, mobile sites are the easiest to maintain – particularly for multiple handsets, as it’s the easiest way to support large numbers of users. Kraft is a great example of a brand that’s really used mobile sites to its advantage with its “no mobile left behind strategy”.

However, mobile sites are less rich in design, unable to take advantage of the full features of the device and also aren’t there when the user fire up the device on that first screen – they’re less front of mind.

When a mobile site is best: When you have a disparate user base and are looking to provide simple utility

2) An app launcher

An app launcher takes content from a mobile site and places it within in app, so it can be distributed though mobile marketplaces such as the iTunes store or Android Marketplace.

The app launcher has the advantage of being available in multiple app stores at a relatively low cost (as it’s essentially the same content and site behind it) and can also get the ‘front screen’ advantage that apps have over mobile sites.

However app launchers, again as they are written for many devices, can’t simultaneously provide for all platform features and because of this, also won’t look as good as some apps can.

When app launchers are best: When getting a cut through in app stores is important or achievable to quickly reach a large numbers of users.

3) A native app

The boom in apps may lead you to think that apps are the best route; they do seem to look the best, with options to all the functions of the device, including more access to customer data. What’s more, unlike the first two options, users don’t even need to be connected to the internet to use the app.

However native apps are more expensive, they’re also niche – only one platform per app and updates are often not automatically deployed; users have to choose to update.

When native apps are best: When most mobile users are using one platform and you’re looking to provide a rich user experience

Amazon Beats Apple And Google To Cloud-Based Music Storage/Streaming

Today’s web news…

Amazon Beats Apple And Google To Cloud-Based Music Storage/Streaming
Apple limits Design Awards to App Store residents
Google in mobile payment talks with Mastercard and Citigroup
browserify: browser-side require() for your node.js
Mobile Boilerplate: a best practice baseline for your mobile Web app
Understanding the potential of in-store mobile media
Soap.com runs mobile banner and audio ads via Pandora mobile app
Facebook effect lifts online advertising
Music From Your Hard Drive May Become Streamable on Amazon
GroupMe: Monetising Group Messaging
How To Use Facebook Safely In The Mideast And Africa
American Express Launches “Serve” Digital Payments Platform, Paves Way for NFC
Next From Google: Charge Store Purchases by Smartphone
SimpleGeo Releases Database for Location-Based App Makers
How Businesses Can Survive a Product Recall Using Social Media

Everyday at Vexed we round up the industry stories that we find interesting and insightful. These are sent round in an email digest, helping to inform the work we do for our clients and keep us at the forefront of digital. If you have questions about any of these stories or would like to talk to us about projects based on any of them, drop us a line at info@vexeddigital.com

Android In-App Billing to launch this week

Today’s web news…

Android In-App Billing to launch this week
Xui.js – a simple javascript library for building mobile web applications.
Will running Android apps be enough to help BlackBerry PlayBook compete?
Location-based services have yet to reach tipping point: survey
How mobile ties in with shopper behavior
How live blogging has transformed journalism
Facebook Partners with Seedcamp to Support European Social Startups
Do You Swivel? Facebook Social Shopping + Augmented Reality [Video]
How Effective Are QR Codes Anyway?
Warner Bros. expands movie rentals via Facebook with five more high profile titles
Google teams with MasterCard and Citigroup for NFC payments, also files patent app
Amazon.com lets you play with an Android virtual machine, try apps before you buy them
Why Facebook’s New Questions Tool Is Good for Brands & Businesses
Think Quarterly from Google UK on data
Building a recommendation engine, foursquare style
5 Tips for Creating Your Own Group Buying Deals

Everyday at Vexed we round up the industry stories that we find interesting and insightful. These are sent round in an email digest, helping to inform the work we do for our clients and keep us at the forefront of digital. If you have questions about any of these stories or would like to talk to us about projects based on any of them, drop us a line at info@vexeddigital.com

Color’s Ambitious Photo App Seeks to Reinvent Mobile Social Networking

Today’s web news…

Color’s Ambitious Photo App Seeks to Reinvent Mobile Social Networking
Windows Phone 7 gets cut’n'paste, other tweaks in update
Facebook tells privacy advocates not to ‘shoot the messenger’
Location-based mobile offers key to driving in-store visits
The multichannel challenge for retailers
Hotel owner turns mobile phones into room keys
New Service Allows You To Schedule Your Tweets
Official Node.js Job Board Pops Onto the Web
Social Commerce Clinic: 25 Practical Recommendations
Social Commerce that Sucks: 4 Pitfalls to Avoid and a Golden Rule
Mobile By The Numbers [INFOGRAPHIC]
World Bank to Launch Web-Based Platform for Urban Development
Facebook Tests Real-Time Ad Targeting
One Extension to Rule Them All: Kynetx Opens Cross-Browser App Store
How 50 Billion Connected Devices Could Transform Brand Marketing & Everyday Life
Why Xbox Kinect Technology Will Be the Next Frontier for Marketers
Toyota Hops on Real-Time Marketing Trend With Prius Records Event

