Getting Started in Mobile Marketing
How do I start? What's the opportunity? Answers from marketers who were newbies once, too.
How do I start? What's the opportunity? Answers from marketers who were newbies once, too.
The mobile channel is made for consumer engagement. It’s immediate, intimate, and everywhere. Although we’ve already discussed how to get started in mobile, it remains the number one question I’m asked by people looking to add mobile to their marketing initiatives. How do I start? What’s the opportunity?
At Mobile Advertising USA conference in New York this week, keynote speaker Tom Daly from Coca-Cola shared case studies from France, Germany, the U.K., and Mexico. He discussed the objectives for each campaign, initial goals and brand relative to the market, and how mobile was leveraged to create an experience for consumers. The ease of interaction with the campaign to drive consumer volume was key to the campaigns’ success. As Daly cautioned, what works in one market may not apply to all markets. Objectives, mobile data penetration, and brand goals all vary. The goal is to test, learn, and share best practices across the brand.
Judith Ricker of Harris Interactive suggested that marketers should “use marketing communications to a build bond with consumer integrated across media in order to succeed.” The goal is to connect with the consumer cognition, emotionally, inspirationally, and behaviorally.
These are all things we know and have heard before in regard to this channel. How do we get started?
Engage Clients With Mobile
I spent some time with Kristen Fox, formerly of ESPN, now VP of professional services at Soapbox Mobile, to discuss how to engage their clients with the mobile channel. What works? What doesn’t? Fox has a particularly interesting perspective, given she’s been on both the buy and sell sides of the industry. According to Fox, the steps to engage include:
Mobile provides an opportunity for a brand to have a one-to-one conversation with the consumer. It’s a live, personal experience. What’s the reaction to Soapbox’s approach been with marketers? According to Fox, brand response has been positive because the message and approach are familiar to marketers. It doesn’t require them to learn mobile technology and terminology right out of the gate. It’s an approach that sets the stage for the future.
Let the Client Own the Short Code
Fox says the most interesting change in moving from the buy side to the sell side is a greater understanding of mobile’s benefits and more transparency around how it works. She believe it’s important for the client to have ownership and control over their short code (define) rather than relinquish it to a mobile marketing partner. A brand builds equity in its short code every time it’s utilized. If that brand changes vendors, contractual agreements may cause the short code to be tied to the old vendor for a fixed duration. This could hinder the brand’s ability to manage initiatives. This is particularly a cause for concern when it comes to vanity codes.
Courtney Acuff, from Denuo, agrees it’s important for the brand team, client, and agency to understand how a short code benefits them, and how it can be integrated, before they can own and control it.
Learning From Coca-Cola
Educating for brand clients is key, says R/GA‘s Richard Ting. Clients generally come from a base of online expertise that’s very different from mobile, and understanding the differences within the process with something as simple as securing a short code or mobile Web site has been a learning process.
Some of Coca-Cola’s conclusions from its experiences with the mobile channel:
Remember, there are 2.2 billion mobile users worldwide, twice the number of those using the Internet. According to Harris Interactive’s Joseph Porus, mobile is the most personal device in history. Mobile is a reflection of who we are, and handset churn allows a 24-month renewable self-image cycle. Mobile will become the new remote control for our lives.