Everyday at Vexed we round up the industry stories that we find interesting and insightful. These are sent round in an email digest, helping to inform the work we do for our clients and keep us at the forefront of digital. If you have questions about any of these stories or would like to talk to us about projects based on any of them, drop us a line at info@vexeddigital.com

Google launches Moderator product for live events

Today’s web news…

Google launches Moderator product for live events
Google releases snappy, the compression library used in Bigtable
On Firefox 4 Day, Chrome 11 Hits Beta With The Ability To Talk To Your Computer!
Building a recommendation engine, foursquare style
Carriers, Google should fear Facebook: analyst
How meetup.com brings in the cash with email marketing
Multiple mobile payments models evolving, making an impact: panel
BrandAlley readies mobile platform
Mozilla Firefox 4 RC for Android and Maemo now up for grabs
Can Twitter Predict The Future Of Stocks?
Gogobeans: Digital Locker and Sharing Solution for iPhone & Android
Google brings check-ins to Google Latitude on iPhone, 30 languages to Places
Share Music on Facebook With Shazam Update
Social Commerce @ SXSW – What Ogilvy Learned [infographics]
Does Your Brand Belong On Facebook?
‘Groupon Now’ to Offer Time and Location Specific Deals via Mobile

Everyday at Vexed we round up the industry stories that we find interesting and insightful. These are sent round in an email digest, helping to inform the work we do for our clients and keep us at the forefront of digital. If you have questions about any of these stories or would like to talk to us about projects based on any of them, drop us a line at info@vexeddigital.com

Facebook Users Around the World Now Gaining Access to Places

Today’s web news…

Facebook Users Around the World Now Gaining Access to Places
Yves Saint Laurent opens store on Cosmopolitan Boulevard
Microsoft+IE9: Holier than Apple open web convert?
Google patches Flash bug before Adobe
Google to enforce SSL encryption on developer APIs
HTTPS is more secure, so why isn’t the Web using it?
United Continental accommodates international travelers via mobile enhancements
Why the mobile Web is key to a marketer’s future
Twitter: tweeting louder than ever
The Pros and Cons Of Tumblr For Small Business
New Dashboard Provides Android Developers with Better Stats
SXSW: Accelerator Finalists and Winners
RIP Digg.
Facebook Acquires Snaptu to Bring Social Networking to Feature Phones
What is Agile Commerce? The Future, That’s What
Facebook Tests Ads Targeted At Status Updates
A Sample of 20 JavaScript Libraries for Data Visualization
Facebook Fundraiser Crowdsources Music By Maroon 5

Everyday at Vexed we round up the industry stories that we find interesting and insightful. These are sent round in an email digest, helping to inform the work we do for our clients and keep us at the forefront of digital. If you have questions about any of these stories or would like to talk to us about projects based on any of them, drop us a line at info@vexeddigital.com

Visa to Offer Person-to-person Payments (to compete with PayPal)

Today’s web news…

Visa to Offer Person-to-person Payments (to compete with PayPal)
7 different approaches to mobile couponing
Microsoft both embraces and shuns Google’s open video codec
Full guide to PNG compatibility
Google for Nonprofits, “You’re changing the world. We want to help.”
Code Standards & Front-end Development Best Practices
HeyZap Goes After Social Discovery, Launches Check-in For Mobile Games
Is there a point to QR codes in an SMS-dependent society?
Lionsgate bolsters movie ticket sales via Groupon
Android 2.2 is now the dominant version of Google’s OS with 61.3 percent of all active devices
Non-Official Twitter Clients Still Widely Used
How to Increase Your Retweets, Twitter Followers & Klout
Speed Summary | Cap Gemini on Social Commerce
More App Store Economics: Case Study of 10M download game, monetized through ads. How much money?
Scan a QR Code & Save Your Place on the Restaurant Wait List

Everyday at Vexed we round up the industry stories that we find interesting and insightful. These are sent round in an email digest, helping to inform the work we do for our clients and keep us at the forefront of digital. If you have questions about any of these stories or would like to talk to us about projects based on any of them, drop us a line at info@vexeddigital.com

Google teaches Microsoft’s IE9 to love open video codec

Today’s web news…

Google teaches Microsoft’s IE9 to love open video codec
Ignoring the potential of minorities in mobile?
Should luxury brands amp up social strategy with Facebook commerce?
Twitter ad play chokes third-party devs
Google wires up for wireless payments
Google splits Google Apps suite in two
Glen Gilmore & Social Media: How NOT to Use Hashtags & RTs in a Crisis
US Bank lets consumers deposit checks, monitor activity via mobile app
Is your product information mobile-ready?
The Social Commerce Strategy Playbook
Google Revamps Its iPhone App
Study: One Quarter Of All Mobile App Users Never Use The Same Application Twice
Facebook takes another swing at Web video
Apple now have an app review resolution center
Facebook Enhanced Analytics For Websites
5 Digital Marketing Trends to Watch

Everyday at Vexed we round up the industry stories that we find interesting and insightful. These are sent round in an email digest, helping to inform the work we do for our clients and keep us at the forefront of digital. If you have questions about any of these stories or would like to talk to us about projects based on any of them, drop us a line at info@vexeddigital.com